TriadCity Message of the Day
2021-03-29
There's a seedy new biker bar in town.
Contributed by our friend Eetu — Remy, Alexis, many others —
it's an appropriately grubby converted warehouse in the
NorthEastern Third ,
on Boulevard Louis-Adolphe Thiers, northeast of Black Plaza.
While not the most welcoming bunch, the gang won't kill you.
Unless you mess with them.
We think.
Can't say we've actually tried...
Spoiler!
Solve a puzzle for a fun treat.
:)
Meet you in the city!
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"In 1455, Gutenberg invented the printing press -- but not the book as we know it. Books printed before 1501 are called incunabula; the word is derived from the Latin for swaddling clothes and is used to indicate that these books are the work of a technology still in its infancy. It took fifty years of experimentation and more to establish such conventions as legible typefaces and proof sheet corrections; page numbering and paragraphing; and title pages, prefaces, and chapter divisions, which together made the published book a coherent means of communication. The garish videogames and tangled Web sites of the current digital environment are part of a similar period of technical evolution, part of a similar struggle for the conventions of coherent communication. Now, in the incunabular days of the narrative computer, we can see how twentieth-century novels, films and plays have been steadily pushing against the boundaries of linear storytelling." — Janet H. Murray, Hamlet on the Holodeck: The Future of Narrative in Cyberspace (info )