The Sky is Falling Complaint Thread

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  • SilverGirlSilverGirl Posts: 2,820

    Non-complaint: little dude loved his birthday presents. 

    complaint: new things are wonderful, but overwhelming. We only opened two of them, and the rest of the day has been so, so hard for him to handle. I hate how much he has to struggle for things that come so easily to others. I wish joy didn't so often come with such a high price tag for him.

  • TSasha SmithTSasha Smith Posts: 27,243

    Is auto save feature in the publuc beta release?

    is beta the software term but betta the fish?

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  • scorpioscorpio Posts: 8,533

    Sfariah D said:

    Is auto save feature in the publuc beta release?

    is beta the software term but betta the fish?

    You would be better off asking that in a more relevant thread, the first part anyway; if of course its actually a question you are looking for an answer to.

    https://www.daz3d.com/forums/discussion/706001/daz-studio-4-23-0-x-general-release#latest

    or

    https://www.daz3d.com/forums/discussion/714281/daz-studio-beta-version-4-23-1-40#latest ;

  • LeatherGryphonLeatherGryphon Posts: 12,084
    edited March 8

    Complaint:  Potato overload:  I'd cleaned and sliced up all my potatoes on hand for the casserole.  (I had to use them up, they were getting soft.)  But didn't have enough makings (soup & flour) for enough sauce for two casserole dishes (3-qt & 2-qt).  So, I was left with a lot of raw sliced potatoes and put them in an airtight container for breakfast scrambles.   That and my 3-quart container of casserole is going to give me the potato pouts from having to eat so many potatoes during the next week.  The casserole would last for a week in the refrigerator but the sliced potatoes will oxidize & turn brown quickly.  I may have to have potatoes for snacks at mid-day.  Ug... too many potatoes.indecision

    Turns out my sauce was a little too thick.  Perhaps the ratio should be 3 soup cans to 1.5 cans of milk.  But if the sauce is too thin, the casserole is runny.  I like it to hold a shape.enlightened  If I'd done everything right I would have offered the smaller casserole to the neighbors, or repacked it into individual servings and frozen it.  Guess what I had for breakfast.  And guess what I'm having for lunch and supper tonight.  Yes, potatoes.devil

    If I'd had another can of mushroom soup, the quantity of sauce would have been just about right for a total of 5-qts of casserole.  As it was, the 3-qt dish was too full and overflowed in the oven.  But didn't overflow the aluminum foil I'd placed underneath it which made cleanup a snap.enlightened

    Post edited by LeatherGryphon on
  • NylonGirlNylonGirl Posts: 2,203

    Another tragedy avoided in the Too Many Potatoes Are Betta Than Not Saving Your DAZ Studio Scenes Complaint Thread.

  • richardandtracyrichardandtracy Posts: 7,113
    Remember salty water slows or stops the rate at which cut potatoes go brown. I use 1-2 TSP of salt per casserole dish of water. Works for cut apples for a couple of hours too. Regards, Richard.
  • LeatherGryphonLeatherGryphon Posts: 12,084
    edited March 8

    Solved the excess raw potatoes situation.  Diced the sliced up potatoes, fried them with vegetable oil and butter, salt, pepper, diced mushrooms, diced ham, a third of a can of leftover corned beef hash, and packaged them into a tupperwearish container.  Instant breakfast for a couple days, just add microwaves.enlightened

    Post edited by LeatherGryphon on
  • TSasha SmithTSasha Smith Posts: 27,243

    Mir ist kalt und ich bin müde.

  • Charlie JudgeCharlie Judge Posts: 13,242

    Sfariah D said:

    Mir ist kalt und ich bin müde.

     Dann geh ins Bett und zieh viele Decken an.

  • GordigGordig Posts: 10,599

    Since the thread dedicated to this topic was closed, I just did a store search for Xochil, and I got nine pages of results, not one of which was the character which is probably the only page in the entire store with that particular sequence of characters.

  • LeatherGryphonLeatherGryphon Posts: 12,084

    Non-complaint:  It's that time of year again.  The winter clouds are gone, the Robins are back and pecking at the exposed grass amongst the remaining snow patches, the sun has moved around to the narrow spot where it shines through my kitchen window in the morning, and I'm up at the right time to see spectrums on my white refrigerator from the prisms in my kitchen window.  Wheee... Spring, and color.smiley

  • DanaTADanaTA Posts: 13,333
    edited March 9

    LeatherGryphon said:

    Non-complaint:  It's that time of year again.  The winter clouds are gone, the Robins are back and pecking at the exposed grass amongst the remaining snow patches, the sun has moved around to the narrow spot where it shines through my kitchen window in the morning, and I'm up at the right time to see spectrums on my white refrigerator from the prisms in my kitchen window.  Wheee... Spring, and color.smiley

    We always have Robins around here.  The ones that go south for the winter get replaced by a heartier bunch that come down from Canada.  Strange that you don't have the same.  I'm in Massachusetts, not that far from you, latitudinally. 

    Post edited by DanaTA on
  • TSasha SmithTSasha Smith Posts: 27,243
    edited March 10

    I am sick of being judged wrongly.  I was called a bigot and another offensive term for asking a question. I was honestly curious why one thing was related to another.  I asked politely but I got responses with barely veiled profanity and name calling.

    I don't like being coerced into accepting an ideology or whatever they call the thought patterns they think.

    I don't want to go into detail though.  My complaint isn't which ideology they think is true or not but being bullied because I dared questioned their ideology and bullied because of it."

    Post edited by frank0314 on
  • Richard HaseltineRichard Haseltine Posts: 107,945

    DanaTA said:

    LeatherGryphon said:

    Non-complaint:  It's that time of year again.  The winter clouds are gone, the Robins are back and pecking at the exposed grass amongst the remaining snow patches, the sun has moved around to the narrow spot where it shines through my kitchen window in the morning, and I'm up at the right time to see spectrums on my white refrigerator from the prisms in my kitchen window.  Wheee... Spring, and color.smiley

    We always have Robins around here.  The ones that go south for the winter get replaced by a heartier bunch that come down from Canada.  Strange that you don't have the same.  I'm in Massachusetts, not that far from you, latitudinally. 

    Robins are not migratory, the faux robins you have in the US may well be.

  • LeatherGryphonLeatherGryphon Posts: 12,084

    DanaTA said:

    LeatherGryphon said:

    Non-complaint:  It's that time of year again.  The winter clouds are gone, the Robins are back and pecking at the exposed grass amongst the remaining snow patches, the sun has moved around to the narrow spot where it shines through my kitchen window in the morning, and I'm up at the right time to see spectrums on my white refrigerator from the prisms in my kitchen window.  Wheee... Spring, and color.smiley

    We always have Robins around here.  The ones that go south for the winter get replaced by a heartier bunch that come down from Canada.  Strange that you don't have the same.  I'm in Massachusetts, not that far from you, latitudinally. 

    During winter the Robins almost go away.  Perhaps it's the "heartier bunch" from Canada that I see rarely, but mostly it's Sparrows, Blue Jays, Cardinals, Chicadees, and Crows.  But in Spring, flocks of Robins come back and become de-facto lawn service teams, fluffing up the grass and extracting bugs. 

    When I lived in Florida with my aunt, we had a big lawn out the back side of the house and would get flocks of Ibis strutting around, duitifully piercing the ground and pecking bugs.  When that would happen I'd call out to my Aunt and say "Your lawn service is back".

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  • TSasha SmithTSasha Smith Posts: 27,243

    Why is there a bottle of root beer infront of my tv?  Now I am wondering do I want a cup of root beer or a root beer float?

  • TSasha SmithTSasha Smith Posts: 27,243

    oops.  I was going to do something but I forgot what it was.

  • TJohnTJohn Posts: 11,339

  • SilverGirlSilverGirl Posts: 2,820

    LeatherGryphon said:

    DanaTA said:

    We always have Robins around here.  The ones that go south for the winter get replaced by a heartier bunch that come down from Canada.  Strange that you don't have the same.  I'm in Massachusetts, not that far from you, latitudinally. 

    During winter the Robins almost go away.  Perhaps it's the "heartier bunch" from Canada that I see rarely, but mostly it's Sparrows, Blue Jays, Cardinals, Chicadees, and Crows.  But in Spring, flocks of Robins come back and become de-facto lawn service teams, fluffing up the grass and extracting bugs. 

    I don't think I've ever seen a robin in the winter. Which is weird, because you never really see them leave, like the ducks and geese... they're just gone, and then all of a sudden they're back. I grew up next to a park reserve, so the diversity of wildlife in my mom's backyard feeding station is pretty impressive, but still no winter robins. 

    (They even have a bear that wanders through the neighborhood sometimes. To my knowledge it's never really bothered anyone. Their next door neighbor, on the other hand, had a SWAT team called on him. My folks just looked up from watching TV and there were officers in SWAT gear running across their back yard. Police came to my parents' door and told them to stay away from walls on that side of the house in case of stray bullets. So I laughed pretty hard when that "which would you rather" question went around last year.)

  • butterflyfishbutterflyfish Posts: 1,482

    SilverGirl said:

    LeatherGryphon said:

    DanaTA said:

    We always have Robins around here.  The ones that go south for the winter get replaced by a heartier bunch that come down from Canada.  Strange that you don't have the same.  I'm in Massachusetts, not that far from you, latitudinally. 

    During winter the Robins almost go away.  Perhaps it's the "heartier bunch" from Canada that I see rarely, but mostly it's Sparrows, Blue Jays, Cardinals, Chicadees, and Crows.  But in Spring, flocks of Robins come back and become de-facto lawn service teams, fluffing up the grass and extracting bugs. 

    I don't think I've ever seen a robin in the winter. Which is weird, because you never really see them leave, like the ducks and geese... they're just gone, and then all of a sudden they're back. I grew up next to a park reserve, so the diversity of wildlife in my mom's backyard feeding station is pretty impressive, but still no winter robins. 

    (They even have a bear that wanders through the neighborhood sometimes. To my knowledge it's never really bothered anyone. Their next door neighbor, on the other hand, had a SWAT team called on him. My folks just looked up from watching TV and there were officers in SWAT gear running across their back yard. Police came to my parents' door and told them to stay away from walls on that side of the house in case of stray bullets. So I laughed pretty hard when that "which would you rather" question went around last year.)

    I've seen winter robins, but I'm also in Massachusetts, so maybe they just like it here. laugh 

    We also get the occasional black bear or moose wandering through. No SWAT teams (so far), though. Yikes!

  • TSasha SmithTSasha Smith Posts: 27,243

    I was looking at Paramount Plus app on my xumo streaming device.  I decided to give Watson a chance.  The main character Dr Watson is trying to solve what is causing mystery illness in patients.  It seems to be simiar to House.

    In the show, Dr Watson just lost a dear friend.  Without looking it up, can you guess the friend's name?  Hint Dr Watson is based on a character in a certain book series, but his friend is the titular character in the books.

  • Charlie JudgeCharlie Judge Posts: 13,242

    Sfariah D said:

    I was looking at Paramount Plus app on my xumo streaming device.  I decided to give Watson a chance.  The main character Dr Watson is trying to solve what is causing mystery illness in patients.  It seems to be simiar to House.

    In the show, Dr Watson just lost a dear friend.  Without looking it up, can you guess the friend's name?  Hint Dr Watson is based on a character in a certain book series, but his friend is the titular character in the books.

    Your clues are too easy. It is Sherlock Holmes who dies in the CBS series "Watson". Do I win the prize?

  • TSasha SmithTSasha Smith Posts: 27,243
    edited March 10

    Charlie Judge said:

    Sfariah D said:

    I was looking at Paramount Plus app on my xumo streaming device.  I decided to give Watson a chance.  The main character Dr Watson is trying to solve what is causing mystery illness in patients.  It seems to be simiar to House.

    In the show, Dr Watson just lost a dear friend.  Without looking it up, can you guess the friend's name?  Hint Dr Watson is based on a character in a certain book series, but his friend is the titular character in the books.

    Your clues are too easy. It is Sherlock Holmes who dies in the CBS series "Watson". Do I win the prize?

    Congratulations!  You won a free copy of Genesis 9 Starter Essentials.  You also get all the items found in this secret link 

    also you get everything listed on this page without paying anything new.

    Post edited by TSasha Smith on
  • DanaTADanaTA Posts: 13,333

    Richard Haseltine said:

    DanaTA said:

    LeatherGryphon said:

    Non-complaint:  It's that time of year again.  The winter clouds are gone, the Robins are back and pecking at the exposed grass amongst the remaining snow patches, the sun has moved around to the narrow spot where it shines through my kitchen window in the morning, and I'm up at the right time to see spectrums on my white refrigerator from the prisms in my kitchen window.  Wheee... Spring, and color.smiley

    We always have Robins around here.  The ones that go south for the winter get replaced by a heartier bunch that come down from Canada.  Strange that you don't have the same.  I'm in Massachusetts, not that far from you, latitudinally. 

    Robins are not migratory, the faux robins you have in the US may well be.

    Pardon, but I'm sure that he was talking about the American Robin, which is a migratory bird.  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_robin    These do not have a British accent.  wink  But there is nothing faux about them, they are very real.  I see them every day!

  • kyoto kidkyoto kid Posts: 41,847
    edited March 10

    DanaTA said:

    LeatherGryphon said:

    Non-complaint:  It's that time of year again.  The winter clouds are gone, the Robins are back and pecking at the exposed grass amongst the remaining snow patches, the sun has moved around to the narrow spot where it shines through my kitchen window in the morning, and I'm up at the right time to see spectrums on my white refrigerator from the prisms in my kitchen window.  Wheee... Spring, and color.smiley

    We always have Robins around here.  The ones that go south for the winter get replaced by a heartier bunch that come down from Canada.  Strange that you don't have the same.  I'm in Massachusetts, not that far from you, latitudinally. 

    ...we rarely have robins in the central city. Mostly pigeons and crows, lots and lots of crows that fill the sky just around sunset like a scène from Hitchcock's The Birds.

    Where i am there is a small wetland park which is frequented by ducks in the spring an dearly summer who nest in the cattails and reeds.  Often it is not unusual to see a mom duck and her ducklings in he pond. Occasionally I've seen a blue Heron wading in the pond as well.

     

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  • TJohnTJohn Posts: 11,339

    Batman has a Robin.

    Robins are around in early Spring here. The bluebirds show up about the same time.

  • kyoto kidkyoto kid Posts: 41,847

    ...hoping that McGyver and his family are OK given the wildfires on Long Island.  

  • richardandtracyrichardandtracy Posts: 7,113

    TJohn said:

    It's impossible to waste a weekend when you have a kitten. You don't often get much done, but it's never wasted. 

    Regards,

    Richard

  • LeatherGryphonLeatherGryphon Posts: 12,084
    edited March 10

    TJohn said:

    Batman has a Robin.

    Robins are around in early Spring here. The bluebirds show up about the same time.

    These Bluebirds?  They're also a big manufacturer of American yellow school buses. (Yellow bluebirds?indecision)

     

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    Post edited by LeatherGryphon on
  • LeatherGryphonLeatherGryphon Posts: 12,084
    edited March 10

    butterflyfish said:

    SilverGirl said:

    LeatherGryphon said:

    DanaTA said:

    We always have Robins around here.  The ones that go south for the winter get replaced by a heartier bunch that come down from Canada.  Strange that you don't have the same.  I'm in Massachusetts, not that far from you, latitudinally. 

    During winter the Robins almost go away.  Perhaps it's the "heartier bunch" from Canada that I see rarely, but mostly it's Sparrows, Blue Jays, Cardinals, Chicadees, and Crows.  But in Spring, flocks of Robins come back and become de-facto lawn service teams, fluffing up the grass and extracting bugs. 

    I don't think I've ever seen a robin in the winter. Which is weird, because you never really see them leave, like the ducks and geese... they're just gone, and then all of a sudden they're back. I grew up next to a park reserve, so the diversity of wildlife in my mom's backyard feeding station is pretty impressive, but still no winter robins. 

    (They even have a bear that wanders through the neighborhood sometimes. To my knowledge it's never really bothered anyone. Their next door neighbor, on the other hand, had a SWAT team called on him. My folks just looked up from watching TV and there were officers in SWAT gear running across their back yard. Police came to my parents' door and told them to stay away from walls on that side of the house in case of stray bullets. So I laughed pretty hard when that "which would you rather" question went around last year.)

    I've seen winter robins, but I'm also in Massachusetts, so maybe they just like it here. laugh 

    We also get the occasional black bear or moose wandering through. No SWAT teams (so far), though. Yikes!

    No bear prints in the snow here this winter, but almost everytime I've gone out in the morning this winter I've seen deer prints down, or next to, our driveway.  That, and bunny trails.  And sometimes I'll catch a glance of a family of deer going back up the hill into the woods in late afternoon after they'd spent the day down in the swamp next to the creek.

    Post edited by LeatherGryphon on
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