Also, the dude just beat seven suppression stones. He’s allowed some quirks.
(PS: Your CAPTCHA kinda sucks. First it says I got it wrong (which I’m pretty sure I was right, even minding case of letters, then asking for a new one reset the comment box. Not a big comment, so not a big deal, but still really annoying. And this new captcha is just evil. Starts off with a face: “8D”. -_-)
I know, I know, I’ve been meaning to figure out a new solution, since this CAPTCHA is no longer keeping spam out for me (I’ve been manually deleting stuff for months now). After the holidays I’ll knuckle down and iron out a spam solution.
Switch to Disqus.
I had some great spam filters before, but ever since I switched to Disqus, I have had literally NOTHING from spam. And that was over a year ago.
You can import all your old comments, too. And Disqus is great for readers; you can easily control notifications when someone replies to a comment, and you can edit your comments.
If you need help with the plug-in, join the Webcomic Creators group on facebook and ask on there. I and others can help.
Well, actually, his doodling is school work. He got the assignment from his bard class that he should express himself in some way, and he said he doodled, so the bard teacher told him to do that more as his “homework” to help him express his artistic side or something.
So actually, our hero had a good comeback if only he had bothered to think about it a little.
When paying attention to something that doesn\’t really capture my attention, my mind tends to wander and I lose focus on it. But by engaging in idle activity, I can keep my mind from wandering and if this activity doesn\’t take much thought, I can then more easily focus on what I want to be paying attention to and pick up on what\’s important. As such, when I was in school, doodling and, in my case, playing calculator games actually helped me to pay attention in class.
Different people, different methods….
Also, the dude just beat seven suppression stones. He’s allowed some quirks.
(PS: Your CAPTCHA kinda sucks. First it says I got it wrong (which I’m pretty sure I was right, even minding case of letters, then asking for a new one reset the comment box. Not a big comment, so not a big deal, but still really annoying. And this new captcha is just evil. Starts off with a face: “8D”. -_-)
I know, I know, I’ve been meaning to figure out a new solution, since this CAPTCHA is no longer keeping spam out for me (I’ve been manually deleting stuff for months now). After the holidays I’ll knuckle down and iron out a spam solution.
Switch to Disqus.
I had some great spam filters before, but ever since I switched to Disqus, I have had literally NOTHING from spam. And that was over a year ago.
You can import all your old comments, too. And Disqus is great for readers; you can easily control notifications when someone replies to a comment, and you can edit your comments.
If you need help with the plug-in, join the Webcomic Creators group on facebook and ask on there. I and others can help.
Well, actually, his doodling is school work. He got the assignment from his bard class that he should express himself in some way, and he said he doodled, so the bard teacher told him to do that more as his “homework” to help him express his artistic side or something.
So actually, our hero had a good comeback if only he had bothered to think about it a little.
I’ll just leave this link here… http://www.bardsworth.com/?comic=separation-of-the-classes
😉
No, no, Kris, Mike really does learn from doodling. For instance, he learned not to doodle Professor Merrit in a bikini….
When paying attention to something that doesn\’t really capture my attention, my mind tends to wander and I lose focus on it. But by engaging in idle activity, I can keep my mind from wandering and if this activity doesn\’t take much thought, I can then more easily focus on what I want to be paying attention to and pick up on what\’s important. As such, when I was in school, doodling and, in my case, playing calculator games actually helped me to pay attention in class.