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Lol, here's a legit musing: So I was walking home, thinking of that whole Schrodinger's cat thing and the concept of a box in a box, but the second box is also in the first box and a pocket dimension due to my saying to myself (I was thinking about how we were going to have to do a slow, graceful-style dance for school which one of my classmates complained about, wanting to do a fast song)(Also, I talk to myself when I walk home) "There's beauty in grace, and, in a way, there's grace in beauty." I then proceeded to compare that statement to how every .ogg file has a .spx file inside, though not all .spx files have .oggs in them, since if they did they'd be the same bloody file. Then I was like "Oh!" as this thought struck: You could have a box in a box with the other box in the one box if they were both the same box since, in a really F'd up way of thinking, one could say that everything is inside itself. That then started bringing back memories of that one "In Soviet Russia" joke on that Portal vid that was like, "In Soviet Russia, portals enter you. Wrap your head around THAT." and my mind crashed in self-defense, lest my mind wander off and leave my sanity behind. (sanity, what sanity?)
So, about a week ago, I... "acquired" a copy of Melty Blood Act Cadenza Version B which I had... "acquired" at a previous time, but deleted due to my hard drive running low on space and me having lost interest in it at that time.
When I ran the CD, I decided to take a delve into the files of the CD itself, and, since I had learned how to read kana between the first time I installed it and the second, I found out there was a folder there called "omake"(extra). Inside, there were 2 folders.
In the one, there were replays that you could run with the game, though when I ran them using the game, all they seemed to be were the characters staring each other down for a number of seconds with their magic circuits going haywire. I wasn't sure if there was alternate music playing or anything, but anyways, I quickly lost interest in those. So I went ahead and checked the second folder.
It was titled "voice" and had 5 folder and a readme inside. I checked the readme, and it was in Japanese, so I Google Translate'd it, and found out very little that I didn't already infer from what I'd seen. The names of the folders were mostly in kanji and what I understood off the top of my head was that the last one said "mail" and the first 2 had "Windows" in romaji before a couple of kanji characters(I recognized the ones on the fist folder to be "shuuryou"(finish/end)). So I browsed the folders, and found around 10 .wav files inside each one. I started playing them, and was quite psyched to find that they were, in fact, voice clips by the different seiyuu(voice actors). I realized before to long, due to my (limited) knowledge of Japanese, I quickly realized that these were messages relaying the starting of Windows, shutting down of Windows, mail alerts, and various other stuff which I couldn't understand very well. Hence, a little more Google Translate'ing, and I came to understand what the folders were: Windows Shutdown, Windows Startup, Emptying the Trash, Other(not entirely sure about this, but the clips don't seem to have much of a theme...), Mail.
This led me to the realization that you can actually edit the Windows sounds. Needless to say, I was bloody overjoyed. I went into my control panel and changed my sounds with gusto. No longer would a beep greet me as I logged in, but instead the random awesome of Arima Miyako. No longer would I power down with some weird other noise, and instead I'd be seen off to sleep by the lovely voice of Kohaku. My computer now yelled something about a kick in Akiha's voice whenever I plugged in some external device(USB flash drive, printer, etc.), and I was seen off with a "Saraba desu, minna-san! Mata Raishuu~!"(roughly "Bye, everyone! See you next week!" wink whenever said device was unplugged. My trash was now proudly proclaimed in Neko Arc Chaos' voice as having been removed, and, after discovering some settings I could fiddle with with Skype, I'm now greeted "good morning" by Kohaku's voice whenever I sign in to Skype.
So that was all very fun, and I started playing the game again, having lost some, but not all, of my prior skill. (The only character/s I probably retained my skills as were Tohno Shiki and maybe Arcueid.) The game has since occupied the last 3 hours of my consciousness without fail.
I am the form of my post. "Bump" is my body, Memes are my blood. I have posted over a thousand messages. Unknown to ban, nor known to replies. Have withstood pain to revive many threads. Yet, those "bump"s will never say anything. So as I pray, UNLIMITED BUMP WORKS!
134f1n47r33 · Tue Feb 05, 2013 @ 09:02am · 0 Comments |
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I just got finished getting advised by a friend of mine on the art of playing the markets: On buying low, selling high, haggling, calculating cost, gain, profit, the 2% tax, all that stuff. Frankly, most of it flew way over my head and I've decided, at least until I can get a bit more comfortable here and have a bit more starting capital, that I'll just do what I did in Dead Frontier that one month when I had no access to a computer with Unity but still really wanted to play: I'll be a bloody inflammatory bot. I'll buy anything that's sizably cheaper than the next lowest price and sell it for slightly more while still being lower than the next cheapest price. All on the market. No haggling, no socializing, just pure, unadulterated inflation of prices.
Which brings me to the title of this post: The Gaian Economy. I used to play Puzzle Pirates a long time ago, and I was amused at how the economy there was player run and stuff. Now, I hadn't taken an econ class yet at that time or anything, so I didn't realize a lot of the implications of the player-run economy nor of the personal, internal economies of every island. To this day, I still don't, but I can talk a bit more like I do. cat_xp
So coming back here after my, what... 5?, 4?... however many year leave, having also now taken an econ class and seen "Spice and Wolf" and "C: The Money of Soul and Possibility Control," it struck me, mostly due to my friend's lecture, just how developed and economy-esque the economy of the Marketplace is. In fact, it's rather like an entire country's economy. Quite fitting, given the nature of this site, no?
Basically, a normal nation's economy, to my understanding, has money come in and go out and resources and blah blah blah... I really don't remember. What I do remember is how the government, specifically the Fed, F's with the economy to try to keep prices how they want them. Now, there are multiple way this is done, as I remember, including stuff like taxes and business incentives and crap like that, probably, but the one I came to understand most was open market operations.
Basically, "open market ops" means that the government can inject or remove money from the nation's money supply, not by printing money or summat, but rather by buying stuff and selling government crap on the markets, specifically bonds. Now, there's good incentive to buy government bonds, as they're backed by an entire nation's bloody government, so you're most likely going to see the return on your investment. (Though trolling may occur should the value of the money you get back have been effectively fiddled with.)
You see, the normal reason why any person who bought a bond from an organization wouldn't get the return on their investment is if the organization they got it from was physically incapable of paying it back, as the government and law enforcement and such would be all over them if they have any net value left and don't use it to pay off what are essentially their debts to their customer. This would therefore usually only occur as a result of the organization or business or whatever shutting down. The government, however, essentially being a bloody nation, is most likely never not going to be able to pay their bonds back. (though, since they're the ones that keep themselves in check, if it weren't for the power of your vote and taxes, you'd probably never see a penny of that money ever again, what with how morally deficient everyone is these days, myself included)
Now, the way open market ops work in terms of practicality go like this. Market prices, the average price at which an item would go for sale, are affected by the money supply in a supplyXdemand kinda way. Basically, the larger amount of money there is in existence, the less rare it becomes and therefore the less value it has as, though demand is technically insatiable, supply would get closer to meeting it, so the gap between supply and demand lessens, lessening the price. How this works with money: The more money in circulation, the more money you'll need to buy the same thing. So, as prices change, the item's intrinsic value doesn't, only how much the money being used to buy it is worth. What the government does to cause inflation, the addition of money into circulation and the accompanying rise in prices, is buy stuff, injecting the nation's money into businesses and such which will put that money into making stuff, buying stuff, selling stuff, paying off their employees, etc. causing the money to circulate throughout the economy. What the government does to cause deflation, the removing of money from circulation, is sell stuff, (bonds and the like, like I said, like those "war bonds" during WWII, those those were legitly because the .gov needed the cash...) causing the money that was circulating from consumer to seller to worker and back and forth between businesses and stuff to be holed up in the Federal Reserve or summat, lessening the amount of money in circulation and therefore making the remaining money rarer, increasing its value and decreasing the amount value of prices, though you're still paying as much in terms of value.
All this to say, though my train of thought was derailed multiple times there, and I dare not go back and read that burnt waffle from hell, lest my head explode from the sheer volume of fail, Gaia's economy has quite a number of amusing parallels. While workers and plants and such create money IRL, gamers essentially create money in Gaia, and in so doing inflate prices. Every person that joins Gaia brings however much gold they start with into circulation, as well as any and all gold they attain from the system itself through things like games, events, and freebies. While consumers and use and such generally remove money from circulation IRL, stuff like the shops, the 2% tax, and people leaving and leaving their fortunes behind remove money from circulation, thereby deflating prices. Of course, shop prices are fixed, so anything that is sold there's price has to work around that. The admins, via events, freebies, and god-modding, can even work like the government, controlling the economy to suit their whims, within reason.
In addition, Gaia has the amusing added element of time dictating prices. It seems, though this and a majority of what I wrote before are pure speculation, that, like wines and such, the older an item gets, no matter how absolutely meh it may be, the price goes up. Expo-frikkin'-entially. I theorize hypothesize that the reason for crap like that is both the unpredictable whims of the Internet, and inflation bots, such as myself and most of the egregiously wealthy cheapskates on this site. Basically, we cause prices to rise, at a profit. In so doing, we attain money for ourselves by jacking up prices, screwing over anyone that actually wanted those items for more... pure... reasons. Yet the way that the market works here, especially the more underground market of the Exchange, is quite intriguing and beautiful and such...
I have no idea what I just wrote there, as I'm pretty sure I blacked out a few times while typing, (bloody lack of sleep... emotion_facepalm ) but yeah, such is my spiel for this afternoon. If anyone who happens to read this (why would you read this!?) happens to be some kind of 1337 econ buff and could correct some of my terrible wording or whatever, that'd be great. I literally don't remember why I wrote this, what my objective was, etc. at all, and I'm feeling really sleepy all of a sudden, but yeah. I figure it'd be a waste to delete what I've written as there's probably something amusing in there somewhere, not that anyone'd be able to find it... まあぁ、いいか。 With that, I'll end this spiel.
I am the form of my post. "Bump" is my body, Memes are my blood. I have posted over a thousand messages. Unknown to ban, nor known to replies. Have withstood pain to revive many threads. Yet, those "bump"s will never say anything. So as I pray, UNLIMITED BUMP WORKS!
134f1n47r33 · Mon Feb 04, 2013 @ 09:34am · 0 Comments |
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