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We killed heroic Anne Frank tonight which is pretty damn amazing. We gave him a shot once when the sonars could bounce and gave up. The normal mode has been consistently our worst fight: we can one-shot chog'all/al'kir/nefarian, but a fight we eight-manned in greens/blues on our second pull kills us half a dozen times or more every week. Tonights hard-mode attempts took little more than an hour and gets us ranked top-50 US 10-man and puts us within sight of #20 US is within site (We've had some pretty good runs at Conclave of Wind so there's a chance we'll get it Monday).

Unlike the other fights we've done it doesn't feel like there's any RNG at all. If you died its' because you were bad and there's never a point where "stand there holding your dick for 60 seconds" is part of the strategy. I'm sure the nerf bat has gutted the fight since we last looked at it a month ago but it's still fun and generally pretty excellent..

Our next guild party is in Vegas a few weeks from now and I think that's lit a fire under their asses: nobody wants to get drunk and celebrate being the 'second best' guild on the server.

We killed heroic Anne Frank tonight which is pretty damn amazing. We gave him a shot once when the sonars could bounce and gave up. The normal mode has been consistently our worst fight: we can one-shot chog'all/al'kir/nefarian, but a fight we eight-manned in greens/blues on our second pull kills us half a dozen times or more every week. Tonights hard-mode attempts took little more than an hour and gets us ranked top-50 US 10-man and puts us within sight of #20 US is within site (We've had some pretty good runs at Conclave of Wind so there's a chance we'll get it Monday).

Unlike the other fights we've done it doesn't feel like there's any RNG at all. If you died its' because you were bad and there's never a point where "stand there holding your dick for 60 seconds" is part of the strategy. I'm sure the nerf bat has gutted the fight since we last looked at it a month ago but it's still fun and generally pretty excellent..

Our next guild party is in Vegas a few weeks from now and I think that's lit a fire under their asses: nobody wants to get drunk and celebrate being the 'second best' guild on the server.

I wish I had time to raid, I'm basically stuck, I have pretty much the best gear I can get pre-raid minus one or two heroic pieces which isn't worth the farming. Unfortunately due to real life time constraints I can't, and the guild I am in is very casual, I think only a few people in guild have as high a score as me so the guild doesn't raid.

Could someone give me a hand on talents/addons/playstyle with a priest? I've been playing Shadow since I made the char and the only time I did some healing was during TBC on which I payed the 1000G for dual spec so I could go disc. However since all these massive revamps to talents and such I don't know anymore on where to start.

There are two basic disc builds: with atonement and without.

With and without still have the same basic play style: you'll use penance, prayer of mending on cooldown, use shield=>penance=>greater heal for "oh crap" or flash heal burst healing, prayer of healing and binding heal to recover from group damage. They're both viable and it really comes down to a mater of personal choice in most cases.

The main difference is in "filler" abilities: what you do when you're just maintaining the group. With atonement you'll smite the mob which heals the lowest health member within 15 yards of the mob. The more you smite the harder you hit and heal for (up to a point). You'll keep your stacks of evangelism up by smiting in low damage phases and then use archangel to convert those stacks into increased healing and some mana when you need more burst healing. It works pretty well for raid content where there's a cycle between low healing required and "oh crap you're going to die" (which is most encounters).

Without atonement you'll cycle greater heal and shields as your filler spells instead. Healing reduces the cool down on weekend soul so you can shield a target more often. This tends to work better as a tank-healing spec where you're more focused on one person than half a raid. It's group healing isn't really any worse than atonement (you can just heal other people instead of smiting the mob) and the mana consumption is fairly similar.

This is the core disc build without atonement. With atonement you lose the cooldown on shadow fiend and drop the points in strength of will to pick up evangelism/archangel and atonement. Disc priests don't really have any 'flexible' points. You'll notice mine priest has a non-standard disc build: it's because I was smite spec'd for heroic wyrmbreaker they replaced him with a 372 token vendor.

Also currently I'm using TukUI which I'm quite happy with. I'll post a screenshot at the end of the post. Any other usefull addons recomded for healing?

The stock UI has gotten to the point that it's pretty passable for just about everything. I think something like power auras or SBF are really the only things that are lacking, the stock UI doesn't do enough to let you know when you need to react to a buff/debuff. For example it's not immediately obvious you're standing in black goo or have the flames debuff on maloriak (and hanging out there will kill you in short order). The stock UI presents this information but it's not really prioritized the way it should be.

While you can get buy with mouse over macros for healing, something like Clique is usually a nice addon. It lets you bind your mouse buttons to your common healing abilities to allow you to react faster than click target/push button style healing.

Boss mods (like deadly boss mods) will show you when creatures are going to do certain things and allow you to coordinate your cooldowns a little better. The stock system is okay (I cleared all of the normal mode raid content using it) but more information allows you to play better.

Grats on pet, but watch out, sounds like you're addicted.. Now that you got that pet it will be one more thing you need/want.. then one more then one more and soon enough 4 years have gone by

I'm not addicted, I'm just shocked and amazed.. the same day I hit 85 .. I get the pet I've been wanting since Cataclysm's launch, especially since he has a 12 hour respawn timer.. AND because he's a rare.. not to mention the fact 5 seconds after I tamed him.. a mage tried to swoop in and kill him. :happy:

I'm not addicted, I'm just shocked and amazed.. the same day I hit 85 .. I get the pet I've been wanting since Cataclysm's launch, especially since he has a 12 hour respawn timer.. AND because he's a rare.. not to mention the fact 5 seconds after I tamed him.. a mage tried to swoop in and kill him. :happy:

Sounds like you're addicted, to be honest.

Problem is every hunter in the game is getting that pet now. Both the hunters in my guild have him, along with most hunters who are in raiding guilds on my server.. So it makes his excitement not really mean so much anymore. Thats what sucks

I finally broke my addiction. I added an authenticator to my account, got 4 characters to lvl 85, finally one day snapped after having some little pos tell me I sucked at life cuz I was only doing 9k dps in a heroic, realized I had wasted 6 years of my life sitting infront of a computer for 8+ hours and NOT MAKING MONEY FROM IT. so I proceeded to sell everything I had on them, randomly give the gold away to strangers, deleted ALL of my characters and smashed the authenticator. Its been almost a month since this all happened and in that time I have realized that I really enjoy restoring old cars. DO I regret the time I spent on wow? Sometimes. But if I consider it a complete waste of time I may as well shoot myself. It ran its course with me, and to be honest I didnt really find cata that much fun.

How ya'll doing Heroic halfus? Can't decide whether to two tank it or three.

Two tanks, 3 healers - no cheesing spec required any more so just go with whatever you normally bring. Our tanks are swapping for MS debuffs but that's not any different from normal mode. You can kinda cheese that with paladins but it's not really necessary.

We let out storm, nether, and whelps on the pull. One tank grabs halfus, one lets out whelps, and then some DPS free the other two drakes and the tanks taunt and/or get tricks/misdirect to help them pick up all the adds. There'a big AOE orgy while people kill off the whelps and then get to work on nether. About 10 seconds into the fight I release time and people are expected to not take any raid damage apart from the breaths from that point on. You could let out time on the pull but we delay it a bit just so that everyone get get into position and so that the tanks have taunts up for the event that one misses. Once nether is dead we switch to storm and then finish off with time. All the dragons should be dead before phase 2, if they aren't you'll need to smack your DPS for tunneling on the wrong mobs (they do it all the time to pad meters). We usually blow bloodlust around 15 seconds in - it gives tanks some time to get vengeance and establish some threat and it helps your healers catch up -- their trinkets/pre-pots are active for the first 15 seconds so it's not so bad. The fight is most challenging during the first 45 seconds and then it gets dramatically easier as it goes on. Don't feel guilty about completely blowing everything you've got in the first minute or two.

I don't have a kill video post-nerf and the pre-nerf one is nothing like the current one so it wouldn't be very helpful. If you can get nef I have no doubt you'll be able to get your 372 tokens in short order.

I don't have a kill video post-nerf and the pre-nerf one is nothing like the current one so it wouldn't be very helpful. If you can get nef I have no doubt you'll be able to get your 372 tokens in short order.

We downed Cho'gall Monday. Hoping to finish off Al'akir this week (he's a pushover once you master P1, think we had an 8% wipe with just explaining **** on vent as we went along) and then start working on Nef. However we'd all like to see some more of Halfus. I think we got the DPS for the fight and we 2 healed Cho'Gall, so with the three normal healers I think we will be fine there and each tank is geared enough for it. Just gotta figure out the way it'll work for us.

After last nights rather rough attempts on heroic robot council (~50%) I've been asked to spread the word that we're looking for a competent holy paladin and hunter. 3 nights per week (Tuesday+wednesday then sundary/monday), roughly 8-11 PST give or take 30 minutes. Officially it's loot council but really it's "dibs with peer pressure" - none of us really give a damn about gear and prefer to pass than to roll (do some soul searching: if you roll on tiny upgrades you'll be miserable because attitudes will be incompatible).

Competent players with past "hard content" experience should give me a shout. It's a fairly small guild and reasonably close (ie: we share phone numbers and addresses, get together to party now-and-then, every raider has one-another on real id, etc) but if we're not on to raid there's probably not going to be many people on unless they're banging out a heroic daily or leveling an alt. Casual but progression minded, nobody yells or screams at failure but we're all capable of seeing who's screwing up - if you don't take well to pressure to perform well you're probably not going to be happy.

We've got a healthy mix of male/female raiders (60/40 split), most of us have completed an undergraduate - a handful of us are grad students/professional school types but I'd say 9-5 desk job is most common -- younger players might have a hard time connecting with the group (I can't remember the last time we had somebody under 21 in the guild). During a trial period you'll be cycled in and out - performing well will land you in the raid more often. As a rule people are willing to sit for others on 'farm content' to help distribute loot but we might cycle people in/out for hard mode content. So far we've been pretty good about just rolling with whatever we had online - maybe swapping a lock for a mage but avoiding the "lol 11 druids" style of raid stacking.

Sorry for my late reply, but thanks on the tips and help! :)

Before I read your post I was playing around a bit with the talents and this is what I made of it:

http://eu.battle.net/wow/en/character/hellfire/vivacino/talent/secondary

Looking at it I wasn't to far off! I just put points in Darkness instead of Veiled Shadows.

I'll play around without Atonement atm since I'll mostly be doing normal 5-man stuff.

I did use the default BlizUI for a long time now, it's just since recently I made the switch to TukUI since I like the clean look. DBM is also one of the first things installed. I'll have a look at the other add-ons when I get home..

again thanks for the help and I'll try to report back in here in a more timely fashion on my finding about playing with disc :p

There are two basic disc builds: with atonement and without.

With and without still have the same basic play style: you'll use penance, prayer of mending on cooldown, use shield=>penance=>greater heal for "oh crap" or flash heal burst healing, prayer of healing and binding heal to recover from group damage. They're both viable and it really comes down to a mater of personal choice in most cases.

The main difference is in "filler" abilities: what you do when you're just maintaining the group. With atonement you'll smite the mob which heals the lowest health member within 15 yards of the mob. The more you smite the harder you hit and heal for (up to a point). You'll keep your stacks of evangelism up by smiting in low damage phases and then use archangel to convert those stacks into increased healing and some mana when you need more burst healing. It works pretty well for raid content where there's a cycle between low healing required and "oh crap you're going to die" (which is most encounters).

Without atonement you'll cycle greater heal and shields as your filler spells instead. Healing reduces the cool down on weekend soul so you can shield a target more often. This tends to work better as a tank-healing spec where you're more focused on one person than half a raid. It's group healing isn't really any worse than atonement (you can just heal other people instead of smiting the mob) and the mana consumption is fairly similar.

This is the core disc build without atonement. With atonement you lose the cooldown on shadow fiend and drop the points in strength of will to pick up evangelism/archangel and atonement. Disc priests don't really have any 'flexible' points. You'll notice mine priest has a non-standard disc build: it's because I was smite spec'd for heroic wyrmbreaker they replaced him with a 372 token vendor.

The stock UI has gotten to the point that it's pretty passable for just about everything. I think something like power auras or SBF are really the only things that are lacking, the stock UI doesn't do enough to let you know when you need to react to a buff/debuff. For example it's not immediately obvious you're standing in black goo or have the flames debuff on maloriak (and hanging out there will kill you in short order). The stock UI presents this information but it's not really prioritized the way it should be.

While you can get buy with mouse over macros for healing, something like Clique is usually a nice addon. It lets you bind your mouse buttons to your common healing abilities to allow you to react faster than click target/push button style healing.

Boss mods (like deadly boss mods) will show you when creatures are going to do certain things and allow you to coordinate your cooldowns a little better. The stock system is okay (I cleared all of the normal mode raid content using it) but more information allows you to play better.

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What I like about Spark is that transcribed notes are not locked, and you can always type more to elaborate on your ideas, which is handy. Overall, I like that the Krono is not shoving AI down my throat, but to be honest, there is really not that much to shove. AI features here feel raw and need improvements to be more useful. Battery Life Like most E-Ink readers, the Krono has fantastic battery life. Even with a clock as a screensaver, its standby power consumption is incredibly low. And when in use, you can get weeks of reading on a single charge. Without the front light, my unit never sipped more than one or two percent of battery during a one-hour reading session. It was nice to see plenty of battery-related settings. You can limit charging at 80% to protect battery health long-term, check the number of charging cycles, manufacturing/first-time use date, battery health, and the maximum capacity. Additionally, the Krono lets you select what hardware remains enabled when sleeping. This lets you keep Wi-Fi and Bluetooth on (say, if you want to receive notifications, for some reason) and keep audio playing when locked. Turning these features off effectively eliminates any standby battery drain. I left my Krono sitting for 24 hours with a clock screensaver on, and it did not drop a single percent. The pretty big 3,950 mAh battery justifies the device's thickness and ensures you do not have to charge it for long periods. Speaking of charging, it is capped at only 10W, which is a bit disappointing, as getting such a big battery to 100% takes a notably long time in the era of super-fast charging smartphones. DuRoBo Moodi The Moodi is a standalone, optional accessory for your Krono. It is a wireless remote with two customizable buttons that you can use to flip pages, control media, or scroll webpages. The accessory connects via Bluetooth. Despite having a built-in rechargeable battery, it is extremely light. While the Moodi's shape and form factor is not what I would call particularly ergonomic, it is not uncomfortable to hold and use. The Moodi comes with six removable magnetic buttons with various smiley faces. Buttons sit securely, and they have nice-feeling, albeit a little loud, clicks. It is a cute touch that adds a little more fun and character to the device. There is also an accented power button and a single status LED. The latter displays charging status and connection mode. The Moodi supports three modes: Reading: Buttons work as volume buttons, allowing you to flip pages in the built-in reader or other apps that support page turning with volume buttons. Media: Buttons work as skip forward/backward, which is useful when listening to audiobooks, podcasts, or music. Scroll: The third mode lets you scroll pages in the web browser or any other application The Krono properly detects the Moodi and presents you with an on-screen guide when you connect it for the first time (it also displays the battery level). However, you can only change modes by holding both buttons for a few seconds. It is also worth noting that the Moodi works with other devices. I connected it to my iPhone and it let me adjust volume or control media playback. Sadly, the scroll did not work, so you cannot use it to waste time scrolling TikToks. Overall, the Moodi is a cute little accessory, which I can recommend for those who read a lot. It is very useful for remote page flipping when you do not want to burden your hands by holding the Krono all the time. I only wish DuRoBo included a lanyard for the built-in loop. As for the battery life, after using the Moodi for a few days, I only managed to drop several percent of its 90 mAh battery. Despite the small size, it is rated for weeks of use, which is pretty impressive. At $35.99, I cannot say the Moodi is a must-have accessory, but I see the appeal. I prefer using the Krono with its Smart Dial, as I rarely read for more than 40-60 minutes in one sitting. However, if you have a stand and like reading for long periods, the Moodi is the right thing to have. It is a bit more expensive than regular page flippers on Amazon, but it is on par with similar products from Kobo or BOOX. Plus, it has a little more fun to it with removable buttons and better integration into the Krono. Conclusion At the end of the day, DuRoBo Krono is a nice pocket-sized e-reader. Its software focuses on the main things without trying to be everything at once. The smart dial idea is unique and great, and I wish more manufacturers had something similar in their devices. The display is also good, with an even frontlight and "always-on" support. I did not notice any deal-breaking issues with the Krono. However, you can feel that the idea needs some improvements, such as a slightly stiffer dial in a more ergonomic location, perhaps a little more premium materials, and better software customization. I hope the company won't give up on the idea and improve the dial and ergonomics in the second generation. Buy DuRoBo Krono Black - $279.99 on Amazon Buy DuRoBo Krono White - $279.99 on Amazon Buy DuRoBo Moodi - $35.99 on Amazon As an Amazon Associate, we earn from qualifying purchases.
    • In what way is any of what I said incorrect? To install an update you need to close all browser instances, upping it from once a month to once a fortnight is an inconvenience for users. Particularly when updates don't offer functionality that users want (notably copilot). Security updates should come as they are needed, not on a release schedule
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