Jump to content
Banner by ~ Ice Princess Silky

Kithop

Muffin
  • Posts

    20
  • Joined

  • Last visited

1 Follower

About Kithop

  • Birthday 1985-10-23

Contact Methods

  • Website URL
  • Skype
    Kithop
  • Twitter
    @Kithop
  • deviantART
    Kithop
  • YouTube
    Kithop5574333
  • Steam ID
    Kithop

Profile Information

  • Gender
    Not Telling
  • Location
    Mission, British Columbia, Canada
  • Interests
    Music! I play guitar, bass, a little bit of drums and keys, and sing - check out my YouTube for music videos.

    Also an IT nerd by day.

Recent Profile Visitors

1,592 profile views

Kithop's Achievements

Muffin

Muffin (2/23)

19

Brohooves Received

  1. Happy Birthday, Kith! 🎁 

  2. Merry Birthiversary! 

  3. Merry Birthiversary! 

  4. You guys probably want to look at Vivecraft: http://www.vivecraft.org/ if you're thinking of using the fancy HTC Vive or Oculus on the PC (Java) version of Minecraft.
  5. B-but, Genesis does what Nintendon't! ;p W E L C O M E T O T H E N E X T L E V E L "Blast Processing" ... ahem, yeah, uh, the Genesis pretty much just had the much faster clocked CPU going for it (I think just over 7MHz vs the SNES'.. I want to say 3.52 off the top of my head?) - it had similar total colour ranges, but was locked to a smaller on-screen palette at any particular point in time, and yeah, used an older sound chip. I'm actually really fond of that older, grittier sound chip, but then I like old-school AdLib and Sound Blaster 16 music on the PC, too. Think of the various Sonic games and their soundtracks, at least before Sonic CD. I was lucky enough to have both systems growing up - and later a Sega CD! - and I was a huge Sonic fan. In fact, Sonic is what got me into Furry, and Furry is what led me to Brony... anyway, I had way more games for the SNES, and I will admit, Nintendo's first party titles are almost always amazing. Mario in various incarnations (SMW, Yoshi's Island, Kart, SMRPG with Square), Super Metroid, Zelda: A Link to the Past... all great games and part of a line of usually-great hits spanning multiple console generations. ...but whether it was the console hardware or just the game design, they always felt... slow. Even Samus running at full tilt still felt plodding compared to the ridiculous, so-fast-you're-outrunning-the-camera twitch action you'd get with the classic Sonic games, played well. Plus games like Streets of Rage 3 and Ecco the Dolphin (though I had the CD version with much better soundtrack) were fun rentals. Speaking of the Sega CD, though, if that kind of counts (along with the 32X, which I don't own ) - that thing is... well, it's a thing. FMV games are horrible, but Ecco and Sonic CD were awesome. Real CD soundtracks more than made up for the crummy MIDI synth chip. Having your console be your own CD player for listening to music as a young teenager in your bedroom? Freaking sweeeeeeet. I'd put on any of my favourites and fall asleep listening to music. That was worth huge points to me as a kid, back when getting your own boombox or whatever as well would be ridiculously expensive. Not that the Sega CD wasn't expensive. Hooo boy was it expensive. My normally generous and spoiling dad even grumbled at the cost of the thing when 'Santa' got it for me one year. Still.
  6. Does a Coleco Adam (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coleco_Adam) - circa 1983 count? I remember we had that when I was super young, like 3 or 4, and by then it was already discontinued. I typed in my own, really bad (all O's!) ASCII art and printed it out of the included dot-matrix printer for my mom to post on the fridge. We had three other programs for it other than the built-in typewriter mode - a '2010' game on cartridge where you had to move a spark around various circuits of the spaceship to repair them before it crashed into the sun, 'Buck Rogers' on tape (yes, cassette tape, like the same you'd put in a Walkman), which I guess would be like a really really crude rear-view shooter akin to StarFox, but way simpler, and then BASIC on tape, where my older brother would spend hours retyping in sample programs from the included, huge manual, and it would draw shapes and such. ...saving? What saving? To what? Our first PC was a 486/DX 33 with 4MB RAM (soon upgraded to 8MB), a 212MB hard drive, Diamond Stealth 32 VLB video card, DOS 6.22 and Windows 3.1. Eventually we got a Multimedia Level 2 kit, I think it was, which was a 2x SCSI CD-ROM and Pro Audio Spectrum 16 sound card (with the SCSI interface on it for the CD-ROM to connect to). The 486 was replaced by a Pentium Overdrive @ 83MHz in the same socket (what? A CPU with a FAN on it?! ZOMG must be so fast!!!), the PAS16 by a Sound Blaster AWE32, the Diamond Stealth by a Matrox Mystique & m3D PowerVR card... then a Voodoo Banshee (which was a Voodoo 2 + 2D card built-in! No more pass-thru cables!), a Pentium 133, then 200 with MMX (zomg), hard drives got bigger - 800-odd MB, then over a GB. A gigabyte! Windows 3.1 gave way to Windows 95 (anyone else remember the ads with the Rolling Stones' 'Start Me Up'? The Hover game? Bragging that your computer was able to play the 'high res' versions of the random music videos, including one for Weezer's 'Buddy Holly' included in the 'GOODIES' folder on the install CD?), to 98, to ME (we don't talk about Windows ME), 2000, XP and so on. In that journey, this was 'the family computer' that I got to spend the most time on, learning how to make boot disks with various AUTOEXEC.BAT & CONFIG.SYS incantations, and later a boot menu with options, for getting all my classic games to run (Aces of the Pacific & Aces Over Europe were BRUTAL for needing a ton of Conventional memory, while say, Star Wars: Rebel Assault of course needed CD & Sound drivers - 'TSR's for Terminate-and-Stay-Resident - loaded, and EMM386 to enable RAM above 1MB). But me? My first real computer that was purely mine and not a family computer or hand-me-down of the 'old' one? An old iBook G3 @ 700MHz with some Radeon 7500(?) video card. And it had WiFi - AirPort, actually pre-WiFi; it came out before the spec was finalized, if I remember right, but it worked fine in the end. I did the last half of my high school on that thing; I was one of the few kids in school with a laptop - my friend had an external USB WiFi adapter thing for his laptop, and we'd learned how to set up the then-nascent chat programs (remember, school did not have WiFi, cell phones still had push-button numbers and were able to, at most, play Snake, let alone connect to some kind of internet) to be able to send each other secret messages despite being in different wings of the school, across the courtyard from each other. Getting something that worked on his PC *and* my Mac was way hard back then. I played a lot of Starcraft (Warcraft 3 ran like crap) on that laptop, and Quake 3. Sadly, however, the video card and its 'low-lead' solder decided to detach from the rest of the board, and despite being replaced once, the new board's done it again, so there's no working video on that thing at all - not even plugging in an external monitor, so it's dead. Lots of machines have came and went since then - I started building my own gaming rigs, have had a couple laptops, dabbled in watercooling and had the typical 'blinged out with cold cathode lamps & LEDs' rig for LAN parties at one point, learned BSD UNIXes (stemming from the Mac) and Linux, and just kind of went that way and haven't looked back. Still, having to work to get the most basic things going that we all just take for granted these days is what got me into computers in the first place, learning how they work, and getting me into a lifelong (so far) career with them. Unless one of you's got experience with some fun old mainframes or punch cards or something, ahem, uh, 'get off my lawn, you young whippersnappers'?
  7. Kithop

    technology Discord

    I'm partial to running my own Mumble/Murmur server instead: https://wiki.mumble.info/wiki/Main_Page Free, open source, runs on pretty much anything, and it's had awesome latency/voice quality for ages. Been around a lot longer than Discord, but it's purely a VoIP chat geared for gaming (rooms/channels vs. one-on-one private stuff). But then I like running all my own servers in my basement, so.
  8. I ran around a whole bunch with my friends (and coworkers, who worked on the BronyCAN website this year!), and spent just as much time recovering in the hotel room. Being anemic and trying to do a con is a mite difficult, but I had a ton of fun regardless. If anyone's interested, I have video up from my panel now! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W04i87KJ1os
  9. I did get approval for my panel - tentatively scheduled for Friday. So now I get to put all the info together! D:
  10. I'd love people attending who are interested! Still waiting on review and approval, of course, but here's what I submitted as a draft conbook entry:
  11. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MU* It sounds like my panel idea (that I submitted yesterday) might be a good one then. ;P Basically: think something a little more laid back, but similar to IRC, with a focus on roleplaying.
  12. I'm already pre-registered; it's in the same hotel as VancouFur this year, which I'm going to this very weekend. ...oh, and my coworker is apparently (one of?) the webmaster(s) for the BronyCAN site this year, so, I uh... guess I kind of have to go, don't I? One idea I actually am just coming up with now potentially for a panel (and I've never put on a panel before! D:)... 'A Brief History of MU*s, and where they fit with MLP'? I'll need to do some more research on specifically MLP:FiM places; all I know of is https://wiki.equestriandawn.com/Main_Page - somewhere I've been for a number of years, but I've been on Furry and Sonic the Hedgehog-themed MUCKs before - SPR, FluffMUCK, FurryMUCK... and the now-defunct ChaosMUCK, where for a brief time I helped out on staff as 'Co-God' / #2. Even did some horrible MUF programming ('2 2 +' ... 'pop swap pop pop pop...') For those that have no idea what I'm talking about, think something a little more structured than IRC, and typically used for freeform, realtime roleplaying where a small group of 2-6(ish) players can bang out a scene in a couple hours, as opposed to a forum RP that can take days or weeks. What do you guys think - sound interesting? ^.^
  13. I used to have a fairly long, full beard when I played full-time in a metal band. Since got a razor (gasp!) and shaved the sides. Kept a full goatee, with the chin bit staying longish. But then, I kept (and plan to keep) my long hair to go with it. ;D With full-beard (bonus: pony shirt!). And now just a goatee.
  14. I have my own espresso machine. And French press. I used to have a Moka pot, until it exploded (oops). Making double-shot soy lattes every morning at home? Awwww yissss. <3 Or, in the summer time, prepping a French press with extra strong cold-brew coffee to sit in the fridge overnight, only to get plunged and poured over ice in the morning? Maybe even two presses worth, to have one with lunch? There's a couple localish grocery store brands I like, bean-wise (Kicking Horse, Saltspring Island), but there's a roaster / cafe in my town here that I've started visiting and getting whole beans from that are pretty good! I like to keep things on the light-medium roast side (dark roast tastes like I imagine cigarettes taste) - more caffeine that way, too.
  15. I've had plenty of blood taken from me - 6 little vials in a row the other day, even! Oh, wait... you mean like, donated for other people? Yeah, no, they won't take mine. Something about 'permanently deferred'... I even showed up once, but they turned me away. Whee Crohn's. In all seriousness, though, for those of you that have donated, thank you - I showed up once in hospital with a red blood count of something like 49 (instead of ~125). The doctors asked me incredulously how I was still even conscious. Two bag transfusion right then and there in emergency. Turns out I was bleeding internally from an abscess. Who knows what would've happened to me if that wasn't there.
×
×
  • Create New...