Old stuff I still know
Our Ginger Fuhrer says that he could still code up a simple game idea in Amstrad Basic, while I'm your man if you ever need to rebuild the suspension on an Austin Allegro (1750 Equipe version). This stuff doesn't leave your mind - tell us about obsolete talents you still have.
( , Thu 30 Jun 2011, 17:04)
Our Ginger Fuhrer says that he could still code up a simple game idea in Amstrad Basic, while I'm your man if you ever need to rebuild the suspension on an Austin Allegro (1750 Equipe version). This stuff doesn't leave your mind - tell us about obsolete talents you still have.
( , Thu 30 Jun 2011, 17:04)
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You know that scene in the (original) H.G.Wells Time Machine film
...where he's watching the sun go around the sky, faster and faster, and the skirt lengths going up and down in the window of the shop opposite?
That's how I feel, these days. A week is a mere blink; even a year seems like a short time. I say something happened "the other day" and then realise it was three years ago. Birthdays seem to happen every month, so fast I've lost count.
The only benefit I can see is that, as you get older, you can start to pull off "eccentric" (rather than just "weird"). My role model is Doc from Back To The Future...
( , Mon 4 Jul 2011, 16:22, Reply)
...where he's watching the sun go around the sky, faster and faster, and the skirt lengths going up and down in the window of the shop opposite?
That's how I feel, these days. A week is a mere blink; even a year seems like a short time. I say something happened "the other day" and then realise it was three years ago. Birthdays seem to happen every month, so fast I've lost count.
The only benefit I can see is that, as you get older, you can start to pull off "eccentric" (rather than just "weird"). My role model is Doc from Back To The Future...
( , Mon 4 Jul 2011, 16:22, Reply)
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