Archive for the ‘General News’ Category

Letter from the Admins

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Folks,
Of late there have been quite a few issues and incidents that the admins of TIDMADT feel should be addressed to the community as a whole.
The first is that of visitors and their conduct while on our TeamSpeak and in-game channels. There are 2 sides to every situation. We cannot control the other but we can lay down some guidelines and rules for our side of things. So to make things clearer for all:
• New visitors to TeamSpeak can initially be brought to the main game channel to be advised of our rules and requirements. Once they have been advised of these they are to be taken to the “lounge” by their host. On further visits they are to be advised they are to only go to the lobby or lounge areas and to “poke” the member they wish to visit.
• We are not to get involved in flame wars, arguments etc. with any visitors to our TeamSpeak or in-game channels. If you feel that a visitor has overstepped the mark in their behaviour or comments – in the first instance POLITELY request they stop the behaviour, then ask their host to have them removed if those actions do not get you resolution find a member of the game officers (WoT, DayZ, BF3 etc). If these are not online then try for a TIDMADT Admin not of your game.
The other issue is that of our general conduct. We have a code of conduct and the WoT community has a handbook that detail what is expected and what will and won’t be tolerated. As an adult gaming community we don’t have a language filter – the games do that. We do however have a behaviour standard that is expected. General abuse and tirades at other players, whether they be TIDMADT or from another group is not acceptable. Again if you have an issue with someone else use the systems that are there – see your games officers, TIDMADT Admins or use the in-game complaints system. Don’t lower yourself to their level and get yourself banned for abuse. By lowering yourself to their level you make it very difficult for your game officers or TIDMADT Admins to be able to do anything about a situation on your behalf.
Cheers,

The TIDMADT Admins:
Mocs, Bonestriker, DevilDog (Baghdad Bob), Wilso2276, Dead_man_walking

Notes on Strats

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There has been quite a bit of discussion about strats.  Let me set the record straight.  We are open to new strats.  The TIME for the discussion is NOT right before a battle, and it is NOT right after a battle.  It is easy, suffering from a loss, to say “strats suck”.

NO strat is perfect, but we need to have SOMETHING to work with.  The strat we have is the strat we have until we have a new one.  So, what is the proper way to bring a new strat into consideration?  It isn’t by sitting in channel saying “we have to do this or that”  It IS by taking a little map, putting little dots on it, and saying HERE is what I am thinking.  Now, if you have submitted a strat and it has been turned down, I guarantee you it isn’t because it was dismissed out of hand.  We may look at your strat and just think it sucks…

Believe me, the admins spend countless hours pouring over things.  We want to win every bit as much as you guys do… so much so that we formed a clan and poured all this time and money into supporting it.  A lot of the ideas you bring us, we have thought of… we have tried them, we have shot holes in them, so if you bring us a strat that we think is something we have tried and tested, we might dismiss it…

Now, dismissed does not mean discarded.  We have them all, and sometimes we take parts of one and put it with another, and try to hobble something together to make a strat we think might work.  Just because we don’t put a strat in place doesn’t mean that we don’t like you.  It isn’t personal.

Now, if we DO discard a strat, and you have absolute faith in it, and you listen to our reasons, and you STILL think you have a point, then one of two things is going on… 1) You missed something 2) WE missed something… there is the entire possibility (hard as it may seem) that we made a mistake.  If you put forth a strat, and you DID WHAT YOU ARE SUPPOSED TO (i.e. documented the fuck out of it and brought it to us in a way that we can review) and you think we dismissed it prematurely, there is a way to settle that… it’s called a TRAINING ROOM.  The proper place to try new strats is in a training room, and if you have submitted a strat, and done what you are supposed to, and don’t think it is being given a fair shake, then you absolutely have the right to request that strat be tested in the training room.

One of two things is going to happen… most likely, your strat is going to fail by the flames of the burning tanks over a tactical issue that you missed, in which case you will see the error of your ways, and maybe make a BETTER strat.  Alternatively, you will get the chance to prove an admin wrong… and who can pass up THAT opportunity?

But, let me make this perfectly clear, for anyone that might have missed it… the time to bring these issues up is NOT in the middle of Clan Wars… and probably not in the heated emotional moments after a loss.  It is to be done with the calm reason of a seasoned general.

And let me say this also… DO NOT EVER counter a Battle Commander in the middle of battle.  If they tell the E100s to roll and shoot on the move, don’t sit there in the middle of battle and say “they have better accuracy if you stop”  You can talk about that later… and it MAY just be that the important element that the Battle Commander was trying to get across is that you need to get those damn tanks where I need them ASAP, and if they hit anything on the way, so much the better… Maybe, just maybe, they are trying to do something you don’t quite get or understand at the time, but I stress to you that in the heat of the battle, when they are trying to get things done, they don’t have time to discuss it.  That’s why it is called an order… and I don’t care WHO you are, WHAT your stats are, or WHAT tank you drive… if I am commanding a battle, and I order my platoon sgt to do something, and that isn’t EXACTLY what you do, you WON’T be a platoon sgt next match… of all the things that I can be negotiable on, that absolutely isn’t one of them…

End of bitch session… let’s roll…

ANZAC Day

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What is ANZAC Day?

ANZAC Day – 25 April – is probably Australia’s most important national occasion. It marks the anniversary of the first major military action fought by Australian and New Zealand forces during the First World War.

What does ANZAC stand for?

ANZAC stands for Australian and New Zealand Army Corps. The soldiers in those forces quickly became known as ANZACs, and the pride they took in that name endures to this day.

Why is this day special to Australians?

When war broke out in 1914, Australia had been a federal commonwealth for only 13 years. The new national government was eager to establish its reputation among the nations of the world. In 1915 Australian and New Zealand soldiers formed part of the allied expedition that set out to capture the Gallipoli peninsula in order to open the Dardanelles to the allied navies. The ultimate objective was to capture Constantinople (now Istanbul in Turkey), the capital of the Ottoman Empire, an ally of Germany.

The Australian and New Zealand forces landed on Gallipoli on 25 April, meeting fierce resistance from the Ottoman Turkish defenders. What had been planned as a bold stroke to knock Turkey out of the war quickly became a stalemate, and the campaign dragged on for eight months. At the end of 1915 the allied forces were evacuated, after both sides had suffered heavy casualties and endured great hardships. Over 8,000 Australian soldiers had been killed. News of the landing on Gallipoli had made a profound impact on Australians at home, and 25 April soon became the day on which Australians remembered the sacrifice of those who had died in the war.

Although the Gallipoli campaign failed in its military objectives, the Australian and New Zealand actions during the campaign left us all a powerful legacy. The creation of what became known as the “ANZAC legend” became an important part of the identity of both nations, shaping the ways they viewed both their past and their future.

Early commemorations

The 25th of April was officially named ANZAC Day in 1916. It was marked by a wide variety of ceremonies and services in Australia, a march through London, and a sports day in the Australian camp in Egypt. In London over 2,000 Australian and New Zealand troops marched through the streets. A London newspaper headline dubbed them “the knights of Gallipoli”. Marches were held all over Australia; in the Sydney march, convoys of cars carried wounded soldiers from Gallipoli attended by nurses. For the remaining years of the war, ANZAC Day was used as an occasion for patriotic rallies and recruiting campaigns, and parades of serving members of the AIF were held in most cities.

During the 1920s ANZAC Day became established as a national day of commemoration for the 60,000 Australians who had died during the war. In 1927, for the first time every state observed some form of public holiday on ANZAC Day. By the mid-1930s, all the rituals we now associate with the day – dawn vigils, marches, memorial services, reunions, two-up games – were firmly established as part of ANZAC Day culture.

With the coming of the Second World War, ANZAC Day also served to commemorate the lives of Australians who died in that war. In subsequent years the meaning of the day has been further broadened to include Australians killed in all the military operations in which Australia has been involved.

ANZAC Day was first commemorated at the Memorial in 1942. There were government orders prohibiting large public gatherings in case of a Japanese air attack, so it was a small occasion, with neither a march nor a memorial service. Since then, ANZAC Day has been commemorated at the Memorial every year.

What does it mean today?

Australians recognise 25 April as an occasion of national remembrance, which takes two forms. Commemorative services are held at dawn – the time of the original landing – across the nation. Later in the day, ex-servicemen and women meet to take part in marches through the major cities and in many smaller centres. Commemorative ceremonies are more formal and are held at war memorials around the country. In these ways, ANZAC Day is a time when Australians reflect on the many different meanings of war.

The Dawn Service

The Dawn Service observed on ANZAC Day has its origins in a military routine which is still followed by the Australian Army today. During battle, the half-light of dawn was one of the most favoured times for an attack. Soldiers in defensive positions were woken in the dark before dawn, so by the time first light crept across the battlefield they were awake, alert, and manning their weapons; this is still known as the “stand-to”. As dusk is equally favourable for attacks, the stand-to was repeated at sunset.

After the First World War, returned soldiers sought the comradeship they had felt in those quiet, peaceful moments before dawn. A dawn vigil, recalling the wartime front line practice of the dawn ‘stand-to’, became the basis of a form of commemoration in several places after the war. There are claims that a dawn requiem mass was held at Albany on 25 April 1918, and a wreath laying and commemoration took place at dawn in Toowoomba the following year. In 1927 a group of returned men, returning from an ANZAC function held the night before, came upon an elderly woman laying flowers at the as yet unfinished Sydney Cenotaph. Joining her in this private remembrance, the men later resolved to institute a dawn service the following year. Thus in 1928 150 people gathered at the Cenotaph to for a wreath laying and two minutes silence. This is generally regarded as the beginning of organised dawn services. Over the years the ceremonies have developed into their modern form and also seen an increased association with the dawn landings on 25 April 1915.

Today dawn services include the presence of a chaplain, but not the presence of dignitaries such as the governor general. They were originally very simple and followed the military routine. In many cases, attendance at the dawn service was restricted to veterans, while the daytime ceremony was for families and other well-wishers. Before dawn, the gathered veterans would be ordered to “stand to” and two minutes’ silence would follow. At the end of this time a lone bugler would play the Last Post and then conclude the service with Reveille, the bugler’s call to wake up.

In more recent times families and young people have been encouraged to take part in dawn services, and services in Australian capital cities have seen some of the largest turnouts ever. Reflecting this change, those services have become more elaborate, incorporating hymns, readings, pipers, and rifle volleys. Other services, though, have retained the simple format of the dawn stand-to, familiar to so many soldiers.

The ANZAC Day Ceremony

At the Australian War Memorial, the ceremony takes place at 10.15 am in the presence of people such as the prime minister and the governor general. Each year the ceremony follows a pattern that is familiar to generations of Australians. A typical ANZAC Day ceremony may include the following features: an introduction, hymn, prayer, an address, laying of wreaths, a recitation, the Last Post, a period of silence, either the Rouse or the Reveille, and the national anthem. After the Memorial’s ceremony, families often place red poppies beside the names of relatives on the Memorial’s Roll of Honour, as they also do after Remembrance Day services.

TIDMADT Teabaggers TTA BF3 Comp news

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Tidmats own BF3 Team the TIDMADT Teabaggers Australian Division is currently making preperations to take on teams in the cybergamers 4v4 squad rush ladder comp, TTA which is lead by Captains Bonestriker & DevilDog (aka Baghdad_Bob028) and team mates Mrkoala and Olmatey and other members yet to join up, have been very busy preparing for battle, training hard with stock standard weapons only allowed in the comp as per the rules…

What is Squad Rush i hear you say? good question squad rush is teams of 4 players per side and 6 rounds (3 attacking & 3 defending) of nothing but blood n guts foot soldering run and gun, with no vehicles, no weapon attachments.. the main objectives are 2 mcom stations that the attacking side must destroy to move on or risk loosing tickets and loosing the round, once the first lot of mcom stations are gone you are moved forward to attack and destroy the second and third and final stations, once the tird stations are gone game over for the win or a loss if too many tickets are lost..

To keep tabs on how the team is going visit the link and search for TIDMADT Teabaggers

http://www.cybergamer.com.au/pc/bf34v4/ladder/

below is a list of what we are restricted to use in the comp

-Kit Loadouts:

Assault: M16 / AK74 + M9/MP443 + Med kit + defib + M320 SMOKE

Engie: M4 / AK74su + M9/MP443 + (Repair Tool)

Support: M27/ RPK + M9/MP443 + ammo

Sniper: Mk11 / SVD + M9/MP443

The Following weapons are not permitted to be used in matches -

All rocket launchers – Land Mines – C4 Explosives – M320 Grenade Launcher (smoke grenades are allowed) – Mortar Strikes

SO lets hear a big Good Luck to the TIDMADT Teabaggers Australia Lets Kick some ass

 

 

And the bombing continues

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The bombing in WWII was brutal.  Military and industrial installations were targeted, but so were cities and civilian populations.  A U.S. Strategic bombing survey after the war estimated that at a minimum 305,000 were killed in German cities due to bombing and estimated a minimum of 780,000 wounded. Roughly 7,500,000 German civilians were also rendered homeless.  Allied forces found that attacking German waterways resulted in tremendous traffic problems on the Rhine, eliminating the movement of coal (upon which the German railways were reliant on) except in certain limited areas.

For 65 years, the Rhine River hid two bombs and an fog-producing device that were dropped by American and British warplanes in the last years of the war. When water levels dropped to record lows in early December 2011, the bombs were finally found near Koblenz, causing evacuation of over 45,000 residents.  The evacuation, the largest in Germany since the end of the war, crippled the city for days as nearly half the population was relocated.

It is estimated that 257 British air bombs were dropped on Koblenz alone during the war. It is not known how many of them did not explode and have been forgotten. Bomb-disposal squads have only managed to deactivate three of them until now.

Read the full story

Texas Judge Caught on Tape

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Sometime in 2004, William Adams found out that his daughter Hillary, 16, had been using the computer to download music and games that were not yet legally available for download.  He grabbed his belt, and told his daughter to bend over the bed.  When she didn’t, he beat her on the legs.

There are a couple points that make this case a little different, though.  The first is that William Adams was (and still is) a judge in Aransas County, Texas.  Among his responsibilities was the hearing of cases involving child abuse.  The second thing is that his daughter recorded the whole episode on a hidden camera.  The video lasts about 7 1/2 minutes, and shows the severity of the beating Hillary received, in addition to the language used by the judge while beating his daughter.

Since the video was made public, it has gone viral.  The repost on YouTube has received over 2,000,000 hits, and outraged viewers have been hammering Aransas County officials to file formal charges against a man who, days ago, would have been responsible for hearing just such a case.

Disciplining a child is every parents responsibility.  There are as many different opinions on how to properly do this as there are parents, and while the debate rages over whether it is ever appropriate to spank a child, what happened between William and his daughter clearly crossed the line.  Already, the dishonoured judge has been temporarily relieved of his duties while a visiting judge will take over his responsibilities.  The outpouring of public support has been huge.  All that is left to be seen is the outcome in the days ahead.

Steve Jobs, innovator and founder of Apple, dies at 56

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When Steve Jobs began hacking together bits and pieces in his mother’s garage with Steve Wozniak, they may have dreamed of great success, but there is no way that they could have imagined the full impact they would have on technology.

Keep in mind that I am a PC guy.  I have never owned an Apple in my life, never listened to an iPod, never surfed on iPad, never called on an iPhone.  Personally, I prefer the more open architecture of Android, and think that (for what I do) PCs have always overshadowed Apples.  (actually, I prefer Linux to Windows, but now we are really getting far off base).  In fact, looking at Apple products, I would have to say they do far better on devices than they do with computer.  I think their marketing department is the best thing about their company, and that a great number of people who buy the devices do so because they want to be part of the “in” crowd.

However, I have to admit that without Apple, without the vision of Steve Jobs, the face of computers and technology would be far, far different… simply put, the world was made a better place by Steve Jobs.

I could say that I prefer my Android phone over an iPhone, but had there not been an iPhone there would be no Android.  I could say that I prefer many tablets over the iPad, but if there had been no iPad, there wouldn’t be a tablet market as we know it.  I could say that, for all its problems, I prefer Windows to Mac, but Windows followed Mac into the arena of graphical interfaces.

Steve saw what nobody else saw.  He saw the potential of the little bits and pieces sitting around him.  His goal, from the beginning and right through to the end, was to make technology available to the public in a simple and easy way that they could understand and integrate into their everyday lives.  Whatever aspects of Apple I don’t like, I have to admit that he did exactly that… and while there are devices that I think may do a better job, they all followed Steve Jobs to the market place.

Steve Jobs had a dream, and he followed it… and his dream led us all into a much brighter tomorrow.

Become a Chess Master!

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The first (of hopefully many) games for TIDMADT is up… I proudly present to you TIDMADT Online Chess.  The Chess game is in beta right now, so it is not tracking scores (number of wins/losses, etc) but this will be added soon, along with (hopefully) authentic chess ratings.  Soon we will also be holding monthly tournaments, and if the site starts getting some advertising coming in, we plan on offering prizes for the champions!

So… all you Grand Masters out there, jump in and start playing!

Our first news post

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On behalf of the Admins of TIDMADT, we wish to welcome you to our little corner of the Internet.

TIDMADT is a Worldwide Online Gaming Community. We do have a mission statement, and I will type it in here and let you all read it just as soon as we come up with it. However, it will probably go something like, “TIDMADT is dedicated to helping its members connect with other gamers in the spirit of fraternal brotherhood, with the exception of its female members, in which case we hope to foster a sense of sororial sisterhood, if such a thing exists.”

Obviously we are a very serious and dedicated group of people. Some of the things that we are dedicated to are:

  • The economy. Let’s face it, things are rough all over. If the economy was doing better, we would have more money to devote to beer, chips, pizza and other “necessities” in life.
  • Politics. They run the economy, so yeah, let’s all vote for the guy that will help us have a better economy so we will have more money. See above.
  • Religion. God loves us, that’s why she made First Person Shooters