Try Wunderland, in the 5th Str. Market--it's an old arcade where
everything runs on a nickle. I think it's mostly video games, but I think
it has some pinball. It's worth checking out. 5th and *High*.
Bob Miller wrote:
> Michal Young wrote:
>
> > Sorry for continuing an off-topic thread, but I'm confused about this
> > message and require enlightenment. (Now! Just do it!)
>
> Worse, I want to start *another* off-topic thread, and your message
> just reminded me.
>
> Where are the best places in Eugene to play pinball? I've only
> found two games in the whole area, one at the arcade in Gateway
> Mall and one in a pizza parlor south of campus.
>
> Thanks!
>
> Desperate attempt to get back on topic: Note that video games are NOT
> pinball. Video games are to pinball as Windows is to Unix: popular,
> frequently found in the home, and of no interest to the serious user,
> who keeps real pinball games in his home and spends several hours a
> week maintaining them. (-:
>
> --
> K<bob>
> [EMAIL PROTECTED], http://www.jogger-egg.com/
--
"I was on a Boston to New York shuttle flight that gets stuck on the runway for 3 hours
with no explanation. Worse, I'm sitting in front of three idiot consultants from
Razorfish
who spend the whole time talking loudly and incessantly. Remarkably, not one word of it
resembled any productive activity in the slightest. 'So, I conducted a series of group
discussion sessions to quantify how they establish their procedures.' 'But, Bianca, how
did you formulate the framework for evaluating their paradigms?'
My favorite line - Bianca is irate because a client asked her for some concrete
bit of information: 'Can you believe that? Hello? I'm an Information Architect, not a
Knowledge Engineer!'" --dump() on slashdot