Wednesday, February 11, 2026
Farewell, Greg Brown and Bob Weir
Tuesday, February 10, 2026
The Reincarnation
| For some strange reason, I didn't get an initial screencap. Oh well. Yes, this is a new Briganaa. |
I decided that one way to combat the desire to rush to the end with four toons and do all the things was to start over with a toon that was most definitely blitzed through the process in 2021 and do it right this time in 2026.
![]() |
| This was right on top of of the Battle.net shop. "Inspired by" my ass; they knew exactly what they were doing. This is as of February 9th, 2026. |
![]() |
| I actually had to hunt for it in the Cash Shop, as it was underneath the Pets, Transmog, and (in-game) toys. |
Monday, February 9, 2026
Meme Monday: Valentine's Day Memes for 2026
Yep, it's that time of year again. I'll try to provide links if I can find them to the creators' stores, so if you want some of these cards you can order them from them.
![]() |
| From Celestial of the East. |
![]() |
| From Goddasaurus on Imgur. |
![]() |
| Have to have some Warhammer 40K Valentines. From Idiot of the East and Sparrows and Lily, although the link seems to be broken now. |
![]() |
| From Someecards. |
![]() |
| From ammatice via Pinterest. They apparently have both a DeviantArt page and a carrd.co page. |
![]() |
| From Sparrows and Lily, which apparently is yet another broken link. Alas. |
Friday, February 6, 2026
The Crazy Still Lives
![]() |
| Yes, that is a thing IRL. No, I'm not going to tell you how I know, but when fifty something years you reach, forbidden knowledge gained you have. |
Wednesday, February 4, 2026
Who's Training Who?
![]() |
| Holy crap. This was in 1995? Yikes. |
Lo and behold, he actually did just that. We were going to put our mid-range CAD/CAM/CAE software, which was so hefty that it could barely run on the best Windows XT servers at the time, on the internet as a browser-based product.
Tuesday, February 3, 2026
Metalheads and WoW Fans, Arise
![]() |
| Screencap from CurseForge as of Feb 2, 2026. |
![]() |
| From Pinterest. Not sure if this is an official graphic or not. |
![]() |
| The cover of Venom: The Saga of Eddie Brock. Graphic Novel Volume 1. From ComicHub. |
Monday, February 2, 2026
Meme Monday: Raspberry Pi Memes
For all of my years puttering around computers and IT, I've never built a Raspberry Pi.
Until now.
I built one to power what's known as a Hamclock* that amateur radio hobbyists use to keep an eye on contact listings, what amateur radio bands are open (it's a shortwave/High Frequency thing, just roll with it) and what solar activity is.
Oh, and it has a nice graphic of the earth showing parts of the earth that are in daylight or night:
![]() |
| This is DL1GKK's Hamclock, which looks much more detailed that the graphic I have. From DL1GKK. |
Geochron makes those as well, but the digital ones cost $500 and the physical machines cost much more than that. My Hamclock is basically the cost of the Raspberry Pi, parts to put it together, and a spare monitor and/or keyboard + mouse.
Anyway, I figured I'd put Raspberry Pi in this week's Meme Monday.
![]() |
| Okay, let's get the low-hanging fruit out of the way. See what I did there? From Instagram. |
![]() |
| And yes, this is another popular meme type. From ifunny.co. |
| When the most current powerful version of the Raspberry Pi came out, the Raspberry Pi 5, it was a bit difficult to find one in stock at first. From Zuyun Zeng. |
| Again, unless you're in the know (and you are now) this would kind of make sense. From Memedroid. |
| Apparently Raspberry Pi enthusiasts are a bit excited about their hobby. From Memedroid. |
| But just like any other electronics project, you can go down the multi-week rabbit hole when you start on a new Raspberry Pi project. From imgflip via Medium. |
*Because of course ham radio would be involved.
Sunday, February 1, 2026
Gaining Perspective Years Later
Thursday, January 29, 2026
Wall-to-Wall Whelming*
I did not watch the Blizzard update today; I only read the highlights, officially known as "Catch Up on the State of Azeroth in our Recap".
![]() |
| You know, this thing. |
Good thing I did, because the overall lack of WoW Classic information wasn't that great of a surprise. To me, anyway.
The 2019 Classic Train is still in Mists, and that was highlighted in the roadmap along with the Anniversary Servers currently on a somewhat watered-down TBC Classic that's designed to be blasted through in less than a year.
![]() |
| To see this better, click on it to see the full-sized version. From Blizzard. |
Basically, the WoW Classic train got some vague promises of wanting to stay true to the community, and there will be surveys heading out over the year to gauge interest in various things and how you want to play.
Oh, and there's now a WoW Ambassador Program, that's supposed to be the community helping the community. Given how some people play, I'm not so sure this will work out very well --or maybe about as well as other community initiatives, which is damning by faint praise-- but at least they're trying.
***
Oh, and did you know that there's Player Housing in Retail WoW?
Oh yes, housing alone got about more of a mention in the recap than all of the Classic WoW versions combined, which also speaks to the fact that Blizzard devoted 2/3 of the recap (and likely the video itself) to Retail WoW. Bully to those who play Retail, but that also says to me that Classic WoW is definitely the red-headed stepchild of the WoW community. Which is honestly just fine for the Classic WoW players, who are going to do their own thing.
How do I know this? The Classic community is already reviving the community-driven Hardcore mode, this time for TBC Classic Anniversary Edition.
This is in direct response to Blizzard deciding to pull the plug on official Hardcore Anniversary servers when the TBC Classic pre-patch dropped. And I'd bet a couple of doughnuts** that TBC Hardcore will be far more popular than people expect. Even if Blizz didn't throw a bone at the Hardcore community by allowing for a buff/debuff identifying those Hardcore players, they'd be out there anyway.
***
One thing that people will point out is that there's still a gigantic black hole for what will happen to WoW Classic once both Mists Classic and TBC Anniversary Classic reach their conclusions at the end of the year. I presume any news there will happen at BlizzCon, which is smack in the middle of September, right around the time when the WoW Classic Anniversary servers were announced in 2024.
I guess that the reckoning will be put off a bit longer, but if I were a betting man this is what I'd expect:
- Warlords Classic will be a thing as the Classic train will keep running towards an eventual merging with Retail WoW, likely sometime around 2029-2030.
- TBC Anniversary Classic will progress to Wrath Anniversary Classic around mid-Q1 2027.
- No Classic Plus will be announced, but Blizz will tinker with another Seasonal server along the lines of the Chinese Titan Reforged servers.
*I'm borrowing "whelming" from Josh Strife Hayes, who uses "it was whelming" in place of the more standard "it was meh".
**To me in my current state of health, that's a pretty serious bet.
***Didn't you ever play "telephone" using a couple of cups and a string connecting the two? Well, shit, I guess I really AM old.
Tuesday, January 27, 2026
A Short Addendum
![]() |
| On January 24, 2026. |
![]() |
| From Icom America's Instagram feed. Uh, and apparently an AI generated pic with an Icom amateur radio. Who'd have thought? |
Monday, January 26, 2026
Meme Monday: Snowpocalypse 2026 Memes
![]() |
| I took this pic when I was out shoveling. |
![]() |
| The snow storm hit more than just the Midwest. It came up from Texas and hit a lot of the South, too. This was from the St. Louis Reddit page. |
![]() |
| Of course, reading isn't a bad thing to do during the snowstorm. From Instagram and ournerdiestthing. |
![]() |
| And not everybody believes the world is ending. From Reddit. |
![]() |
| The storm has reached the Atlantic Coast and New England, who are more used to this sort of thing. From WAHUP. |
![]() |
| This was a screencap from a recording of the NBC broadcast of the game. From Amazing Blaze Zine. |
![]() |
| The Augusta Kentucky Historic District put this collage of photos from news reports of the game. From Facebook. |
Sunday, January 25, 2026
It's Not About Green Eggs and Ham
![]() |
| Not bad, but #3 on "Worth Fixing" is highly dependent upon what the issue is. And #1 on "Deal Breaker" can easily be manipulated into really silly stuff. From @drelizabethfrederick via Instagram. |
Friday, January 23, 2026
Almost At The End
![]() |
| The listings as of January 22, 2026. |
![]() |
| Boom. |
Thursday, January 22, 2026
And Now a Counterpoint
Tuesday, January 20, 2026
Cranky Red Being Cranky
![]() |
| No, not these seasons, although this is pretty accurate. From Reddit, ifunny.co, and NBC 4 in Columbus, OH. |
![]() |
| This is ESO's 2026 Seasons road map. From neowin (and Zenimax). |
![]() |
| From The Office. And Yarn. |
You see, I've dealt with "seasons" before, in Retail WoW. When you run Battlegrounds like I did in Cataclysm and Mists of Pandaria, the gear grind was organized around gear acquisition (and rankings). I never bothered with rankings and arenas/rated battlegrounds, because I was more of a casual PvPer. However, when people would sprint ahead and acquire gear quickly (due to winning regular/rated BGs) and you were merely doing your thing, playing in random BGs was a nightmare for a few months until you started to get the PvP gear that you needed. It always seemed to me that once you became barely geared enough to survive without getting one-shot, the PvP season would end and a new currency/gear set would open up and you'd have to start over. This led to one of two options: Git Gud (play more), or Drop Out. Given I didn't have the time to play to such extreme levels to effectively 'git gud', I eventually dropped out in frustration.
Since that time, I've come to understand that the way the seasonal content is designed, this is a feature and not a bug. Companies want you to login as much as possible (and spend real life money on stuff in cash shops too), so seasons are designed to maximize FOMO without turning off the player base en masse. There's a fine line between utilizing FOMO to get people to constantly login and buy stuff without pushing them at all or too much, and over the years the more successful games have figured out where that happy medium is.
![]() |
| HINT: That happy medium is much too FOMO-driven for my liking. From Dean Signori. |
It's the consumption-based society placed in a video game. However, instead of keeping up with the Joneses with cars or computers or power tools or spouses*, it's skins and bling and pets and gear and mounts and weapons. And titles; can't forget the titles part.
"If money is all you love, then that's what you'll receive."--Princess Leia, Star Wars
"Do you not havephonesfriends?"
--Possibly apocryphal
![]() |
| From Choice of Games. And the Pythons, of course. |






































