Jun. 12th, 2006

Nefarion

Jun. 12th, 2006 08:24 am
plonq: (Warcraftian Mood)
I got my first taste of Blackwing Lair on the weekend - almost seven hours worth of it.  It was fun, but tedious in places.  Granted a lot of the tedium finds its root in the fact that I was dead through much of the run.  I expect to last a little longer the next time through, in part because I will have better gear, but also because I am learning as I go.  The priest class-leader in this guild really knows her stuff, and she's been giving me a lot of help with issues like mana management and proper positional play.  I may not be the worlds fastest learner, but some of this stuff is apparently starting to sink in.

We wiped four times on Nefarion for various reasons (two due to bad luck, and two due to running around like idiots).  Our problem was not with Nefarion, but with the critters that preceded his landing.  Once we got past them, the rest of the battle was comparatively easy.  I am a little annoyed at the way that I died in the final battle (I got feared and ran into his claws), but he was down to 3% health at that point and the battle was essentially over.  At the end of the day, I still had 2/3 mana reserve left and I finished 2nd on the healing chart, so I'm pleased overall.

I scored some nice boots (Shimmering Geta) from Chromaggus.  I wasn't going to spend the DKP on them, but my class leader messaged me and said, "You bid on these.  Do it.  Do it now!"  I got some whispers from a few others in the raid saying, "What are you doing?  You should wait for the Boots of Prophecy.  They're way better." and "Why did you bid on those?  They're crap!"  I appreciate that they are looking out for me, but I must point out what I said in the previous paragraph about being second in healing, and still being at 2/3 mana at the end of the fight.  Part of that was mana management, but I'm also up into the +60 mana every 5 seconds regeneration rate now - which works out to about 3 extra heals per minute.
plonq: (Brainfree mood)
A few years back Mattel released a talking Barbie doll that included the phrase math is hard in its repertoire.  The doll caused quite a stir at the time, primarily from groups who felt that it encouraged stereotypes.  It turns out that the doll was disturbingly prophetic, at least based on what I read in the [livejournal.com profile] customers_suck community a couple of weeks back.

The scenario painted by the poster was that their cash register had malfunctioned, and refused to display the change owed back to customers.  Her co-worker had resorted to struggling with a pocket calculator to figure out the change owed back, and was having to endure snide comments from the customers like, "did you drop out of school or something?"  She defended her co-worker, of course, citing that neither of them are "good at math".  The first few responses were commiserative in tone, expressing sympathy over having to deal with these rude customers, but eventually somebody posed the question that I had been thinking:

"What math is involved in giving back change?  It's pure counting.  Obviously you weren't trained properly for your job."

That opened the floodgates of indignation in the community, with some taking the side of that poster, but the majority siding with the poor beleaguered cashiers who saw counting change as being on par with integral calculus in terms of complexity.  I was initially going to get involved, but there was not much for me to say that hadn't already been covered.  If you can count out change when the computer tells you to give a person $6.37 then you can count change when the bill comes out to $11.13 and the person hands you a $20.  Somebody explained it very simply, and it was dismissed as too complex.

Here is a simple explanation.  Item comes out to $11.13, customer hands you a $20 bill.  A modern till will tell you to give him back $8.87 (I did that in my head as I was typing this - maybe I'm in the wrong line of work).  You don't need to know that, though.  All you have to do is start at the customer's total and begin counting up to the amount that he/she gave you, starting with the smallest increment.  Count it out loud so that the customer can follow what you are doing.

$11.13 (grab a penny)
$11.14 (grab a penny)
$11.15 (grab a dime)
$11.25 (grab a quarter)
$11.50 (grab a quarter)
$11.75 (grab a quarter)
$12.00 (grab a $1)
$13.00 (grab a $1)
$14.00 (grab a $1)
$15.00 (grab a $5)
$20.00

Yes, this is math...

... at a grade 2 level.  That we apparently have high school graduates who can't wrap their heads around this makes me weep for the state of our education.

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