Crystal Olympic Shard Bugs

Hi everyone,

What’s this ? Second post in a week ? I need to post more often, even if it is just internet spaceship pics.

Picture. Cartoon. This is a 2 by 3 set of panes. In the left panes, a single figure, shouting. The right panes have three figures with their arms raised, shouting. The words go : "Who are we?" "Readers!" "What do we want?" "All the books!" "Where will we put them ?" "We Don't Know!"
Yep. Need more book cases

Yep. Kinda between books but I know what the next one will be. It was nearly Red Mars by Kim Stanley Robinson. The start of his books tend to be the best and I was enchanted by the story of Nadia as she builds the earliest permanent Mars habitation. Red Mars was a really good one, the story kind of petered out as it went through Green Mars and Blue Mars. I think he’s an author with fantastic ideas about world building … but the overall plot line tends to suffer. Still great books though. I thought the world building in 2312 was fantastic.

Can’t find my copy of Red Mars though, I’ve either picked it up and put it somewhere not near the others or it’s one of a little collection that I lent out a while ago.

Anyway, next book is looking like an overdue reading of Ready Player One by Ernest Cline, which was a birthday present from CK. Can’t remember when !

Anyway, last book was The Crystal Shard, which was R.A.Salvatore’s first entrance in to the Dungeons and Dragons area of book. There was a cluster of these released to support the Forgotten Realms world building pack, with this one covering the forbidding area of Icewind Dale to the extreme North West of the Realms. It’s a cold place, with Ten Towns (literally called Ten Towns) filled with rowdy frontier folk who are more interested in a fight than teaming up against the invading hordes. And invading hordes there are. It’s still a very readable book, 30+ years on from when it came out and I’ll be moving on to the rest of them in due course.

Game screenshot. Elite Dangerous. We are landed on a rugged grey white planet. We're on the day side. Our ship is filling a landing pad in the lower centre. It's the purple Cutter ship with two engines on outriggers to the sides and a tubular hull. A decent sized settlement stretches out to the left of the ship. The ship is longer than the settlement.
Ship is chonky

I avoided playing games pretty much all this week. Temperatures in my main room were hitting 30 degrees C on my fan and the graphics card was up to 53 C at idle at some points. That’s about 7 degrees above where the point where the graphics card says things are ok. It’s 49 now. If games happen, the graphics card and processor need to do work, which means heat getting introduced in to the room. I could feel it in yesterday’s session (but continued !) and definitely felt it in today’s session.

They started off with a bit of ferrying around cargo, that’s the job of the Imperial Cutter class Tiamat’s Chariot. A fearsome craft, she takes on all pirates who come to try and rob her of her cargo and also takes a massive amount of cargo around. I’ve not been enjoying that quite as much as I have done before though, so only 3 cargo runs have happened this weekend. It’s Community Goal time, with this week’s ones being a Trade one (bring cargo for reward) and a Combat one (shoot pirates for reward).

Game screenshot. Elite Dangerous. Same grey white planet as before. We are looking back at our ship from the other landing pad. Our pilot stands at the bottom under an entry sign. The base consisting of blocky looking buildings is sprawling out behind us, with our ship on the horizon behind all of that.
Don’t leave without me !

Another one of Tiamat’s Chariot from the other end of that base. It was fun to see the scale of the ship here, especially as one of my pick up points for cargo was as well lit as the base here. Another thing I appreciated was being able to take the taxi around the galaxy. This is one of the good features of the Odyssey expansion. Before, you’d be able to request your ship be delivered to you but I thought this time, the ship is set up to make travel easy so I’ll go to the ship. This time it’s …

Game screenshot. Elite Dangerous. Our ship is heading away from camera. She is the Federal Corvette, a roughly triangular ship with a blunted off point at the front end. She is in purple with dark grey covers above the engines at the back. She's flying above a base with scattered domes and landing pads that's on a grey plateau, with orange lowlands in the background.
Alpha Lima inbound

The Admiral Luperza, a Federal Corvette class warship. She did alright in the bit of combat a week or so ago but I wanted to put some upgrades in. I’ve ended up rearranging the fit as well, so instead of two massive beam lasers and 5 smaller gatling cannons, she has 3 massive gatling cannons and 4 smaller beam lasers. The ships are limited on battery (capacitor) and the big beams drain that capacitor really quickly … This set up feels like it’ll have more combat endurance. Oh and I’ve boosted the range of the beam lasers as well.

I haven’t tried it out yet though, there are no suitable combat locations in the system where the Community Goal is ! Oops. There’s more work to do on this one, always more grinding to do in games like this.

Oh and I was very close to having another look at Eve Online, as it’s another one that has a definite draw for chilled out space trucking. Eve is pretty much pure pvp though. You have to be able to accept that style of gameplay to get the most out of it, which includes voice comms and patrols which have very strict demands on your time. I decided that wasn’t for me quite a few years ago and nothing really has changed.

Game screenshot. Elite Dangerous. Our triangular purple Corvette is landed on a pad in the bottom right, pointing away from camera. In the distance is another collection of domes, with a conical structure with the top chopped off up ahead.
Awaiting upgrades

There’s a bit more to the Elite stuff, which I’ll close out the post with later.

Olympics ? It’s been good watching it so far, although with proceedings starting from about 12.30 local each day, it’s on a bit too late for me. I take advantage of the telly box being able to rewind an hour and then fast forward through the boring stuff, like filler segments and football.

I’ve been curious about the outfits again … The martial arts players have a set outfit that must get in the way :-D. Tennis highlights were just on … those look pretty normal. Hope they’re ok in the heat. Cycling will always be a sport for the lycra. Moving swiftly on. Then there’s swimming with the form fitting outfits and swim caps …

I think the big thing there is that all of the competitors should be on an equal footing, with no performance benefits being allowed from someone having a smarter technology behind their outfit. (Non-friction swimwear? Maybe)

I was curious about the gymnasts … Why do the ladies wear the leotards and the blokes wear the trousers ? Which one is better for doing the moves for their sport ? I know/knew a ex gymnast, she worked in the last team. I never asked her and it’s probably not a question you can casually pop into conversation ? You know ? Equality and diversity and all that ?

It’s always fun to see the archery people. They use hats. Hats are cool. And the Korean ladies were giving a scary sense of invulnerability earlier. Yep. Zombie apocalypse comes and you need people to take out zombies silently, get these ladies on your team. The skateboard people were like your typical cool street kid. It’s good to see them get their chances on as big a stage as this.

That’s the thing with the Olympics, it’s a fantastic festival of sport, where you find yourself watching things you’ll only watch every 4 years or so and they’re so compelling due to being right there with the competitors baring their passion for what they do.

Like the triathlon starting in a few minutes ! Things kick off early tonight so I better wrap up.

Bit more internet spaceship … I’m still invested in Elite. It offers a good chilled out alternate reality space to escape in to. And that can be valuable, especially in times like this. Wonder what I’d be like as a trucker in this world ? That would be a massive shift. And then it also has its exploration and combat side too.

But there are so many bugs … The most frustrating one is in the lighting system, where you’ll be heading to a planet and not be able to see anything at all due to it just appearing jet black. As in, it’s a hole in space occluding everything behind it but you can’t see the thing blocking the view. That’s perhaps the biggest actual bug in the Odyssey expansion. The abysmal performance isn’t really a bug, it’s just utterly flawed output from the developers. Here’s another of those bugs …

Game screenshot. Elite Dangerous. We're on foot, with the camera looking up at our pilot and beyond that, windows that mark the edge of the area we are in. Reflected in the glass is a small grey ball of a planet and a space station that is a mix of square and triangular faces that come together to form a cube.
Hope the windows are air tight

This is the bar, inside the concourse which is common to all of the space stations. The concourse is usually inside the space station … not floating around outside where the reflection of the station gets caught in the window. Where is that though ? Is it a reflection or a ghostly form of the station and planet ?

Who knows.

So many bugs. But it still has that hold on that part of me that enjoys flying around in spaceships.

Stay safe everyone ! Be well.

Seeking Space Adventures

And other things too.

Where did I leave it last time ? Ah ha ! With the Lego R2D2. That was a good little build that and I definitely appreciate the clever, simple, slick mechanism for the central leg plus it has a few other things hidden in there too for tool arms and a fully rotating head. This could be the first Lightmybricks kit I go for, although I should probably go for the Porsche and the BB-8 light up kit too. Thumbnail pic ?

Game screenshot. No Mans Sky. We are looking on a rugged yellow landscape with occasional rocks and small red spiky plants. The sky is a very bright yellow.
Wait … different game ?

That’s actually No Mans Sky, which I had another look at yesterday. It’s becoming increasingly clear that Elite Dangerous is in a very bad way at the moment. There’s been a series of patches since the Odyssey expansion was unleashed on an unsuspecting customer base and they’ve been very up and down in quality. The latest effort was introducing an AMD technique as an attempt in plastering over some of the massive cracks in the game at the moment. It hasn’t worked. I’ve actually turned it off now because I think it was crashing the game.

Game screenshot. Elite Dangerous. Our ship can be seen lower right, facing away from camera towards a tiny selection of buildings on the centre left. The landscape is barren grey and the horizon is just at the top of screen.
India Charlie Echo inbound

I’d been playing around with the various paint packs that I have available and this one works pretty well in all lighting. It’s like the Cadbury Clipper photoshop thing I did a while ago, where I did a graduated purple aft fading to white forward. This is the Cutter ship again, named Tiamat’s Chariot, callsign DL.SDL. There’s reasons for all my ship names, they’re often tributes. Tiamat was the Queen of Dragons, so it felt fitting that her name be part of the name of my flagship.

Game screenshot. Elite Dangerous. My ship is on a landing pad close to camera, pointing away and to the right. She is in the shiny purple livery this time, although it looks black with purple highlights. There is a smaller white ship behind and to the left on another landing pad. Assorted base buildings can be seen up and right.
Empire representing

I had an opportunity here with the Imperial Clipper that’s landed on the pad that’s a bit further away. The Clipper is the less expensive sister ship to my Imperial Cutter. Great ship too. If it were smaller, I’d look at it for being a landing ship. Anyway, this shows off the shiny purple paint job … It’s a stunning looking paint job, if you get the right lighting for it. I can’t use it for spacey screenshots because it just disappears into the background. However …

Game screenshot. Elite Dangerous. Our Cutter ship is in the lower half of the image. You can't see much because the ship rather fades into the black background of space but there are various silver highlights of parts of the ship, plus the star light is making small points of light reflect in the purple hull.
Set course for the next star

This one looked good. I was avoiding a White Dwarf star here. These are very old stars, which have gone through a nova phase and the remnant left behind that explosion does not have the mass to become a neutron star or a black hole. More about them at the link. In game, they’re a fairly dangerous and annoying object because you come out of the jump right on top of them and have to steer a wide berth around them to progress. You can get a boost off them but you have to get dangerously close. I don’t think it’s worth the risk (and annoyance!)

The reflected lights did look rather spectacular though didn’t they ? I have to admit though, this one has some processing to increase the brightness and contrast, otherwise that shiny purple disappears into the background of the void.

I think I’m on the verge of skipping to something different though. Elite’s got big problems at the moment, both within the game and especially within the publisher. A graphics card update will address some of the issues. Those are coming on to the market but the prices are still too high. A 3060 card on release was around £370 (still high), these are back on the market again but the prices are around the £550 mark. Scan had some for £470 … but I don’t absolutely need one yet so I’ll wait a bit longer. Anyway, when driving the buggy around today, I was having issues with the control of it that I’ve never had before. It was essentially racing out of control probably due to the shocking frame rates around populated bases.

Game screenshot. Elite Dangerous. We see the aft end of our spaceship heading out to the exit of a space station. We see purple engine flare and blue light reflected in the hull.
Trouble Dog, departing

This is the latest ship, a Python class ship callsign TRBLDG. More on that later. Gonna talk about books :-). The Python is a great all rounder in the game. She has a roughly triangular cross section from above and behind, with mounts for 5 guns on top and an armoured shell. They can land anywhere and this time, the ship is fitted out for carrying passengers. This is the next step in trying out the money making schemes … plus I haven’t done it before.

But I am kinda looking for a different space game at the moment. Elite’s got a lot of flaws and I haven’t really been enjoying the game play loop grind lately. I have to either vary it or have a certain mission to go for. Before, it was finding shiny things to look at while bouncing around the galaxy. At the moment, it’s getting the credits to buy a carrier ship and then I’ll take that exploring again with a selection of support (mining for fuel) and other ships.

The other games out there are the moment of note are No Mans Sky. Which has come a very long way from another bad launch. However, it feels very much like a ground game that happens to have spacecraft in it and I think that’s why I keep bouncing off it.

The obvious candidate is X4, the latest in the universe set up by Egosoft. I’ve had most of their games over the years but never really put much time in to them. They always seem to have their own bugs and issues in their gameplay and that appears to be true with X4 as well. It has its devoted fans but I know my history with the previous games where I just don’t get on with them, combined with what I’m seeing from reviews about the game having its issues.

Star Citizen is another one … I think this game will be ready this decade. And yep, there’s 9 years to go there. It’s a massively over ambitious project that hasn’t come out with anything really worth playing yet.

There are other games in the Steam wishlist. I should probably have a look at Frontier Pilot Simulator. This one isn’t done yet but apparently has a lot going for it. It’s not strictly space … but it is a space colony that needs pilots to take cargo around. Sold.

We’ll see. But first, another look at that new ship …

Game screenshot. Elite Dangerous. Same place as before, except we are looking backwards into the space station interior at the bow of our ship. The blue lighting reflects off the chromed hull.
Mutt of Mayhem, departing

There we go, this is the Mutt of Mayhem. The name comes from Gareth L. Powell’s Trouble Dog trilogy of Embers of War, Fleet of Knives and Light of Impossible Stars. It’s a great trilogy. Very gritty … very dramatic. It’s another that bounces between characters and places as it goes but it uses that to great effect to aid its pacing and to allow the story to develop in a very well judged time.

Oh and all bets are off as far as the characters are concerned. A character you were convinced was going to be around for all 3 books might see a sudden end. I dunno about you but not plot armouring all of the characters adds a lot to the drama. One central character of the books is the ship, Trouble Dog, a Carnivore class cruiser which leaves active naval service due to the events right at the start of the first book. I’ve felt like borrowing the name for a tribute for a while now. Thoroughly recommend the books.

Game screenshot. Elite Dangerous. Our ship is landed on a barren grey brown landscape. We see her port side, looking left. There is a shadow under her silver hull. In the distance are the domes and spires of a planetary base.
A base to race ?

I might have a closer look at this base before going on the passenger grind … This is the Mutt of Mayhem parked in front of a base in Kremavi which has been chosen as a new race track because it has convenient access and is in permanent sunlight. A definite bonus for taking pictures.

Books ? I finished Shadow Captain by Alastair Reynolds. This is the middle book in a trilogy set apparently in a very much future solar system, where all of the planets have been dismantled to form a multitude of settlements and other treasure hiding places. The dominant space technology is to have solar sail ships ply their way between the stars. It’s very much pirates in space, with the ships owing a lot to the old sailing ships with broadsides of cannon. It works pretty well as a setting and I’ll look forward to reading the conclusion when I get round to it. Book 1 – Revenger, Book 2 – Shadow Captain and book 3 is Bone Silence.

The next book is another Gareth L. Powell. It’s his Silversands and although short, it’s exploded into action right from the start. I’m looking forward to getting back to it, which will happen in 5 … 4 … 3 … 😀

New year, new lockdown

Hello everyone,

I know if I was to start writing about what’s happening in the UK at the moment, it would start an avalanche of ranting. So I’m going to try and avoid that :-). Yep, lockdown again … although personally, I’m not seeing much change there.

However, there are a few things that are getting more urgent that are on hold for now until it’s a bit safer to be around people. I was back on duty with work today, we have the facilities to allow us to work remotely. It did feel a bit weird though. (Could have been the lack of sleep from Brain not wanting to shut down for Land of Nod !)

Thumbnail pic ?

Rings of the Gorgons

There we go. I haven’t been travelling too far in real life but I have done that travel to far away imaginary planets in the internet spaceship. Some are places that are recommended by the sightseeing sites (https://elite.kamd.me.uk/), some are places that I’ve run across in the travels. I have a few rules (pointers ?) there for places that should be worth a closer look. It’s good to get there in sunlight too …

Spooky

Light makes the screenies more usable.

It hasn’t all been internet spaceships though, I’m having to somewhat ration the time in the more active games. The shoulder was getting more prone to pain spikes last week. Wrist actually isn’t so bad but I have to watch for unwarranted moves in the wrong angles or I get the ouchies.

I haven’t gone too much further into Per Aspera, although I’m very intrigued by that one and I have a very promising start now with an established growing colony. I had that little look into Prey and will go back when shoulder issues and time allow. I started a new Mars Horizon run as well, this time as Russia with different rockets and a higher difficulty. Mars Horizon is a game that I can see myself getting all the achievements on at some point and then I’ll keep coming back to it for some chilling out times.

I’ve also been back moseying around Skyrim …

Twas a dark and stormy night

Another case for a little bit of light going a long way.

Don’t jump !

That’s the mine side of Markarth, a towncity built into the side of one of the mountains.

Koliana and Lydia taking in the sights

And after a little raiding of the local dwemer tomb. Need to complete that armour set for Lydia there. I’m going for the heavy armoured tank with big sword approach again this time. Stealth archer is another powerful build but I get in trouble with that one as the enemies close, so it’s more a case of letting them close and then chopping them up.

It’s not just games though. I managed to finish Absolution Gap by Alastair Reynolds. It might be a while now before I go back to his books, although I do have Shadow Captain and Bone Silence of the Revenger series lined up. It’s not that Absolution Gap was a poor book, it was pretty well written. It’s just that over 660 pages it didn’t really go anywhere that was of interest. Kind of outstayed its welcome.

You can’t say that about the Martha Wells Murderbot series. They’re expensive … but they get in, tell their story and get out again before you can blink. Cos you’ve probably opened one of the novellas and read it in one sitting. Expensive … but more value in these ones than a lot of longer books.

Not sure what the next one will be, I think later on I’ll start Light of Impossible Stars by Gareth L. Powell to finish off that series.

Bit of a close orbit there …

One thing about Elite, the solar system generations can tend towards moons that are a bit close to each other …

Steamy

That was my landing spot to finish one of the sessions … perhaps a bit of sulphur in those geysers ?

Tidy Waterworlds

Here we had a pair of undiscovered water worlds that were orbiting each other close (the tides must have been impressive) and the Steam Horse Nebula in the background.

A bauble

And that’s where I am at the moment, perched on the edge of a crater by a canyon system with the parent gas giant over there in the background.

It’s a curious counterpoint. In real life, we’re in our lockdown and we’re not supposed to be going anywhere (people are … mutter mutter mutter) and I’m pretty much just heading out for emergency stuff and restocking the food cupboards.

In the internet spaceship game, I’m off on a trip around the galaxy. But even there, it’s a kind of lockdown of its own. Normally in the game, I’d be either mining and going to the best selling station or I’d be on a trading route going from station to station. At the moment, it’s just me and the crew of the ship bouncing from star to star and the only interaction with people offboard is when I visit the fleet carriers dotted around the galaxy. Staying at home, with home doing a circuit of the galaxy.

At the Blackwater carrier

That one had a nice perch, in the sun too.

Oh ! New music arrived as well with discount opportunities on a certain website I need to find a viable alternative to. Albums from the following have arrived and been enjoyed :

Katie Melua – Album Number 8 and her Ultimate Collection

Ellie Goulding – Brightest Blue

Lisa Hannigan with the hypnotic At Swim

Mike Oldfield with Tubular Bells II

And I thought I had the Per Aspera soundtrack, apparently not ! (I think I was going to evaluate it in game before buying).

Time to disappear into a book now for me. Be well, stay safe.

Advent 2020 Day 1 – To Mars via A-Wing ?

Hello everyone,

It begins … And it seems, as always, where there is a plan, there is a plan that’s undoubtedly going to change immediately ! The Advent Plan this year is going to include the Star Wars Lego Stuff (the calendar looked great this year and had an excellent start) and games. But I’m going to deviate slightly from that already. What’s behind day 1 ?

There we go. Usual suspects in there (covering up the wall !), plus one I made earlier and today’s model which was a dinky little A Wing. They do marvellous things with the advent calendar models. I think that’s actually a better looking A Wing than the bigger one. I haven’t acquired the Ultimate Collectors Series A Wing though, it’s a bit expensive at £180 and to be honest, with the X Wing game, it wasn’t my favourite ship to fly. Still, nice concept with a pilot ideally placed at the centre of rotation and two massive engines for speed.

What’s the book there ? I have a memorium as part of this post … One of the authors I grew up with died yesterday of covid complications. His name was Ben Bova. I’ve enjoyed quite a lot of his books, although with all authors as prolific as him, the quality does go up and down. It’s a hell of a bibliography and I’m just realising that there are a lot of books to go there that I haven’t read (linky).

Highlights include the Orion series, which started with a lovely concept of a Protagonist and Antagonist who were at opposite ends of their stories. One was stepping forwards in time, the other was stepping backwards. They would meet at certain nexus points in history, where mankind could have died out if not for an intervention. Central to the series were a race of hyperadvanced Creators, who would be our long distant followers (what’s the opposite to Ancestor ?) Ah ha ! Descendants. To ensure their survival, they had to protect their ancestors … and they made Orion their agent. As he goes backwards in time, he learns more about the origins of the conflict and how his feeling about it develop is exceptionally well written. I think the strongest of these was Orion 3, Orion in the Dying Time, which put Orion in the period where the dinosaurs died out and homo sapiens took over. There are events here on a cosmic scale.

And then there’s Orion 2, which saw our character moving through the stories of the sieges of Troy and Jericho with a little bit of Egypt too. He inherits a mercenary band of Hittite Engineers from an Empire that had crumbled to dust as the story begins.

They’re usually great stories of epic adventure and his specialty was near future Earth, such as the story of the first Moon colony and an incredibly tense race to independence in Millennium. There’s also Messianic Nanotechnology in Voyager and … the two Mars books. (I should read the other Grand Tour books at some point).

There have been plenty of Mars books and they tell their tales in their own ways. This time, we have a multinational, multirace crew inhabiting a temporary base on Mars. Bit like The Martian, perhaps double the size. They have Hydrogen fuel cell rovers and power armour. And a precautionary tale for what can happen if your vitamin supply gets neutralised by pure oxygen … One notable thing is that for the second book, Return To Mars, they convert the rovers to Methane because the Hydrogen leaks out (the molecules are too small) which might be a precautionary tale for the moves to fuel cell technology today …

Anyway. Great author, I enjoyed most of the books he wrote (variance in quality is ok !). I’m tempted to read Mars again and I was chuckling away at a Remember story written by R.A. Salvatore that was posted on Farcebook yesterday. Need to read more of his books.

To the game … I’m still addicted to Mars Horizon. Yep.

I left the last Mars Horizon post with the people getting to the Moon …

To the Moon ! Again

I managed to get back there again last night in record time. I’m hunting achievements again … It’s going to be tricky to get all of the achievements but I’m enjoying having them as targets along the way while I play this lovely new game that they’ve given us. It’s a little marvel.

International Space Construction

The graphics are a little simplified and cartoony but they look great and don’t get in the way. You could probably successfully play this game on pretty old hardware and it would still look good. It doesn’t need great graphics to do its thing. The gameplay is very simple as well. You choose the research and the missions and there is a resource token puzzle minigame that determines how well the missions go.

BUGGY !

It gives you these little cutscenes along the way too. I’ve only played Japan and half of NASA so far, so I’m looking forward to seeing the other rockets and devices from ESA, USSR/Russia and China.

Probing

Yes. I will always make that joke given chance.

TINY ROCKET !

This made me chuckle as well. It was a tiny little sampling rocket fired off from a Mars lander, designed to bring Martian surface material back to Earth. Could this happen with our science ? Probably not. I did enjoy seeing it in game though.

Mars Base

A curious base. Bit small for my liking. I think the best starter base I know of for Mars has to be the one in Kim Stanley Robinson’s Red Mars, where engineer Nadia carves out an underground (for radiation protection) base at the landing spot. Of all the stories in the Mars books, that’s the one I enjoyed the most.

The Mars mission in Mars Horizon feels very much one way … but that’s ok for game things. I think the Transit Spacecraft plus Lander Vehicle and Ascent Vehicle model is more like the way to go.

I think that’s it for me for today !

Lovely little A-Wing model;

Sad at the loss of Ben Bova, possibly the author I read most (after Anne McCaffrey) in my teenage/young adult years;

Vastly enjoying Mars Horizon.

Hopefully this will be a good December’s worth of posts and I won’t start burning out on them like I have in previous years …

Stay safe, be well.

(PS I should say a couple of words for the drama in the Vendee Globe over the last couple of days … maybe tomorrow ! Good to see one definitely safe and the other travelling to safety)

Defensive Baking and Speed Running

Hello everyone,

Book today ! Internet spaceships later.

It wasn’t that book. Although after seeing it in my search for a thumbnail today, I kinda want to read that now ! The pic above is The Great Dragon Bake Off by Nicola O’Byrne and here’s the Goodreads link.
Nah, this semi-review is about A Wizard’s Guide to Defensive Baking by T.Kingfisher, aka Ursula Vernon.

After switching to this one after giving up on the tedious Existence (David Brin), this book was a wonderful breath of fresh air. It’s written in a light style and it’s always half a sentence away from an inventive bit of humour that’ll keep you laughing all the way through the book and quite often, bursting out into uncontrollable chuckles.

What’s it about ?

This book is centred around the 14 year old Mona, who lives in a feudal medieval era world blessed by a light touch of magic. Wizards are rare … and our Mona has an affinity for bread and baking. She can make gingerbread men dance and animate dough in various other ways.

However … not all is well in this world …

There’s been a Murder ! This is one of those lovely books that’s extremely well paced. You don’t get bored but happily get drawn gently into a tale of skullduggery and then heroism. It builds to a natural climactic finish too. Quite possibly a bit dark with what one of the characters gets up to … but you probably need a bit of evil to balance all that fluffy goodness.

I think I had all sorts of bread puns lined up when I was talking to someone about this the other day but the internet spaceships thing today has banished them a bit ! Let’s see …

A nice fluffy story. It rises satisfactorily throughout, it tempts with goodness and the humour and characters are the icing on the top. Oh and it’s consistent within itself too, coming out the oven with a lovely texture throughout.

A Wizard’s Guide to Defensive Baking by T.Kingfisher (aka Ursula Vernon) – wonderful book, will definitely be checking out what else she’s come out with. Humour throughout and delicious inventiveness.

Internet spaceships ? I may have to be a bit more careful with these because my body wasn’t liking what I was doing with them today. (Oo-er?)

I left things last time with the Hand of Caledorn doing a different type of mining … After one more quick session, I’ve switched over to Zoomnarr, aka 5K-L4H. That’s Zoomnarr in the picture above. She’s my second Krait Mk II ship, with that type selected because there hasn’t been a record run done with them yet. Mission … head to the Core.

After a little shakedown cruise first. Seen here checking a decidedly second hand science ship.

The speed run thing is to see how quickly you can get from the Sol system to Sagittarius A* at the galactic centre. It’s been done in 86 minutes 57 seconds … in a ship with greater jump range. They’re probably seeing 75-77 light year jumps there, Zoomnarr can do 61.1 light year jumps. I think they have a much craftier route as well than the ones the Spansh plotter gives me.

The things they look for to register runs are 3 screenshots … the one above which proves you started on the same day you arrived (they changed the info in the next one). The time of departure :

There we go. 12.58.00 in the top right. And time of arrival, using the Galaxy Map to prove that you’re at the Core :

This time it’s 16.08.49 in the top left, making the run time 3 hours, 10 minutes and 49 seconds for my fastest time yet. I thought I had a chance of breaking through to under 3 hours but made a few errors at neutron stars :

That was the worst, where I bumped into the exclusion zone which drops you out of hyperspace. To go really far and fast, you drop into the streamers of the neutron stars and that lets you jump 4 times the distance that you would without the boost.

One thing about the trip is that as you get closer to the centre, the star density massively increases. It’s pretty. And I’m definitely liking the new colour scheme.

And another visit to Sagittarius A* ! I think this is the fifth time I’ve been there on this character and it’s still a treat seeing the stars lensing around the monster in the middle there.

But it was time to put the ship to bed and there she is coming to rest in Explorer’s Anchorage. The trip back will be a lot slower and I’ll be checking out places to see as well with a new rover.

Next objective – to have Zoomnarr on screen with Cmdr Drew Wagar’s next Elite tour, starting in October. I should be back in the bubble for that :-).

Hopefully with limbs that have forgiven me by then too ! The speed run play style is a bit reminiscent of MMOs, where you feel pressured to keep at it when you’d normally step away for a moment or take it a bit more chill. I was feeling this trip in my hip (strange I know !) and I’ll have reminders from the arms over the next few days.

But the setting of a new time and the screenshots I’ll get on the way back will make it worth it.

Stay safe everyone, be well.

20 Bookish Questions

Hello everyone,

I just spotted something over at Cyberkitten’s blog and thought I’d join in too. Here’s the link to CK’s answers.

20 Bookish Questions :
One: How many books is too many books in a book series ?
The book after the series ran out of steam. A few cases here … Anne McCaffrey’s Dragonriders of Pern books were excellent … up until the main story was told and the direction was lost. It was flogging the dead horse after that. With David Weber’s Honor Harrington books, these were fantastic in their earlier days when it was all about the space navy action. Where these ran off the rails was the steady escalation into a more political sphere. The politics and espionage were boring and it dragged the stories out way too much.

But with James S.A. Corey’s The Expanse series, I’m wondering if they can finish off their story in the last book … Could be a big book. They’ve been clever with that series too, with it feeling like a trilogy of trilogies, where there’s a time step between books 3 and 4 and another skip between books 6 and 7. The authors will finish The Expanse on Book 9, even though there’s a lot of fan desire to have more books in that universe. I think they have the right of it.

Two: How do you feel about cliffhangers ?
The best cliffhangers are the ones that provide a step or a break between books. The previous book tells its own story to completion and then sets up the scenario for the next book. Done well, a cliffhanger leaves you satisfied and hungry for more. The Expanse books have done this pretty well. Another of Anne McCaffrey’s though (the Freedom’s Landing ending) felt like a padded first book of a set of 4 that could have been just one book.
(Translation – it’s all about the book and the narrative)

Three: Hard cover or paperbacks ?
Paperbacks because they are cheaper and lighter. But … if I’m in a book cave and they have a hard cover copy of a book I’m interested in, I won’t pass up doing the collecting thing just because it’s hardback.

Four: What is your favourite book ?
While it wouldn’t be my Favourite, I keep going back to The Martian. It combines the space scifi that I love with a joyful style. It’s fun to read. The books I’ve enjoyed most over the past year are the first two Murderbot Diaries books by Martha Wells and Fleet of Knives by Gareth L. Powell. Now those two books set up cliffhangers well.

Five: What is your least favourite book ?
Farnham’s Freehold by Heinlein. There are probably others (Rama II) but this one came to mind recently. It’s about a family who dive into their nuclear shelter and find themselves transported to the far future. And then the racism starts … This is possibly the most racist thing I’ve ever read. Heinlein has his great moments … but he also let the fascism out a bit too much and it’s joined here by really offensive racism too.

Six: Love Triangles – Yes or No ?
If it’s good drama, go for it. However, if the book gets mired in the love triangle to the distraction of everything else then I’ll get bored. This is one of the things that drove me away from Rama II. Too much bad interpersonal drama between poor characters. But there’s also a lot of potential for interesting drama here too.

Seven: What was the most recent book you could never finish ?
Rama II by Arthur C. Clarke Gentry Lee. Rendezvous with Rama was an excellent book. It had mystery, it rattled through its story, it kept you interested … and it was over in a flash. 10/10 would consider reading again. However, I abandoned Rama II after over a third of it was tied up in tedium before they set foot on the artifact. I then did a bit of research, finding out about the Gentry Lee thing where someone else wrote it under essentially endorsement.

Eight: What is the book you’re currently reading ?
Existence by David Brin. I’m not too far in so far. Tiredness and the recent heat were keeping me away from reading. But I’ve also not really been engaged with the writing style so far. Early days, must get back to it.

Nine: What is the last book you recommended to someone ?
I think I’ll say “A Big Ship At The End Of The Universe” by Alex White here. I really enjoyed this one too. It’s space fiction again but the New Thing here is that while science is in play, this book is all about the magic in the universe. Oh and motor racing too, plus fun characters. Angry characters, evil ones, good ones, naive ones. I’d definitely recommend this one.

Ten: What is the oldest book you’ve ever read ?
Not sure here. I think it’ll be an H.G. Wells, although I’m having trouble remembering there. H.G. had a gift of writing in such a style as to avoid the danger of having their books appear dated, even now.

Eleven: What is the newest book you’ve read ?
I wonder actually, could be A Big Ship At The End Of The Universe, could be Embers of War. I tend to wait a little until the price has come down. I’ve got a big list of unread books, so it’s rare that I feel that need to immediately pay full price for the newest book. Thinking about it, this could be Tiamat’s Wrath, book 8 in the Expanse series.

Twelve: Who is your favourite author ?
Hmm … I think I’ll put Timothy Zahn here, for what he did for the Star Wars Expanded Universe by giving us a much better set of sequels to the movies than we got in cinema … Oh and there’s also Michael Stackpole and Aaron Allston for their XWing books, James S. A. Corey for their Expanse books, Gareth L. Powell and Martha Wells. There are too many books to lock it down to just one author :-).

Thirteen: Buying or Borrowing Books ?
I’ll happily borrow a book, dive through it and hand it back but I do like to own my own books. It helps the author, probably doesn’t give them much cash but the more people buy their books, the more likely we are to get more books from the author. And more people support artists, the better.

Fourteen: What is the book you dislike that everyone seems to love ?
Hmm … Ignoring that the author seems bent on destroying her own reputation at the moment and intent on turning herself into a pariah, I’d pick Harry Potter. Yep, went there. I couldn’t finish the first book. Perhaps I’d been seeing the issues inherent in her universe before they were brought out and highlighted. Maybe it was thinking Diagon Alley was a name completely lacking in originality rather than something clever or cool. And while I liked the character Luna Lovegood because she was an interesting character, I don’t think the name Lovegood was an appropriate name for a child character in what’s supposed to be a kid’s book. Another one that may have sounded “cool” but … pick something else. It sounded like it was inspired by the names given to Bond Ladies.

Fifteen: Bookmarks or dog ears ?

Thou shalt not dog ear.

Sixteen: What’s a book you can always re-read ?
The Martian, due to the sense of fun running all the way through it. The simple intelligence in how the author develops his character and his answers to the problems he faces. It’s a very enjoyable book to read through.

Seventeen: Can you read and listen to music ?
It’s very rare that I don’t have music on … However, depending on the book, I might not be paying much attention to the music while being enthralled by the book !

Eighteen: One PoV or multiple PoVs ?
This can work really well either way. In The Expanse and Fleet of Knives books, the PoV changes between chapters as the book wraps together threads as seen from the different characters. It works extremely well for those books. However, others work very well from a single PoV, like Starship Troopers or Old Man’s War by John Scalzi.

Nineteen: Do you read a book in one sitting or over multiple days ?
I don’t read fast enough to read a 600 page book in one sitting :-D.

Twenty: Who do you tag ?
Nope. I don’t do that. If you enjoyed reading this as I did with CK’s version, feel free to grab the questions and tag yourself in. But I don’t tag people like that :-).

PS In other news, I did the internet spaceship thing today … I think there’s mixed feelings there. I didn’t have any wrist spasms but I have more stiffness in my shoulder now. Curious …

Books ! And a little bit of buggying around

Hello everyone,

I feel tired ! Dunno why, haven’t exactly been doing that much. Perhaps it’s lack of sleep, or my body getting used to not doing very much. I’ll be out of the house soon though, for more than just stocking up the cupboards again.

Also been doing book … Not just one book as well but two ! Let’s see. It should be through the Google thing by now :

Actual paperback. Perhaps rare in this era of ebooks and Kindles … Signed by the author too :

Big nod. (Yes, that’s my thumb). This was a case of seeing a sequel to a book I’d already read and enjoyed and being content to pay a little more than e-book price in order to support that local bookshop and to get one with a little, superficial aye, extra.

What’s the book about ? It’s the sequel to Embers of War, which sets up this world by introducing the setting and characters which include the spaceship at the centre of this trilogy, the Trouble Dog. After being required to undertake an atrocity that ended a war, she retired from naval service and joined the House of Reclamation, an organisation dedicated to rescue and preservation of life. This middle book sees the Trouble Dog and crew embark on another rescue attempt, this time to jump into the unknown to rescue a ship of salvagers who came a cropper when they attempted to do a bit of illegal salvage on a wandering generation ship.

Oh and all hell is breaking loose in the galaxy while this is going on. I don’t want to say too much more about the plot cos it’ll spoil both this book and the previous book but …

I love the Trouble Dog, she’s a ship with attitude and an avatar that combines smart, tough, sassy and resourcefulness. The book swaps between various characters, with its 400 pages broken up in to 83 chapters which each focus on a central character. The Trouble Dog is the star of her own chapters.
As is Nod, an alien of the Druff race which are innately brilliant engineers. Every ship has a Druff engineer that keeps the ship going. They’re utterly alien, written expertly by the author and lend a welcome change of perspective to the books.
And I like the rest of the human characters too, who all have their own driving characteristics, mental flaws, issues and other quirks that make them and keep them interesting.

This one is very definitely a Middle Book and as such it moves the general plotline on considerably. It doesn’t give an end, Embers of War is definitely the beginning and … I got the last book in the queue to read. I’ll be looking forwards to that one as much as I am looking forward to reading Absolution Gap.

The second book was Artificial Condition, by Martha Wells and it’s book 2 of the Murderbot Diaries. The first comment that always comes out about these books is … HOW MUCH ? The price is a bit too inflated for my liking at £6 for essentially a novella. Still, this one and All Systems Red (book 1) were both captivating reads. The central character just goes by their self given name, Murderbot. They’re a former SecUnit (Security Unit) that’s gone rogue. Except all they want to do is have a chance to peacefully watch as many entertainment serials that they can.

It doesn’t work that way though, so Murderbot ends up on adventures that have gone from pure survival and a start in figuring out the events that made them go rogue. Cos they didn’t just go rogue originally, they were involved in the death of all of the humans in the place it happened.

I’ll be back for more of the Murderbot Diaries. They’re a fun read. Bit quick … but that also means that it’s tight writing that rattles the story along without any more padding than is necessary to tell you what’s going on in Murderbot’s head.

Recommended – both books.

Buggying around ? Internet Spaceships again ! Gotta admit, I’m having to be a little careful with play time because my hand and shoulders are bugging me again but it was good to get back to the populated bubble again and have a little explore. I left it last time at the Hawkins Gap Bases (the spelling is horribly inconsistent I know).

This was a good one to fly by … It’s a ringed planet lit by the local neutron star.

The end of this journey took me to Cortes Base, which has been adopted by a race circuit for intrepid fighter pilots and maybe by pilots of the little ships too. I may have to check that out. I took the buggy in there …

I found a couple of issues along the way, This is a dome on the outside of the base where the foundations don’t quite reach to the ground. I’m actually ok with this, although it reveals some of the magic around how these planetary bases are generated and built in the game. A couple of glitches are ok.

I never gave the birds eye view ! There we go, on approach.

This was the way in and … you may be able to detect another glitch. The ramp doesn’t reach quite all the way to the ground. That’s ok, I had jet boosters let me jump up there :-D. Little bit of creative use of a jump ramp maybe but it was still good to get in there.

And have a little look around. Click for bigger on these by the way.

One fun thing is that the scale is all good. The bases are massive … and in scale. Those windows up there genuinely look like a floor high each and the ground floor doors to that hangar building are scaled correctly for the rover.

Lots to explore too.

Bit quiet out there in the streets … I might have got there a bit late, their time.

Couldn’t get in to the actual base though.

Lots to see in there.

It was getting time for me to put the game to bed as well though …

Another peek from a safe distance and then it was time to be off and make a proper landing.

Outside of the internet spaceships, I’ve been working on a Dwagon Alphabet. I have most of the letters now, although it’ll take a fair bit of tweaking time before I’m happy with them all. People like them though. The first one was a Happy Birthday message for someone which I hope she enjoyed … and then more Dwagon Letters have sprung up from there as I produce them. I’m a fan of the Clip Studio application that I’ve been using, it makes the drawing and editing with the tablet happen very easily.

I think that’s it for tonight though. Stay safe, be well, steer clear of the internet if it’s causing you grief (lots has been coming out into the public eye lately, much of it unhealthy).

Dwagon Alphabet will come later but for now … out take from the excursion !

Landing Autopilot’s been sniffing the rocket fuel again.