JustMeJosh
JustMeJosh
JustMeJosh

I'm disappointed by the (comparatively) mundane middle name. Better choices would include "Eats," "Poops" or "Ismadeof."

I got that too, but once I logged into my [Battle.net] account again, it worked fine.

Curse you, Error 37.

Apparently. Maybe their problem isn't that they do too much, but rather that they don't advertise any of it.

I would imagine fan demand is driving the decision as well. There were many times as I read the books that I wished I had the recipe for a dish the narrator described.

Of course, then I reply to your comment and it posts four copies of my reply and then logs me out, so...

That's been my experience so far—I converted a few days ago via Twitter and have remained logged in.

That's been my experience so far—I converted a few days ago via Twitter and have remained logged in.

That's been my experience so far—I converted a few days ago via Twitter and have remained logged in.

That's been my experience so far—I converted a few days ago via Twitter and have remained logged in.

It wasn't half bad. A little slow for the first 15 minutes, but the twist at the end is totally worth the wait. By the way, I changed our user name. Also, stay home next Tuesday.

Beyond the Wall

"I'm not a cr...well, OK, I am a crook, but I also have a volcano lair and a death ray, so vote for me!"

Nothing from Blizzard, but I was invited to hook up for sex and received several strong leads on enhancements for what's in my pants, so it wasn't a total loss.

Not tonight, honey. My testicles have a headache.

Is there evidence that any of these measures actually convince people to buy instead of rent/stream? I get frustrated and annoyed by the delayed release dates, missing extras and locked unrated editions, but never to the point that I put the DVD back in the Netflix sleeve and drive to Wal-Mart. I assume the studios

"The scientists have the viruses locked up tight for now..."

"The app, appropriately called WalkSafe"

I'd also buy that for my "kid's" room without hesitation.

I didn't really start enjoying it until about the last quarter of the book. As I read through the first two-thirds I kept thinking that Grossman didn't care about Brakebills—he was just going through the motions of exposition so he could finally tell his version of the Narnia story (which is worth the wait, by the