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A place to discuss topics/games with other webDiplomacy players.
Page 922 of 1419
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Sandgoose (0 DX)
05 Jun 12 UTC
Points to blow
Okay, so I have more points than I'd like to have right now and I'd like to blow them. So, I can go up to 1000, and would be willing to challenge you...the 1000 is final. WTA/ANON/Full -or- Public Press. Message me baby, sandgoose is waiting.........for YOU.... ;D. Come on big boy.
22 replies
Open
1brucben (60 D)
03 Jun 12 UTC
This is DIPLOMACY. Gunboat needs to be BANNED
Gunboat involves no diplomacy at all. We need to ban it or else the game of diplomacy shall be ruined.
35 replies
Open
2ndWhiteLine (2611 D(B))
06 Jun 12 UTC
D-Day
See below.
40 replies
Open
SantaClausowitz (360 D)
06 Jun 12 UTC
Why do men still have to pay?
Question about today's society
141 replies
Open
Disraeli (427 D)
07 Jun 12 UTC
rule question
If all players vote both "draw" and "cancel", does the game draw or cancel?
14 replies
Open
rokakoma (19138 D)
07 Jun 12 UTC
EoG - Bad Players Welcome
6 replies
Open
Zmaj (215 D(B))
06 Jun 12 UTC
Atheists and death
See below.
59 replies
Open
NigeeBaby (100 D(G))
08 Jun 12 UTC
I don't believe this ...... I think it's just Rumours !!
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-18363214
3 replies
Open
smcbride1983 (517 D)
07 Jun 12 UTC
Getting people to talk
I usually get the ball rolling and open up communication with everyone before spring of the first year is over. However, recently I took over for someone and I can't get any dialogue going with the other folks. Any suggestions?
12 replies
Open
NigeeBaby (100 D(G))
07 Jun 12 UTC
A perfect candidate for Site Moderator
......witty, charming, intellectual, tough, fair, honest, resilient, you know who !!
23 replies
Open
Stressedlines (1559 D)
07 Jun 12 UTC
EoG GB 55
gameID=91011

thoughts?
10 replies
Open
The Czech (40398 D(S))
08 Jun 12 UTC
Need a sitter for a live game.
Wife needs me to help her with something. Will be AFK for an hour or so. Other wise a good position gets lost and screws the game for everyone. Please help.
gameID=91026
PM me and I'll tell you which country I am.
0 replies
Open
Stressedlines (1559 D)
07 Jun 12 UTC
can someoen tam,e over this poistion in a gunboat?
http://webdiplomacy.net/board.php?gameID=91011#gamePanel
6 replies
Open
jabberjawsjr (100 D)
30 May 12 UTC
Favorite Italy Openings
What are your favorite Italy openings?
20 replies
Open
SantaClausowitz (360 D)
29 May 12 UTC
Daily Christian Slaughter Thread
Perhaps I'm just glib. I guess I understand that Jesus might want to test his flock by making them martyrs every once in a while, but why would he allow them to massacre innocents in his name? This thread will explore this question, semi daily.
145 replies
Open
abgemacht (1076 D(G))
06 Jun 12 UTC
Buying a Truck
So, I'm thinking of buying a truck with my parents to help them with yard work. It will mostly be for picking up mulch and trees, bringing the lawnmowers for maintenance, and I'd like to use it to plow their driveway. I'm thinking a Ford Ranger from '95-'00. Thoughts?
51 replies
Open
NKcell (0 DX)
07 Jun 12 UTC
Pausing a game
Hey, the game I'm in ( gameID=87777 ) has an austria leaving until sunday...everyone hit pause except turkey, who has one SC left and is taking advantage of the situation. Any way we can force pause this game?
22 replies
Open
dave bishop (4694 D)
05 Jun 12 UTC
Diplomacy App?
See below.
26 replies
Open
SpeakerToAliens (147 D(S))
07 Jun 12 UTC
What's the record for unclaimed neutral SCs?
In 2 different games:-
Greece still neutral in autumn 03.
Tunis still neutral in spring 05.
9 replies
Open
obiwanobiwan (248 D)
06 Jun 12 UTC
Ray Bradbury Dies
http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/lookout/science-fiction-author-ray-bradbury-dies-144137431.html
inb4essay
obiwanobiwan (248 D)
06 Jun 12 UTC
Time to shed some Martian tears... :/
Aw man. He was a very talented author.
Zmaj (215 D(B))
06 Jun 12 UTC
He was a giant. Despite his fame, I'd still say he was underrated.
loowkey (132 D)
06 Jun 12 UTC
no words just sadness i read
Celticfox (100 D(B))
06 Jun 12 UTC
This makes me really sad. He was such an amazing writer and so many people tend to forget he wrote more then just Fahrenheit 451.
Draugnar (0 DX)
06 Jun 12 UTC
The Martian Chronicles... One of the best books ever written. RIP Mr. B. You were one of the first Sci Fi authors I read and I became hopelessly addicted because of you.
SacredDigits (102 D)
06 Jun 12 UTC
I hate to say this, but I honestly thought he had died a few years ago and was astonished by this news not because of his death, but because he was still alive yesterday.
Welcome to the parallel universe, SD.
Draugnar (0 DX)
06 Jun 12 UTC
I thought Richard Dawson had already passed and was shocked when he died the other day in much the same way, SD.
bo_sox48 (5202 DMod(G))
06 Jun 12 UTC
One of the great authors ever if you ask me. One of the few whose books and stories I can remember years later. He and Jack London - maybe Cormac McCarthy - are the only ones that fall into that category for me.
obiwanobiwan (248 D)
06 Jun 12 UTC
What Bradbury story does everyone remember most?

For me, it's in "Martian Chronicles" (I think it's in there) and I don't remember the title...

But it's about someone who's built this crazy Gothic mansion on Mars with all these robots, and he invites people over...and this guy was a huge fan of Edgar Allan Poe, but all books have been banned now, and he invites the people who banned these books to his mansion...

One thing leads to another, and they die in his mansion, which is like the House of Usher, and they're killed by his robots and house and all that in a very Poe way, and the Poe fan says something like "You banned Mr. Poe without even reading him...and you should've, because, if you had...you'd realize how very Poe-ish this is right now and that you're a-gonna die" and boom, he dies.

Something like that, it was a long time ago.
SacredDigits (102 D)
06 Jun 12 UTC
A short story about a house that is fully automated, going through the daily routines of everything it does to meet every need a family of four has and give them as much comfort as possible. Halfway through you begin to suspect something is amiss because the food keeps getting swept away wholly uneaten and such. At the end, you discover that the family got nuked to oblivion along with most of the city but the house keeps at it.
bo_sox48 (5202 DMod(G))
06 Jun 12 UTC
Kaleidoscope from "The Illustrated Man" was one of my favorites. The Veldt wasn't bad either (that's the nursery one, right?).
Draugnar (0 DX)
06 Jun 12 UTC
From Martian Chronicles - April 2005: Usher II

As a fan of both Bradbury and Poe, this is simply my favorite Bradbury story from my favorite Bradbury novel/collection.

Draugnar (0 DX)
06 Jun 12 UTC
@Obi - my favorite, oddly enough, is the one you reference.
The Veldt. http://www.d.umn.edu/~csigler/PDF%20files/bradbury_veldt.pdf
Zmaj (215 D(B))
06 Jun 12 UTC
I love the paranoid ones, like The Town Where No One Got Off, Come Into My Cellar, Fever Dream... there are dozens of them.

Among the TV adaptations of his stories, my favorite episode is not from The Ray Bradbury Theater, but from The Twilight Zone:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5PdVAPd9c8Q


I really liked "A Sound of Thunder" the imagery was vivid. An interesting take on a time travel plot having a hunting expedition to kill dinosaurs an instant before their actual deaths to avoid timeline pollution. I found the T-Rex to be surprising in his description. I wouldn't have thought of the creature in those terms.
obiwanobiwan (248 D)
06 Jun 12 UTC
I'd forgotten A Sound of Thunder, that's another good one, too...with a great, ironic and dark ending, which makes it even better.
Mujus (1495 D(B))
06 Jun 12 UTC
Here's a real-life Bradbury story: I was driving my oldest daughter to the college she was going to attend to hear Bradbury speak (a few years back), and on the way she confesses to me that she didn't pick that college for its academics, but for its inspirational setting. Naturally I because concerned, and told her that she really needed to focus on the academics. She agreed with me, but repeated again what she had told me. Then she started telling me about all these authors she had been reading, many of which I had never heard of! I was somewhat impressed but wondered if she had been neglecting some of the accepted canon of great writers (she hadn't). Finally, she told me that she was really happy to be writing mostly poetry with an occasional short story. Since she wanted to make a living by writing, however, I recommended that she focus on writing a novel because there's no money in poetry and short stories. She agreed with me, but said that it just felt right to focus on poetry and short stories. I drove on, despairing of my teenage daughter's lack of practical responsibility, but not wanting to complain about it either, and we eventually arrived in the hall where Bradbury was going to speak. So eventually, out toddles this decrepit-looking old man with a shock of white hair, approaching the podium with baby steps and using a four-footed cane to help get him there. The whole room was quiet, with a lot of us holding our breaths and wondering if he was going to live long enough to get to the podium, and if he would get there without falling! But as soon as he started to speak, out boomed this hugely loud, authoritative voice as he started his presentation by saying "A college degree is highly overrated. You need to be some place that inspires you!" I snuck a look sidewise at my daughter, who was absolutely enraptured by this man. In the course of his amazingly informative and educational presentation, Bradbury went on to say, "People under thirty have no business writing a novel. They don't have enough life experience. Write a poem a day and a short story a week, and in one to three years, you might have something worth publishing." I was boggled at the fact that my daughter had instinctively known this. Finally, he rattled off a list of authors and books that aspiring writers should be reading, including several of those my daughter had mentioned on the drive in. At age 15 she instinctively knew more about writing than I would ever know. After the talk, Ray Bradbury sat in the foyer at the back of the room and autographed books, and my daughter asked if she could kiss him (on the cheek), which she did, as they both beamed.
The next time I heard him speak he was in a wheel chair, and the presentation was somewhat shorter but still amazing, in which he mentioned how life is short, how he always looked forward to a kiss from beautiful young ladies, and how he would be available at the end of the program if anyone should wish to get an autograph or give him a kiss.
Mujus (1495 D(B))
06 Jun 12 UTC
Correction: "Naturally I became concerned...."
Mujus (1495 D(B))
06 Jun 12 UTC
Correction: "at age 16" (I guess I'm not much of a writer!)
iMurk789 (100 D)
07 Jun 12 UTC
This did make me sad at first too, but the more I thought about it the more I realized that we should celebrate that we were gifted enough to have such a talented and prolific writer produce so much quality material over the course of his life. That's not too mention that he did live a long, most likely very fulfilling life. I bet he died happily and very content with his time here on Earth.
obiwanobiwan (248 D)
07 Jun 12 UTC
"Then she started telling me about all these authors she had been reading, many of which I had never heard of!"

Damn it, Mujus, now I have to ask...

Who was she reading?

And that's a great speech by Bradbury (jealous you got to see him in person) and pretty spot on...

I try and write everything...and I probably write garbage (I've never yet gotten a single thing accepted) but you have to keep at it and keep writing continuously to get better (or, in my case, to set new records for Length and Futility on an online forum.)

Your daughter sounds like a very bright person...and probably a lot truer a person than I, so kudos to her and best of luck in her writing endeavors (but really, I have to know, out of curiosity, what she was reading, as now I'm trying to think up authors who might not make the "accepted canon" from Austen to Dickens to Shakespeare to Tolstoy, who might appeal to a teenage girl aspiring to be a writer, and who Ray Bradbury would endorse...) :)
Mujus (1495 D(B))
07 Jun 12 UTC
I don't remember, but I'll ask her. :-)
Here's a piece that ran yesterday in the Guardian by Neil Gaiman, another author I enjoy, about his friend Ray Bradbury:

Yesterday afternoon I was in a studio recording an audiobook version of a short story I had written for Ray Bradbury's 90th birthday. It's a monologue called The Man Who Forgot Ray Bradbury, and was a way of talking about the impact that Ray Bradbury had on me as a boy, and as an adult, and, as far as I could, about what he had done to the world. And I wrote it last year as a love letter and as a thank you and as a birthday present for an author who made me dream, taught me about words and what they could accomplish, and who never let me down as a reader or as a person as I grew up.

Last week, at dinner, a friend told me that when he was a boy of 11 or 12 he met Ray Bradbury. When Bradbury found out that he wanted to be a writer, he invited him to his office and spent half a day telling him the important stuff: if you want to be a writer, you have to write. Every day. Whether you feel like it or not. That you can't write one book and stop. That it's work, but the best kind of work. My friend grew up to be a writer, the kind who writes and supports himself through writing.

Ray Bradbury was the kind of person who would give half a day to a kid who wanted to be a writer when he grew up.

I encountered Ray Bradbury's stories as a boy. The first one I read was Homecoming, about a human child in a world of Addams Family-style monsters, who wanted to fit in. It was the first time anyone had ever written a story that spoke to me personally. There was a copy of The Silver Locusts (the UK title of The Martian Chronicles) knocking about my house. I read it, loved it, and bought all the Bradbury books I could from the travelling bookshop that set up once a term in my school. I learned about Poe from Bradbury. There was poetry in the short stories, and it didn't matter that I was missing so much as a boy: what I took from the stories was enough.

Some authors I read and loved as a boy disappointed me as I aged. Bradbury never did. His horror stories remained as chilling, his dark fantasies as darkly fantastic, his science fiction (he never cared about the science, only about the people, which was why the stories worked so well) as much of an exploration of the sense of wonder, as they had when I was a child.

He was a good writer, and he wrote well in many disciplines. He was one of the first science fiction writers to escape the "pulp" magazines and to be published in the "slicks". He wrote scripts for Hollywood films. Good films were made from his novels and stories. Long before I was a writer, Bradbury was one of the writers that other writers aspired to become. And none of them ever did.

A Ray Bradbury story meant something on its own – it told you nothing about what the story would be about, but it told you about atmosphere, about language, about some sort of magic escaping into the world. Death is a Lonely Business, his detective novel, is as much a Bradbury story as Something Wicked This Way Comes or Fahrenheit 451 or any of the horror, or science fiction, or magical realism, or realism you'll find in the short story collections. He was a genre on his own, and on his own terms. A young man from Waukegan, Illinois, who went to Los Angeles, educated himself in libraries, and wrote until he got good, then transcended genre and became a genre of one; often emulated, absolutely inimitable.

I met him first when I was a young writer and he was in the UK for his 70th birthday celebrations, held at the Natural History Museum. We became friends in an odd, upside-down way, sitting beside each other at book-signings, at events. I would be there when Ray spoke in public over the years. Sometimes I'd introduce him to the audience. I was the master of ceremonies when Ray was given his grand master award, by the Science Fiction Writers of America: he told them about a child he had watched, teased by his friends for wanting to enter a toy shop because they said it was too young for him, and how much Ray had wanted to persuade the child to ignore his friends and play with the toys.

He'd speak about the practicalities of a writer's life ("You have to write!" he would tell people. "You have to write every day! I still write every day!") and about being a child inside (he said he had a photographic memory, going back to babyhood, and perhaps he did) about joy, about love.

He was kind, and gentle, with that midwestern niceness that's a positive thing rather than an absence of character. He was enthusiastic, and it seemed that that enthusiasm would keep him going forever. He genuinely liked people. He left the world a better place, and left better places in it: the red sands and canals of Mars, the midwestern Halloweens and small towns and dark carnivals. And he kept writing.

"Looking back over a lifetime, you see that love was the answer to everything," Ray said once, in an interview.

He gave people so many reasons to love him. And we did.


27 replies
Crazy Anglican (1067 D)
06 Jun 12 UTC
Vote only : Please like the first quote in this thread if...
You believe in some sort of God or higher power. You do not have to attend church or consider yourself part of any particular religion.
22 replies
Open
Stressedlines (1559 D)
07 Jun 12 UTC
LIve WTA GB 26
gameID=90953 Actually an interesting game, with only one CD late by Germany.

Otherwise, well played, and I was not sure things would ever unlock in the south.
2 replies
Open
Ethanol (1780 D)
05 Jun 12 UTC
Looking for sitter
Hi there.
I've to go on a buisness trip next 1.5 week were i will not be able to access to the internet and check Diplomacy.
Would there be a possibility to find someone take care on my few games.
8 replies
Open
Dernwine (370 D)
07 Jun 12 UTC
Game Babysitter needed
I'm going away with unreliable internet access for a few weeks and need someone to baby sit my account for me if possible...
1 reply
Open
Thucydides (864 D(B))
06 Jun 12 UTC
Strong Persia position open
The other players need a replacement as the last guy was MIA for a while, anyone want to help them out? They've been very patient. gameID=89404
3 replies
Open
NigeeBaby (100 D(G))
07 Jun 12 UTC
gameID=90882 EOG - Play Hard & Ready Up You Spas
Any chance of an EOG here from Germany & England .& Italy......
0 replies
Open
dubmdell (556 D)
07 Jun 12 UTC
If a mod could check the email regarding a pause
Within the next three hours. Thanks.
0 replies
Open
DiploMerlin (245 D)
07 Jun 12 UTC
Cutting off support from countries with two coasts
Does a single attack from a fleet on a two coast country cut off support from either coast?
3 replies
Open
Mujus (1495 D(B))
07 Jun 12 UTC
Debate on Debate Threads
This is a new thread where people can debate how the debate threads should be run. Whenever anyone feels like going meta, here's the venue. :-0
5 replies
Open
dubmdell (556 D)
06 Jun 12 UTC
Could a mod check the email?
A matter of small importance, if you could take a moment. Thank you.
2 replies
Open
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