The real question though is this. Should I take the red pill or the blue one? Or should I follow the yellow brick road? Too many questions, not enough answers. Must analyze Nomad - Memory Alpha - Wikia
I've been a post-aholic on PC lately. The 30 seconds I must wait on Tapatalk to retry sending my post feels like the 90 seconds it takes to nuke a Hot Pocket. The longest fraction of 1/30th of an hour. Actually its worse, because PC is worthwhile and Hot Pockets are disgusting.
So, just for the fun of it all, I am trying to post. We will see. I actually have a serious Prius car "trouble" problem and wanted to post in the usual Gen II forum, but got issues right away, so gave up.... So, came here to "gently inquire." It's nice that we have this thread to complain about things, but, you know, what would be even nicer, would be if someone actually came on here and told us what is up....even if they don't know....that would be better than this nothing. Well, you can say, hey, it's free, if you don't like it....yeah, I understand. But, I also understand that there is $$ being made with this site, based on on the work of the participants. And, again, that is fine, but keep us informed. I also understand family obligs, but that should not still be a factor...and if it is, let us know that...
Chapter 1. "In the beginning, a forum was created. A nation, endowed perfect, crystalized by its own need, even among a webscape of global communities. A nation was given birth of it's own divine purpose, and the nation saw that it was good." Chapter 2. "Service was good. Data flowed like rivers into SQL servers and there was abundance across the land. The hungry were fed, the restless found peace. The nation was as a polished gem highest on the king's crown, and the nation saw that it was good." Chapter 3. "Years went by and many prospered. But one day, a faulty service pack was released. As a weed in a vineyard, it started below the surface, unnoticed. It grew slowly at first, but soon a database error had broken the surface. The nation hardly took notice of such an oblique error." Chapter 4. "Service packs--announced loudly and forgotten quietly--were installed. Zero-days were promptly patched as the patches were released, but still the database error grew. The nation had taken notice. They asked, 'What will be done? 'When can I post as before?' But they got no guarantees, and even fewer answers. A nation's growth had been halted by weeds fighting for system resources." Chapter 5. "Error 404. The chapter you are looking for could not be displayed."