Squid wrote:jampot wrote:So the Ultra Agents finally get awesome, with that dockyard villain hideout...aaaaaaand it's not coming out in the UK. Bummer.
Does that sort of thing happen a lot? (exclusive LEGO releases, that is) If I do succeed in my goal of relocating to the UK, that sort of problem could likely become an issue for me as well.
I remember back some years ago the theme Dino Attack was significantly different elsewhere.
I wasn't aware of the new Ultra Agents wave. To be honest, the AnitMatter oil rig base set (I'm assuming this is the set you're referring to) looks a bit medicocre, it's got a low part and minifig count for its price, and doesn't look all that enticing. The HQ Command ship set looks a lot more impressive, in my opinion.
A lot of LEGO themes tend to be delayed or not released in the UK. LotR first appeared several months after it did in the US. Galaxy Squad was only available through LEGO stores or the online shop until the second wave was released. I was particularly aggravated that Space Police III was not available in the UK, especially since that theme had a lot of cool parts and stuff (I did manage to pick up a set whilst I was in Canada, though). Oddly, Games was released in Europe long before it arrived in the US (I think it was something like half a year).
Harborlight wrote:Lego Angry Birds.

I didn't know Angry Birds was still a thing to be honest. I thought LEGO The Simpsons was bad enough as is. I'm not even sure how Angry Birds could be effectively translated into LEGO. The plummeting popularity also calls into question this move. Even if LEGO could afford such losses, it's not good business sense to invest in a licensed theme that is declining in popularity (particularly when there are much more interesting IPs and things like LEGO Ideas kicking around). Oh well, in all likelihood this will be the sort of licensed theme that will stick around for a year or two and then be forgotten as people move on.
Portal, on the other hand...
Squid wrote:Does anyone know how to recover a picture after it has been deleted on a camera?
I animated a really difficult shot for Welcome to Darkmoor yesterday. And today I animated another shot which I messed up. I was deleting the flawed shot but I accidentally deleted a single frame from the previous shot which was absolutely essential to it.
I really don't want to re-shoot it and I'm not sure if I'll even be able to get it right a second time because it was really hard.
Does anyone know of anything that can help?
Ouch, that must hurt.
I'm no computer expert, but I do know that, in computer terms, deleting a file is more like making it invisible, in that you're removing the computer's method of locating it in its storage system. Even after "permanent" deletion, a file still technically exists and can do so for a long time until it is overwritten by another file, which is why it's possible to retrieve files from a computer even if they've been "permanently" deleted, or even if the hard drive has been damaged.
That said, I have no idea if the same applies to camera memory cards, and you'd (probably) more or less have to be on the level of a professional software expert in order to do something like that. In any case it's probably too much effort to go through to retrieve a single frame. Are you absolutely certain that you need this single frame for that shot, and that you can't somehow edit or shorten it in some way? It'd be horrible if you had to re-shoot all that.
Last edited by Mr Vertigo (June 10, 2015 (08:48am))
Retribution (3rd place in BRAWL 2015)&Smeagol make the most of being surrounded by single, educated women your own age on a regular basis in college
AquaMorph I dunno women are expensive