Domain: professionalsuperhero.com
Stories and comments across the archive that link to professionalsuperhero.com.
Comments · 8
-
Re:Game Over
Heres one for you pal:
http://professionalsuperhero.c...
Who's Brin and Gates? Well since you apparently can't use Wikipedia Brin studied comp sci and maths.
Gates spent most of his formative years coding and devising algorithms.
"This thread is one for the wall."
If thats the idiot A/C wall then yeah, you're right up there with the best my friend. Its rather tell you posted entirely as A/C so no one can look up your moronic drivel in years to come.
-
This calls for a Professional Superhero!
We need ACTION ITEM MAN! Professional Superhero.
http://professionalsuperhero.com/ -
Re:Speak the Reader's Language
They are simply interfacing with you to build consensus and team cohesion, working toward common goals and meaningful milestones. This requires sharing broad vision and shared sacrifices. By facilitating your gaining context, they hope guide you to greater synergy.
Haha! You are joking with the wrong guy!
-
Problem solving ablilty tops his entire list.
Problem solving ability is what they are really trying to test. If you cannot figure out what to do, and lack basic problem solving ablilties you are one of these guys http://professionalsuperhero.com/ .
"Talk is cheap. Show me the code." -
Re:I would be interested to see
Now that's interesting. I've been known to do some comic book lettering from time to time, but my actual handwriting is pretty damn horrible these days. Small, but horrible. The reason is application. I use handwriting to jot down notes, where the primary goal is speed. Studies have found that the slowest known way to write the English language is in block caps, so that's out the window straight away. The overall look of the letters goes downhill from there.
By comparison, writing letters for comic books is really more of a kind of drawing. You have to read the script to know what to write, but when you're making the marks on the paper you're not really thinking about the words at all, just the letterforms (in my experience, anyway -- and that's even when I wrote the script myself).
Even more interesting, my dad was also pretty good at block caps. I used to see his block writing around the house, on moving boxes etc. It was even more precise than mine (I assume because in comics you're trying to convey a little bit of emotion with the letters). His handwriting for notes was legible, but totally different. And my dad was also a doctor. I've seen him write prescriptions. They are illegible, totally illegible. I swear to you it's a code! I bet they write them that way to prevent hypochondriacs and junkies from writing believable fake scrips.
-
Not to mention....
-
And let's not forget
-
Re:34% on desktops?
Action Item, is that you?