Patrick Lancaster 🏜️

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Patrick Lancaster 🏜️

Patrick Lancaster 🏜️

@plancaster

Loves Jesus ✝️ • USAF Gulf War veteran • Built @abc15 online & won some Emmys • Misses dial-up modem sound • All-around #GenX #INFJ nice guy • Had a mullet 🤨

Phoenix // Liberia Beigetreten Ekim 2007
4.7K Folgt2.9K Follower
Thrilla the Gorilla
Thrilla the Gorilla@ThrillaRilla369·
Be truthful: would you remove someone from your house for being unkind to your pet? 🐶 🐱
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Buck Hills Farm
Buck Hills Farm@BuckHillsFarm·
Never really sure what the guineas are actually doing, or if anyone “wins” the running around or what. Funny birds 😂
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Patrick Lancaster 🏜️
@TheMuppetPastor My timeline is filled with photographers, videogame programmers from the Nintendo & SEGA heyday, and even a retired Sony Walkman designer. I absolutely love it!!
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Skeletor 🧼🧽🫧
Skeletor 🧼🧽🫧@TheMuppetPastor·
One thing I love about the translated tweets is that I’m learning how awesome a lot of Japanese people are!
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Patrick Lancaster 🏜️
@TheStingisBack I was a freshman in high school when "The Day After" aired, the entire school was pretty quiet the next day as we were all still trying to process it. It sounds like many of us experienced the same effect across the country, same with "Threads" in the UK.
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The Sting
The Sting@TheStingisBack·
In the early ’80s, two landmark TV films tackled nuclear war: The Day After (US) and Threads (UK). Both showed the effects of nuclear fallout on ordinary people. They were grim, unsettlingly accurate, and terrifying. Neither offered a happy ending.
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Coleen Guzman
Coleen Guzman@gypsyOTR·
“You have stayed at this mountain long enough. It is time to break camp and move on.” ~Deuteronomy 1:6-7🕊
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🌸 Bekah 🌸
🌸 Bekah 🌸@TGrammie2·
I don't care what anyone says, life was just better back then
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艦長田中
艦長田中@kanchou2045·
私は今年で60歳になります。細々ではありますが、XとYouTubeで発信を続けてます。 配信歴はニコ生・ツイキャスなど10年以上。ショボくてもキャリアだけは長いです(笑)。 私は2045年の戦後百年、80歳になるまでSNSで発信し続けます。 多くのアカウントやチャンネルが消えていくのをたくさん見てきました。 私はもともと貧乏なので、しぶとく生き残ってみせます。 一緒に20年後の日本を見てみたい方、ぜひXで相互フォローお願いします! YouTubeでは先人の動画をアップしながら、週1でライブ配信もやってます。気が向いたら覗いてみてください。 #相互フォロー #高市総理応援 #日本列島を強く豊かに
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Patrick Lancaster 🏜️
This is a great example of what makes 𝕏 so awesome, we get to hear backstories about our favorite topics from those who were there and this one's hilarious.
Sandy Petersen 🪔@SandyofCthulhu

My friend worked at Origin Systems. Now, my friend loved loved loved Gauntlet. To the point that he would often talk in Gauntlet-speak. For example, he'd stand up from his cubicle to go to lunch and announce it, "Fred needs food badly." Or when a co-worker gave him something he needed, he'd say, "I've not seen such bravery." Or if the co-worker had bungled something, he'd say, "Exit the room please." If a deadline was coming up, he'd say "Your life force is running out." That sort of thing. Anyway one day a new worker, an experienced coder who'd been in the industry, came to Origin Systems, and settled into the cubicle right next to my friend. Seemed like a nice guy, if a little quiet. Anyway, Fred continued his Gauntlet-speak hijinks for a few weeks. Then, one day Fred spilled his coffee or something and said, "Someone shot the food!" and the new guy cracked. He stood up in his cubic and started violently denouncing Fred, ranting about how Fred was constantly mocking him and he wasn't going to sit down for it any more and Fred better watch himself in the parking lot and and and ... During the rant, Fred came to realize that the new guy was ONE OF THE ORIGINAL PROGRAMMERS OF GAUNTLET! He though Fred was making fun of his game! Fred managed to calm him down, and convinced him that he, Fred, practically worshiped the guy and had no idea he'd been on the game. If he had he would have been quizzing him non-stop about his tasks, buying him coffee, etc. So they became friends. This kind of thing happened more often than you might think in the gaming world back in the day. There weren't that many professional developers so we'd see each other at conventions, or when we switched jobs. And there was usually no more than two degrees of separation. For instance, I only met Lord British himself once, but I knew two men pretty closely who later on went to work for Origins Systems and became top guys there (Fred mentioned above and Andy Hollis). Ask me anything.

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Patrick Lancaster 🏜️
@SandyofCthulhu Hilarious, thanks for sharing! I love hearing stories like this, gives me even greater appreciation for those games that I still love. Back then you could actually call companies like Origin and talk to the programmers, Chuck Buche told me about the rubber band gun battles 😆
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Sandy Petersen 🪔
Sandy Petersen 🪔@SandyofCthulhu·
My friend worked at Origin Systems. Now, my friend loved loved loved Gauntlet. To the point that he would often talk in Gauntlet-speak. For example, he'd stand up from his cubicle to go to lunch and announce it, "Fred needs food badly." Or when a co-worker gave him something he needed, he'd say, "I've not seen such bravery." Or if the co-worker had bungled something, he'd say, "Exit the room please." If a deadline was coming up, he'd say "Your life force is running out." That sort of thing. Anyway one day a new worker, an experienced coder who'd been in the industry, came to Origin Systems, and settled into the cubicle right next to my friend. Seemed like a nice guy, if a little quiet. Anyway, Fred continued his Gauntlet-speak hijinks for a few weeks. Then, one day Fred spilled his coffee or something and said, "Someone shot the food!" and the new guy cracked. He stood up in his cubic and started violently denouncing Fred, ranting about how Fred was constantly mocking him and he wasn't going to sit down for it any more and Fred better watch himself in the parking lot and and and ... During the rant, Fred came to realize that the new guy was ONE OF THE ORIGINAL PROGRAMMERS OF GAUNTLET! He though Fred was making fun of his game! Fred managed to calm him down, and convinced him that he, Fred, practically worshiped the guy and had no idea he'd been on the game. If he had he would have been quizzing him non-stop about his tasks, buying him coffee, etc. So they became friends. This kind of thing happened more often than you might think in the gaming world back in the day. There weren't that many professional developers so we'd see each other at conventions, or when we switched jobs. And there was usually no more than two degrees of separation. For instance, I only met Lord British himself once, but I knew two men pretty closely who later on went to work for Origins Systems and became top guys there (Fred mentioned above and Andy Hollis). Ask me anything.
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exQUIZitely 🕹️@exQUIZitely

Elf shot the food! One of the best 4 player arcade games ever made. Oh, the quarters... the many, many quarters. Who was your pick: Warrior, Valkyrie, Wizard, or Elf?

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Patrick Lancaster 🏜️
@OwenGregorian Right?! I saw "WarGames" opening week at Scott AFB. To say everyone was a bit tense is an understatement, you could hear a pin drop in the theater 😬 Then, of course, we had "The Day After" movie on ABC also that year...good times.
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Owen Gregorian
Owen Gregorian@OwenGregorian·
When I saw this as a kid, I thought to myself: “They would never be so dumb that they’d put AI in charge of weapons that could kill lots of people.”
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Barbara Eden
Barbara Eden@Barbara_Eden·
Happy Birthday @WilliamShatner ! I hope it's- dare I say- out of this world! Tee-hee! Barbara aka Henrie O!
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Patrick Lancaster 🏜️
Happy birthday to this absolute legend! Nobody else like him. My earliest memories are of watching Star Trek with my dad on the couch in the early 70s, in fact before they got married he didn't pick mom up for dates until the latest episode was over 😆
William Shatner@WilliamShatner

At 95, I'm still smokin'! 😝 I’ve learned two things: Never waste a good cigar. Never trust anyone who says you should ‘act your age.’ 😉👍🏻

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Patrick Lancaster 🏜️
@WilliamShatner Happy birthday, good sir! I'm grateful that you have been such a big part of my life from the beginning, my earliest memories are of watching you command the Enterprise and crew with my dad on the couch in the early 70s. Blessings!!
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William Shatner
William Shatner@WilliamShatner·
At 95, I'm still smokin'! 😝 I’ve learned two things: Never waste a good cigar. Never trust anyone who says you should ‘act your age.’ 😉👍🏻
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Juanita Broaddrick
Juanita Broaddrick@atensnut·
Leader of Japan and South Korea in a jam session during a summit in January. Sanae Takaichi is an amazing leader and cute as a bug.
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Sovey
Sovey@SoveyX·
I’m with my family today and my little cousins have played this song 10 times. I didn’t ask to learn the dance, but now I am an expert. Chicken. Banana. Chicken. Banana. Chicken. Banana. Banana. Banana.
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Patrick Lancaster 🏜️
@exQUIZitely Exactly right, well said! You had to have at least a little tech knowledge to get online, and once you made it work being connected to the rest of the world was an amazing feeling. Interacting with others on BBS and forums was civil, everyone was just happy to be there!
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exQUIZitely 🕹️
exQUIZitely 🕹️@exQUIZitely·
Funny thing is, I didn't mind waiting. It was a known and accepted part of being online back then. I was just fascinated by the whole concept of the Internet, of being connected to - in theory - everyone out there. The number of attempts didn't matter, nor did the speed. I remember watching pages load line by line. It was great to see what people (not bots, an AI, or massive corporations) had created out there, including the cringe-worthy websites. I distinctly remember a fan project called Nevernights. It was a turn-based RPG, but you had to send your turn by email to the GM. He would then manually enter the data and draw the updated map (with each player's position) for around 200 players, a monumentous task. Fights were done separately and could last several days since you could only send in one turn per day (move, attack, use item, etc.). It was one of the best experiences of early Internet wonder, painstakingly slow and requiring a lot of patience and dedication - and it was glorious! Finding fansites about things that interested you, all of a sudden being able to connect with people from the other side of the planet who happened to also like your favorite sports team or games you grew up with. Sending emails the same way you would write a letter - not with emojis and a 2-liner, but real and long messages. I could go on, but everyone who's experienced early stage Internet knows it anyway. It was slow, sometimes weird, buggy, full of flashing banners and little GIFs - but it was also a wonderful world. It felt much more innocent, playful, open and harmless. I am sure it had its dark corners early on, but it wasn't the behemoth that is today, being so entrenched in our every day lives. It was an escape from real life for a little while... now it feels like we are living in a world where we escape the Internet for a while by going outside, back into the real world.
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