So I was bored...
I decided to make a new animated avatar using GIMP with some of the pictures of my home network.
I was going to use pictures of my Overall Work Area, the Desk, the Network, and the Rack Mounted Computers in the server cabinet. However, I could not get the four pictures small enough with decent quality, so I just used the Desk and Network pictures.
I also finally retired the Falcon Northwest Computer that I purchased in 1997 which I had been using as a router, firewall, dhcp server, dns server, and a few other server chores since 2002 with Slackware Linux. I definitely got my money's worth from that system.
I was going to use pictures of my Overall Work Area, the Desk, the Network, and the Rack Mounted Computers in the server cabinet. However, I could not get the four pictures small enough with decent quality, so I just used the Desk and Network pictures.
I also finally retired the Falcon Northwest Computer that I purchased in 1997 which I had been using as a router, firewall, dhcp server, dns server, and a few other server chores since 2002 with Slackware Linux. I definitely got my money's worth from that system.
A sansGUI interface is one that does not have the small features called "Windows". The term comes from the French word sans, meaning "without".
SansGUI's are more typically used in Unix-like Operating Systems. The conventional wisdom is that a GUI (Grapical User Interface) help guide the casual computer user to perform routine tasks with Point and Click simplicity. SansGUI's have acquired considerable acceptance for users accustomed to the CLI (Command Line Interface).
SansGUI's are more typically used in Unix-like Operating Systems. The conventional wisdom is that a GUI (Grapical User Interface) help guide the casual computer user to perform routine tasks with Point and Click simplicity. SansGUI's have acquired considerable acceptance for users accustomed to the CLI (Command Line Interface).
So I see you are the guy who runs Google Earth
Sounds pretty intense dude... networks and server systems are way over my head... but I do appreciate the finer technicalities involved with all aspects of computer technology. But I leave stuff like that to the experts. Give me one computer, and I will go to town... give me a network or server and I will most likely skip town (after breaking something).
-Cub. =o)
Sounds pretty intense dude... networks and server systems are way over my head... but I do appreciate the finer technicalities involved with all aspects of computer technology. But I leave stuff like that to the experts. Give me one computer, and I will go to town... give me a network or server and I will most likely skip town (after breaking something).
-Cub. =o)
Looks Good SansGUI... I'm gonna call you Sans for short, if you don't mind... lol
The Avatar looks good... I really wish I was adapt at that stuff as some of you guys on here... I haven't seen too much of your work Sans, but I know Cub is something else when it comes to Graphics... You two should get together, you could probably make an Animated Tex Game for us all...
The Avatar looks good... I really wish I was adapt at that stuff as some of you guys on here... I haven't seen too much of your work Sans, but I know Cub is something else when it comes to Graphics... You two should get together, you could probably make an Animated Tex Game for us all...
The Paved Straight Road, Won't Always Get You Farther Than The Winding Dirt Road...
Can You Run Your Game??? Click Here And Find Out...
*Note, Not All Games Have Been Tested & Therefore May Not Be Listed...
Can You Run Your Game??? Click Here And Find Out...
*Note, Not All Games Have Been Tested & Therefore May Not Be Listed...
Cub, you had me rolling on the floor with the skipping town comment, but I have to wonder...since you correctly identified Google Earth from the tiny picture...Maybe I'm not alone. 
Thanks Baf, I don't mind if you use the short version, "Sans". I don't usually do much in the way of graphics, but I did go to school for Computer Animation and Programming for Vitual Reality in the mid to late 90's (Wonder which games may of influenced that decision
). However, I've let most of that knowledge wither away.
Thanks Baf, I don't mind if you use the short version, "Sans". I don't usually do much in the way of graphics, but I did go to school for Computer Animation and Programming for Vitual Reality in the mid to late 90's (Wonder which games may of influenced that decision
A sansGUI interface is one that does not have the small features called "Windows". The term comes from the French word sans, meaning "without".
SansGUI's are more typically used in Unix-like Operating Systems. The conventional wisdom is that a GUI (Grapical User Interface) help guide the casual computer user to perform routine tasks with Point and Click simplicity. SansGUI's have acquired considerable acceptance for users accustomed to the CLI (Command Line Interface).
SansGUI's are more typically used in Unix-like Operating Systems. The conventional wisdom is that a GUI (Grapical User Interface) help guide the casual computer user to perform routine tasks with Point and Click simplicity. SansGUI's have acquired considerable acceptance for users accustomed to the CLI (Command Line Interface).
I know that feeling... I was a master of Computer Hardware in the mid 90s myself... But once they started punching computers off of the assembly line, I said to myself, what's the point and continued my education...
The Paved Straight Road, Won't Always Get You Farther Than The Winding Dirt Road...
Can You Run Your Game??? Click Here And Find Out...
*Note, Not All Games Have Been Tested & Therefore May Not Be Listed...
Can You Run Your Game??? Click Here And Find Out...
*Note, Not All Games Have Been Tested & Therefore May Not Be Listed...
Ok, I changed my sig again too 
A sansGUI interface is one that does not have the small features called "Windows". The term comes from the French word sans, meaning "without".
SansGUI's are more typically used in Unix-like Operating Systems. The conventional wisdom is that a GUI (Grapical User Interface) help guide the casual computer user to perform routine tasks with Point and Click simplicity. SansGUI's have acquired considerable acceptance for users accustomed to the CLI (Command Line Interface).
SansGUI's are more typically used in Unix-like Operating Systems. The conventional wisdom is that a GUI (Grapical User Interface) help guide the casual computer user to perform routine tasks with Point and Click simplicity. SansGUI's have acquired considerable acceptance for users accustomed to the CLI (Command Line Interface).
You didn't like the Mixed up words??? lol
The Paved Straight Road, Won't Always Get You Farther Than The Winding Dirt Road...
Can You Run Your Game??? Click Here And Find Out...
*Note, Not All Games Have Been Tested & Therefore May Not Be Listed...
Can You Run Your Game??? Click Here And Find Out...
*Note, Not All Games Have Been Tested & Therefore May Not Be Listed...
No, its been around the net since 2003. My sig is brand new and meant to parody the San Serif entry on Wikipedia.Bafitis wrote:You didn't like the Mixed up words??? lol
A sansGUI interface is one that does not have the small features called "Windows". The term comes from the French word sans, meaning "without".
SansGUI's are more typically used in Unix-like Operating Systems. The conventional wisdom is that a GUI (Grapical User Interface) help guide the casual computer user to perform routine tasks with Point and Click simplicity. SansGUI's have acquired considerable acceptance for users accustomed to the CLI (Command Line Interface).
SansGUI's are more typically used in Unix-like Operating Systems. The conventional wisdom is that a GUI (Grapical User Interface) help guide the casual computer user to perform routine tasks with Point and Click simplicity. SansGUI's have acquired considerable acceptance for users accustomed to the CLI (Command Line Interface).
Hi there, interesting education you've had there. You should check out Chris' company he helped set up after Access went off the radar.
http://www.trugolf.com/
. If you haven't read Neuromancer, you should because its the very reason why any of us are even talking and why VR was such a popular computer science for the past 20 years.
Glad to have you around Sans
Oh, I should introduce myself, I'm Mr_Cyberpunk I work as a QA Tester for a video game company and hopefully soon a CEO of my very own game company.
http://www.trugolf.com/
Sounds like the guys are still into VR too, as am I. As you've probably realized my attraction to VR was Tex as well, growing up through the 1990s I had a lot of time with VR simulation - as a user though, biggest influence at the time for me was the film The Lawnmower Man. I eventually started to get into Cyberpunk as a young teenager, on reading Neuromancer in 2001 (around the time I first played Deus Ex) it really opened my eyes as to where all the VR technologies got inspired from in the first place. For that matter William Gibson practically invented the internet after inspiring people to build this so called "MATRIX" thing he came up withTruGolf founders and staff have been developing golf games and software for twenty years. Originally known as Access Software, they developed the “Links™” series, the widely acclaimed and hugely popular golf games for PC. Access Software was sold in 1999 to Microsoft for their expertise in golf software development, and TruGolf emerged a short while later.
Glad to have you around Sans
Yeah I've checked out TruGolf before, looks really cool.
Like say Lucas Arts and The Force Unleashed.
Don't forget us little guys that do not own, or plan to own, a console gaming system.mr_cyberpunk wrote:Glad to have you around SansOh, I should introduce myself, I'm Mr_Cyberpunk I work as a QA Tester for a video game company and hopefully soon a CEO of my very own game company.
A sansGUI interface is one that does not have the small features called "Windows". The term comes from the French word sans, meaning "without".
SansGUI's are more typically used in Unix-like Operating Systems. The conventional wisdom is that a GUI (Grapical User Interface) help guide the casual computer user to perform routine tasks with Point and Click simplicity. SansGUI's have acquired considerable acceptance for users accustomed to the CLI (Command Line Interface).
SansGUI's are more typically used in Unix-like Operating Systems. The conventional wisdom is that a GUI (Grapical User Interface) help guide the casual computer user to perform routine tasks with Point and Click simplicity. SansGUI's have acquired considerable acceptance for users accustomed to the CLI (Command Line Interface).