Mountains are calling & I must go! Let’s wander where the Wi-Fi is weak & the trails are steep.
Adventure awaits!

Jason Roberts is a photographer who threw himself back into the art like a man escaping a burning building. No plan, no roadmap, just a camera and a hunger for something real. Oregon is his stomping ground: mountains that bleed into the sky, rivers that rage like drunk gods, and ghost towns crumbling under the weight of time. That’s where his lens points, not at the polished, the staged, or the safe, but at the raw nerve of the world.
Roberts walked away from photography once, swallowed by the static of daily life, but he came back swinging. The camera became his weapon and salvation, a way to wrestle order from chaos and bring back proof that the wild is still out there kicking. Every shot is a field report: lightning storms stitched over the Three Sisters, deer skulls strung up in hunting camps, forests whispering secrets in the dark.
Through Nerdy Viking Photography, Roberts keeps driving down back roads, chasing storms, and crawling into the forgotten corners of the Pacific Northwest. His work is part survival note, part love letter, part battle cry. A reminder that beauty isn’t gentle, it’s feral, and you have to step off the map to find it.
The original made back in 1984 starring Robert Englund as Freddy Kruger has been a classic in the horror genre for years. His grotesque humor and classic one liners made for classic Freddy. I admit I’m partial to the classics as far as horror goes. The gore and rawness of the make up and effect… Read more
Originally posted on Gaminginthehood: In this blog, I will give you my review for the K7 and what some of my main class setups are for this weapon. ? Review: This is a in your face SMG. I only use for up close engagements. The K7 is a great weapon for free for all, since… Read more

Originally posted on Gigaom: If you see someone near you talking to their computer, don’t be surprised. The latest version of Google’s Chrome browser now supports voice search through the “OK Google” keyword. The feature first arrived in beta back in February and is now available on the generally available version of Chrome. To use… Read more
