UT2k4 demo
UT2k4 demo
try it if your system can handle it. onslaught and assault are awesome.
It takes 43 muscles to frown and 17 to smile, but it doesn't take any to just sit there with a dumb look on your face.
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- Tenth Dan Procrastinator
- Posts: 3055
- Joined: Fri Jul 18, 2003 3:02 am
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Heh, usually I don't eat breakfast (big surprise). As for eating the same thing, I left it in the refrigerator and forgot about it. Sigh, guess it's going to get trashed.
Randomness: there was a short thread about the meaning behind "Ordo Rosae Crusis" here:
http://www.xenger.com/~orc/phpBB2/viewtopic.php?t=89
Just curious if the founder saw it and wanted to comment or not.
Randomness: there was a short thread about the meaning behind "Ordo Rosae Crusis" here:
http://www.xenger.com/~orc/phpBB2/viewtopic.php?t=89
Just curious if the founder saw it and wanted to comment or not.
I posted a response to that thread, I'll copy it here for people too lazy to click on that link:
Yeah I learned about it through Umberto Eco's book, "Foucault's Pendulum", which is a really complicated and difficult book to read, but interesting nonetheless. Incidentally that's where I got the name Diotallevi. I wouldn't really recommend it as light reading, but it's worth looking at if you're interested in stuff like history, the occult, occult groups throughout history, group psychology, the use of symbols in the occult, codes, and stuff like that. What makes it difficult to read is that the protagonists in the book often have long conversations that Eco presents verbatim, ranging from philosophical debates to explaining events in history. So after 10 or so pages it's easy to lose track of everything they've said and you're left wondering who said what when and what it means when they say this or that.
I'd recommend "The Name of the Rose" over "Foucault's Pendulum" for people interested in books by Eco. It's set in the period when the popes were in Avignon and deals a lot with theology and other topics that if I mentioned might give away the ending. It's still more difficult to read than mainstream authors like say Tom Clancy or Michael Crichton, but not to the degree that "Foucault's Pendulum" is.
Another book I'd recommend is "The Eight" by Katherine Neville, especially if you like Chess at all. It's much more mainstream and fast paced than Eco's work, but it also deals with occultist groups like the Freemasons and kind of reinterprets history by attributing all kinds of major historical events to occultist motives. Pretty interesting read.
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- Tenth Dan Procrastinator
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I might be able to save you the trouble of picking it up. You or anyone else interested should PM me your email address.Zekmyr wrote:I bought that book for my boss for Christmas, haven't read it myself though. Still trying to find time to finish the Cryptonomicon (which I highly recommend btw). My boss is really into DaVinci though, so I thought he'd like the book. Might have to pick it up myself one of these days.
Zekmyr
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- Tenth Dan Procrastinator
- Posts: 4891
- Joined: Fri Jul 18, 2003 3:09 am
- Location: San Jose, CA
Anyone else?quantus wrote:I might be able to save you the trouble of picking it up. You or anyone else interested should PM me your email address.Zekmyr wrote:I bought that book for my boss for Christmas, haven't read it myself though. Still trying to find time to finish the Cryptonomicon (which I highly recommend btw). My boss is really into DaVinci though, so I thought he'd like the book. Might have to pick it up myself one of these days.
Zekmyr