• Member Since 23rd Aug, 2012
  • offline last seen Apr 25th, 2023

palelordhiphis


More Blog Posts76

  • 315 weeks
    My Shop Teacher

    "Practice makes permanent. If you practice wrong, you'll be doing it wrong for the rest of your life. So, practice it right."
    ~My Junior High Shop Class Teacher

    1 comments · 319 views
  • 315 weeks
    8 Bit Ponies Group

    I created a group for 8 bit pony related stuff a while back:

    https://www.fimfiction.net/group/213619/8-bit-ponies

    Images, Apple II games, C64, etc, are all welcome :) BitPonies FTW.

    0 comments · 331 views
  • 315 weeks
    Avoid the "The Writers' Group" here on Fim Fiction

    It's full of a bunch of people who snub any writing advice that would actually result in better writing. They show nothing but disrespect for solid advice with clear methods and instead tell people that "you should just feel pacing" and "you'll know how to do it after you write enough and become a better writer the natural way."

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    2 comments · 468 views
  • 315 weeks
    Do not FEEL your way through structure when writing stories

    There are a lot of half-baked authors who seem to think that "feeling" your way through pacing, structure, and storytelling is the way to go. They are flat out wrong. Practice form and get good at it before you think about breaking form.

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    4 comments · 423 views
  • 319 weeks
    Apple II - 8 Bit Ponies (Emulated Apple ][) hires graphics

    Some ponies as Apple II graphics (hires mode)

    Thanks to pcx2hgr, dos33-programs, GIMP, LinApple (emulator), Shutter, etc.

    Okay, there’s Twilight (classic and alicorn-wings-down), Spike, Apple Jack, Pinkie Pie, Rainbow Dash, Rarity, and Fluttershy as Apple II hires graphics running in an Apple II emulator (LinApple). Here, they are displayed in both color and classic green :)

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    0 comments · 319 views
Sep
6th
2012

Vocabulary - Keep It Simple · 3:46am Sep 6th, 2012

Some of the most successful authors, including Stephen King and Agatha Christie, use very limited vocabularies in their writing (both in variety of words and variety of phrases). Obscure words and archaic or odd phrasing generally alienate your audience and take them out of the story. If your audience exits your story . . . you have failed.

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