Jump to content

Search the Community

Showing results for '길음역텍사스위치오라 카이 인사동 스위츠[Talk:Za31]모든 요구 사항 충족'.

  • Search By Tags

    Type tags separated by commas.
  • Search By Author

Content Type


Forums

  • Geocaching HQ communications
    • Geocaching HQ communications
  • General geocaching discussions
    • How do I...?
    • General geocaching topics
    • Trackables
    • Geocache types and additional GPS-based gameplay
  • Adventure Lab® Discussions
    • Playing Adventures
    • Creating Adventures
  • Community
    • Geocaching Discussions by Country
  • Bug reports and feature discussions
    • Website
    • Official Geocaching® apps
    • Authorized Developer applications (API)
  • Geocaching and...
    • GPS technology and devices

Find results in...

Find results that contain...


Date Created

  • Start

    End


Last Updated

  • Start

    End


Filter by number of...

Joined

  • Start

    End


Group


Location

  1. A. Responding does not necessarily equate to "being nice". B. You can never control whether someone is "offended". Even a "nice" response could end up being read as a swipe at them or rude response. I'd rather let them get frustrated by no response than interact with someone who chooses not to put effort into a solve...or at least say they did. C. Not responding to lazy cachers takes precisely zero effort, so it already has an advantage over any interaction at all. and... D. I've actually been interacting with you about this, yet you still feel the need to talk about it and make me out to be some rude jerk. This is PRECISELY the sort of issue I'm talking about. By pursuing this discussion, you are actually, in a way, proving my point.
  2. Meh...I don't feel like responding to every request for a hint on my puzzles. I don't feel like it's reasonable to expect me to always respond. I don't get offended when others don't respond to my own messages. All this talk about what is "reasonable" is...ummm...unreasonable?
  3. Hi All. Brand new here (haven’t found a single cache yet), but the whole concept is so cool i am now after my first one. Tell me: is it addictive? :-p Anyway, I’m Brazilian but now living in Berkshire, UK. If anyone wants to talk that’s nearby, give me a shout!
  4. You may be right. I'm trying to understand why someone would suggest that a CO would be better off placing a string of traditionals caches along a route, rather than make the same experience a single multi-cache. That was basically what someone suggested in another discussion thread, and it rubbed me the wrong way. I can see that, but I'd take the advice as the simple practical comment: very few will do 1000 stage multi, so do a 1000 traditionals, instead. It doesn't much matter why that is. Even what you quoted in the OP sounds like nothing more than "don't bother me with a multi", not "if you do a multi, I won't get as many smilies." What's struck me about the quality question is that in almost every response to the quality poll, people keep calling it "quality" when what they talk about is what they like. I appreciate this thread in this context, because I think what we're seeing is that the multi-trad vs. multicache discussion boils down to what people like and not at all about which has more quality. Specifically, some people like lots of simple, individual caches, so by what right do we say those caches don't have "quality"? Yet dissing power trails in just what way is a prevalent position in the quality discussion.
  5. The case you made is that numbers are the only reason for people to pick multiple caches over a multicache. I argued against it. It doesn't really make sense for you to turn around and talk about the fact that you can imagine a situation where the numbers really would be the only difference. Although I like multicaches, my point was that many people (most people, actually) don't like multicaches, so you just strengthen my argument by making the multicache in your thought experiment devoid of anything that would make anyone at all want to do it. All the more reason for people to pick the traditionals instead. I'm not really sure I know what point you're trying to make, but I think the multicache doesn't support it. I think what you're trying to say is presented just as well with the thought experiment of 2 traditional out in the desert 100 miles apart vs. a string of 1000 traditionals strung out a tenth of a mile apart. I think you're trying to suggest that it's only an obsession with numbers that would make the 1000 cache string more popular. Would that be as valid a thought experiment to get to your point? There are people that do power trails. Some of them, I guess, do it just for the numbers, but I think most do it for the challenge. Yes, the mind numbing challenge. I've considered trying one for that reason, but haven't had a reason to be near one. Furthermore, even if you could prove that the only people that ever did power trails were people that had no interesting in geocaching beyond the find count, I'd still just say, "More power to them!" There's invalid about being motivated by numbers.
  6. "What is the difference in their experiences?" Are you kidding? What's the similarity? It's like two different games. With traditionals, all you do is find the cache and sign the log. With a multi, you have to read the coordinates of the next stage, copy them into your GPSr, and then you have to figure out where the next stage is and how to get there. You don't know where you're going when you start, so you can't plan your route and you won't know where you're going to end up. The only similarity is that there's a container at each specific location. (We'll ignore the fact that multi stages don't have to be anything like cache containers.) I don't doubt there are a lot of people that skip multis because the same number of traditions will give them a higher count, but I think far more people skip multis because they think they're too much work and are unpredictable. And that's just 2 stage multis. Talk about a multi that takes a day, and only a very special group of people will do it. You can't tell me that the other 95% of cachers are all numbers hounds. It's just obviously not true. There's no doubt people often do the power trails because they think the stats are important, but I think that argument evaporates when you talk about about a day's worth of typical caches. 20, 30, even 100 finds doesn't make much of a difference in statistics considering what's impressive by today's standards. If someone picks 10 traditionals over a 10 stage multi, it's hard for me to imagine they're doing it for the stats. There have to be other reasons...and I think I've explained what they are. (For the record: I love multis and do any I run into. On the other hand, I've never done a power trail.)
  7. It isn't really a "use at your own risk" kind of issue. It's really more of a "don't talk about these things on our foums" issue. For example, someone might want to discuss... the differences between an unauthorized smartphone app and other apps (Groundspeak's app and/or the authorized API partner apps). the latest location-based game that isn't geocaching. a new geocache listing site, and the new features it introduced, or the mistakes its making, or whatever. what geocache listing sites are best for cross-listing a cache (in addition to listing it at geocaching.com). what geocache listing sites are best for listing cache concepts that were not published on geocaching.com. the details of an upcoming geocaching trip that includes someone banned from Groundspeak's forums. There are any number of conversations that would not be allowed on Groundspeak's forums. Groundspeak is perfectly free to set such rules for their forums. But those rules may discourage local geocaching groups from using their forums.
  8. The app was convenient, so it brought more new people in to try the hobby. It's no surprise the more new people mean more mistakes, but I think it's the number of new players, not the fact that many of them were using the app. Have you really seen much of that? It does happen, but only a few caches a year. And, man, talk about being discouraged: the newbies that get into it and drop a couple sub-par caches get bored really fast when people complain about bad placement and poor containers, so they rarely plant more than a couple such caches before giving up. Since I don't believe this happens often enough to worry about, I'm against "doing something about it" just in general, but the fact is that some of the best COs in my area started out this way then quickly learned from their mistakes. We'd have missed out on a lot of good caches if the process had discouraged them from trying because they'd fail. More new players, more problems makes sense. But, the ratio is different between the groups. Lets say we get 100 people that stumble upon the app and 100 stumbling upon an article in a magazine or newspaper. It stands to reason that more app users will make mistakes because they download and immediately try to play. At the same time, the article readers get more information right off the bat and thereby tend to make less mistakes. Mas38's statement is certainly what's happening in my area. The vast majority of new app owners only stay with us for a short time. New names pop up once or twice and then they're gone never to be heard from again. We are lucky though that they don't tend to place caches in the short time they're interested.
  9. The app was convenient, so it brought more new people in to try the hobby. It's no surprise the more new people mean more mistakes, but I think it's the number of new players, not the fact that many of them were using the app. Have you really seen much of that? It does happen, but only a few caches a year. And, man, talk about being discouraged: the newbies that get into it and drop a couple sub-par caches get bored really fast when people complain about bad placement and poor containers, so they rarely plant more than a couple such caches before giving up. Since I don't believe this happens often enough to worry about, I'm against "doing something about it" just in general, but the fact is that some of the best COs in my area started out this way then quickly learned from their mistakes. We'd have missed out on a lot of good caches if the process had discouraged them from trying because they'd fail.
  10. Placing caches in residential areas is always tricky. You'd have to get permission first of all. I don't know how easy it would be to get permission to place a cache in/on a street light. Municipalities would probably frown on people tinkering with their street light. I'm guessing that 99-100% of lamp post hides do not have permission. Asking the owner of the Little Free Library would be easier in the long run - they're already wanting people to come and rifle through that bookshelf, so they're probably going to be OK with people coming and looking for a cache there. But besides the permission angle, you have the neighbor angle. Are there houses nearby where people might get jittery if people start hanging out in the area, looking suspicious? If people start frequenting a street light by their side yard, will they think there's a new drug drop or something? Personally, although it sounds harder, I'd get permission from the LFL owner. If you don't want to knock on their door, try leaving a note in the library itself with an explanation and your email address. However, you've got to talk to people eventually. Bite the bullet and knock on the door.
  11. My events are simple: Meet at a local homemade ice cream shop Stand around the parking lot and talk about geocaching To a muggle that might sound boring, but my one hour (scheduled) events often last two hours or even more. And I've gotten to know some really nice people! Sometimes a kid will attend with their parent(s) and get to meet a cache owner whose caches they really liked, and for them it's like meeting a celebrity. "I found your cache! It was so cool!"
  12. Yep. Most of the time, geocachers sit around a table and talk. There is often a log book for people to sign. Sometimes there are name tags. There is usually a table where trackables are placed so people can discover or retrieve them. Sometimes there are organized activities, like games or raffles. An easy and fun ice-breaker game is "Geocacher Bingo", where you get a bingo card filled with various geocacher characteristics, and you have to get people who match those characteristics to write their names in the corresponding spaces. Examples include "owns an EarthCache" or "has found fewer than 100 caches" or "does not own a smartphone". Often there is food. Many events are held in restaurants or coffeehouses, or at patio seating outside such places. Some have been potlucks. There is a 24-hour donut shop that is sometimes used for midnight events (events that run from 12:00 to 12:30 AM, usually to be the first event on a day where a special Souvenir is available).
  13. Although there has been talk about replacing the PQ system (I can suggest a design for that) there still needs to be a way to encapsulate geocache data so that it can be transferred from the site, other applications such as waypoint managers (GSAK, EasyGPS, Basecamp), and the devices we use for finding and hiding caches (smartphones or handheld GPS devices) and for the most part, that's a GPX file.
  14. Maybe it's just here, but one of the reasons so many went to faceboook from local websites is because a bunch didn't want to really discuss things. New folks mostly, ask for the fifth time "If I only drive a nail in this one tree, would it be okay?" , then get pissed when they hear the same answer. They don't wanna hear no. One of the last threads on a local site to me, a member said, "you couldn't talk to me like that on faceboook..". I said what he was talking about never happened (I was there. He wasn't.), and that he just made that up. - But my reply was, "So how do you ever hold actual conversations if everyone's always agreeing with you?" . The few times I ask a friend to show me what's going on with the faceboook, it's someone says something (usually about themselves...), with a line of submissives agreeing afterwards. We've yet to see "discussions" on anything related to the hobby at events unless it's a rare Geocaching 101-type event. A further area, we used to see more talking about a competing site more than this one ... at an event from this site. - A "respected" cacher too no less... Another in the same area talked more about their stock options than the hobby. We left early on both. One of the reasons I rarely log events anymore. Guilt by association maybe... A few states now, I'm not gonna bs and say even most members give two figs about the guidelines. I ask questions, often from threads here, but usually just ignored unless a low showing. Stats, " how I got my numbers" (that "all about me" thing again...), stats, "give me a hint", "we're doing (pick a cache name) later, and anyone who'd like can tag along" and stats, seem the norm, along with games, prizes, sometimes a potluck. Did I mentions stats are discussed a lot?
  15. I dunno about the rest of the crew, but I'm sitting here watching Twilight Zone (talk about your anachronisms) on my Waaay Back Machine and putting off writing up a few more Contributing Buildings. For just the third or fourth time in my life I'm doing a historic district in which I have all the contributing buildings. Keith
  16. Sadly, many are. Micros and nanos are small, and can easily be overlooked, espcecially if the camo is well done. Assuming it's missing because you couldn't find it seems a bit, well, arrogant may be too strong a word but that's what it amounts to, IMO. A string of DNF's may make it more likely it's missing, but I don't think I would ever presume to replace a container for another CO unless (in the case of a few of our son's hides) we have him on the phone and we are both convinced it's missing and he gives permission. Finding more than one container at GZ seems to be becoming a common occurrence for us - one an original, one an obvious replacement, either with or without permission. By reading previous logs, you can infer a throwdown - a few DNF's, then a few finds (with no owner maintenance or any hint of a replacement container), and a logsheet with the newest loggers' names on it, then another nearby container with an original log in it ... In other cases there is talk in the logs of a replacment with CO permission, or the CO himself comes out and replaces - and we find both the old and the new container, or sometimes just the original! With larger caches it's easy to tell if it's missing in most cases. nano's and micros are more elusive!
  17. Here's one of the artcles: http://www.latimes.com/politics/la-pol-ca-california-split-three-states-20180612-story.html Please, with all policy on the side. We are only going to talk about it from the geocaching point of view. From the geocaching point of view only, How many of you geocachers feel about this? I am sure many of you are working on the 50+1 state challenge(or even finished it) and this might cause a few setback(s). It will set me back as well if California become a three states. I never geocache in one of the "future" planned section. I do wonder how much headache this was cause for Groundspeak. I am not saying I am against it or for it. Its just a setback or more on my challenge goals. Anyone else?
  18. It is a promotion designed to get people out finding geocaches, not a Geocaching event where people gather to talk about Geocaching. I've stopped most of my geocaching for the current time, waiting for the summer temps to go below 90F. Maybe September in my area.
  19. The first rule of Platinum Membership is that you don't talk about Platinum Membership.
  20. I have been out of the scene for a few years, ever since my son got old enough that it wasn't 'cool' to cache with dad anymore. :/ anyway, I have recently gotten back into it when my brothers have developed interest. I have the Garmin 60csx, and it wouldn't work with anything I did on my windows 10 machine. None of the browsers or add ons or anything would work. So, I drug back out my old desktop, opened up Firefox (which is version 19.0) and did a search for the garmin plug in. found the signed version, got it running, and it worked. I was able to send the cache to my GPS once it finally detected it. Now, since it's an older browser, the front page of Geocaching.com didn't load right. I couldn't click anything but the video, so I just adjusted the address bar and added /login at the end of the address. took me to the log in page, worked, opened the map, and yeehaw! I do have a problem with the diffrences between the phone app and the computer site. the phone app won't let me see anything above a 1.5 unless i'm a premium, and I can see ALL basic hides on the computer. I only have one account. I think it's bull to make you pay to use your phone. It takes all the fun out of a spur of the moment cache search. I saw a newer cache in a town that I was going to and wanted to grab if I had time. I logged into my phone, and it was listed as premium and I couldn't open it up!!! even when it wasn't on my computer. Talk about salty!!! anyway, the whole point was to say, the older firefox browser (and make sure you make it so it won't update) running on win 7 for me, will install the old plug in that will let you use your 60csx units!
  21. My recommendation would be to do nothing at this point. You don't want to poke the bear and make the situation even worse. If it gets up to more than a week or two with no sign of activity or communication, I'd send a very contrite and apologetic follow-up message. Take this as a lesson learned: the reviewers have ears everywhere, so don't talk about them behind their back. Even if you think you're saying something about them on a seemingly-private platform, they may have friends that will forward your comments to them.
  22. IMO, the best thing you could do is talk to whoever is in charge of the preserve and let them know that they can get a free Premium membership in geocaching. That way, they can keep track of whatever geocaches are on their property and deal with them as they see fit. If they then decide they want any of the caches gone, they should just remove it and ask to have it archived. In my experience, when such a property manager asks for an archive, it is done immediately.
  23. Talk it over with the cache's owner. He might not be aware of the restriction -- perhaps because he's oblivious -- so he'll understand his error if you talk to him about it. Or he might be fully aware of the restriction and convince you his cache isn't a problem. This might include him thinking that there's a logical non-intrusive way to get to GZ, in which case you can help him see why that logical approach wasn't apparent to you. Or you might find out the CO's just a jerk, in which case you can think about whether to alert to trail maintainers or Groundspeak, or just want to keep it to yourself.
  24. Interesting stories y’all. :-) I had had been out of town and was just getting back. I needed to call a friend about dinner plans and since I don’t talk on the phone or text while driving, I pulled into a parking lot to make my call. Made my call and then thought “Well, let me just check and see if there are any nearby caches.” The closest one came up... about 6 feet away! It was an LPC and turns out of allllll the empty parking spaces in the lot, I’d parked right in front of a cache. All I had to do was step out of my car. From reading the listing to find was about 1 min. I have another one buuuut.....it’s kind of embarrassing. I’ll have to think on whether to tell that one or not....
  25. Ha! I honestly didn’t notice it was so old. They have not. I honestly don’t know who to talk to about that or if it’s even possible for that it to happen at all in the first place.
×
×
  • Create New...