Domain: youtube.com
Stories and comments across the archive that link to youtube.com.
Comments · 87,129
-
OK, it's the Future
As delivery drones fly, they capture all they see on the ground, facial recognition, sell it to data aggregators and TMZ. That's what will get them going in the U.S., air-safety be damned. Money, money, money. Look! there you are, using your lunch break to visit a motel! To stop us from posting who you were with, just text $300 to blackmail of the future.
-
hyperloop is stupid idea
My opinion of the hyperloop concept is based mostly on this critique by "thunderf00t" (youtube link):
https://www.youtube.com/watch?...I think wilful ignorance and blind optimism fuels these things. Maybe they're a good thing, in that they show the general public why engineers "can't just" do this or that. Think of the history of the Concorde - that was actually quite simple from an engineering standpoint, yet it was a long way off from being practical, even decades later.
-
Re:Or...
-
Re:Product life times ...
-
Re:the title that just wont die
"The only people who come into my office are those who are conducting an IT inventory."
So they've managed to isolate their "miracle worker" safely away from the productive staff, and cleverly stashed you in a storage room and called it your office.
-
Re:the title that just wont die
-
Obligatory
-
Oblig. Futurama
Kind of like playing Virtual Virtual Skeeball...
-
Re:Wow, what a [welcome] change in coverage of Afr
Yeah,I lived there a long time ago (1990's). I even had the idea,being an avid RC plane nerd, of equipping them with an auto pilot as had been available for RC helicopters for a couple of decades and using them as remote location drug delivery vehicles. But I never had the time nor resources. Now you buy complete electronics packages for under $100, drop them in a senior telemaster and deliver 5kg of supplies 1000km away for a few dollars a trip.
It's not without precedent, even fifteen years ago. (He was successful)
-
Re:Science Fiction Missed Out
The Culture novels are full of killer drones.
Since your example was visual media, here's a short fan film adaptation:
Drones are seen in the sky buzzing about their business at 3:00
-
Got a neat short time-lapse...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?...
It's a partial eclipse - but in this 10-second video, got a really nice image of a reflection of the eclipse at 4k - the sun/moon combo rotates around eachother, as clouds do their dance. Watch full-screen and look at the upper-left, rather than the direct sun image.
It made for a nice cool day in Florida. Definitely looked like late evening, even well outside the totality area.
Ryan Fenton
-
Re:I'm sad to say it, but Linux is dead to me.
Some anonymous troll said:
.. "I had been using Linux from very early on .. But today, Linux is pretty much dead to me .. The GNOME 3 desktop is, in my opinion, totally unusable. The other desktop environments aren't much better." ..
You're talking total rubbish if you don't mind me saying so:
Raspberry PI Desktop
Linux Mint 18.1 "Cinnamon" overview
KDE Plasma 5.X Review 2015
Ubuntu Gnome 17.04 Review -
Re:I'm sad to say it, but Linux is dead to me.
Some anonymous troll said:
.. "I had been using Linux from very early on .. But today, Linux is pretty much dead to me .. The GNOME 3 desktop is, in my opinion, totally unusable. The other desktop environments aren't much better." ..
You're talking total rubbish if you don't mind me saying so:
Raspberry PI Desktop
Linux Mint 18.1 "Cinnamon" overview
KDE Plasma 5.X Review 2015
Ubuntu Gnome 17.04 Review -
Re:I'm sad to say it, but Linux is dead to me.
Some anonymous troll said:
.. "I had been using Linux from very early on .. But today, Linux is pretty much dead to me .. The GNOME 3 desktop is, in my opinion, totally unusable. The other desktop environments aren't much better." ..
You're talking total rubbish if you don't mind me saying so:
Raspberry PI Desktop
Linux Mint 18.1 "Cinnamon" overview
KDE Plasma 5.X Review 2015
Ubuntu Gnome 17.04 Review -
We know where this leads...
-
Re:Nothing
just don't find them as mindlessly fun.
I see a pattern forming here. The older games, particularly side-shooters and DOS Doom, had to work within limited resources, so they were built around action and shooting and speed 'cause there just wasn't any room for story and dialog and cut-scenes and total-realism all that cruft they pile onto "modern" games.
Doom was just plain madness... the fun kind. The Doom 3 makeover is a good example of modernizing but taking the fun out, 'cause they wanted to tell a story and make you solve puzzles and show off what the engine could do and dark and scary in a predictable way. Doom 2016 was putting the fun back in. Get up, get out, shoot things, glory kills until some horror comes right at you and kills you and you're left in a pool of sweat. That was the thrill of Doom for me, opening that door and seeing/hearing a Baron of Hell for the first time, going "what the fuck is that!!!" before my Doom guy screams and dies. Adrenalin. No talk. We kill. -
When choosing the brain to interface with...
...please use some care.
-
Re:computers already interface with the brain
Yes I can't imagine any software engineer who would willingly connect anything to your brain, poof you've been owned. Though you might be willing if you are a:
- parapalegic physicist
- fighter pilot (remember the movie Firefox? you have to think in Russian. https://www.youtube.com/watch?... )
- ??? -
Re:censor this
-
Re:censor this
-
Re:In other climate news
"The level of obstruction exhibited by Senate Democrats on these nominees is just breathtaking," Mr. McConnell said...
...and yet it is still far, far better than what McConnell and the other bitch republicans did with Merrick Garland, a level of obstruction that had never been seen since at least 1992 thanks to then-Senator Joe Biden and the Democrats. And because you're an inbred little piece of shit hypocrite...
There. I fixed that for you. Here is a citation in case you are unaware of what I am referring to.
-
Re:Blame Trump
Short memory Kiddo, The republicans learned this stunt from us 16 years ago.
I like how you talk shit but provide no citation. Classy! Thanks for helping make Slashdot grate! Lazy fuckhead.
Here you go: courtesy of then-Senator Joe Biden
It was rather aggressively reported by quite a number of media outlets, though I suppose the particular media outlets from which you consume news helpfully decided that this particular bit of information was not at all newsworthy.
-
Videos by Norman and Daniel
Norman Wildberger runs a great Youtube channel. On it you can find a series (which is currently being made and released) about the tablet and ancient math.
Go to the source Luke: Playlist
-
Heather Heyer's Family
What I would 'tell the family' is that MORE SPEECH is the best herd-immunity against hate speech. If white-supremacists were allowed to speak freely (without antifa mobs rioting) they would just look like fools. LESS people would be swayed to their side rather than more. Just imagine Anna Kasparian debating a white supremacist. In a bikini. (her not him you schmuck!) In general when speech is suppressed then WORSE societal behaviors often end up fomenting in the fringes. You're outspoken on slashdot. You'll take on a white supremacist idiot in the public forum. I have faith in people like you. And if you find any bikini pics of Anna Kasparian (blonde era), do forward them. P.S. Here's the 'Battle of The Blondes' Coulter vs. Kasparian at Politicon and Toure being sexist by calling it a catfight. Yeah, I'm being sexist too but look at her legs when she gets up! https://www.youtube.com/watch?...
-
Re:Who's the criminal?
Why the hell do we stand for this?
Because they have the lawyers, guns, and money.
-
Re:Nothing
Modern games aren't as good as older games. New games hold your hand and lack challenge and fun.
This video demonstrates the difference between now and then well.
-
Re:Nothing
> Games haven't changed, I have.
Yes they HAVE changed -- often times for the worse. FPS Map Design 1993 vs 2010
Modern games are full of bullshit:
* unskippable cut-scenes
* MTX (micro-transaction) because the game devs don't respect your Time, Space, nor Wallet.
* Season Pass
* bullshit DLC (DownLoadable Content)
* QTE (Quick-Time Events) You remember Dragon's Lair ? Yup, that's what modern "AAA" gaming has devolved into.
* Grindfests aka Skinner boxes
* Flat UI that you can't fucking tell what are UI elements you can interact with vs static elements.
* Multiplayer games that don't allow you to run your own server -- typical EA bullshit.When the "gaming industry" refers to its customers as "whales" you know they don't give a fuck about you -- only how long they can keep "milking" you. If you wat to know the general state of the "industry" Jim Sterling excellent Jimquisition pretty much sucks up the fuckery that publishers and devs try to pull.
With that said I'm a professional game developer and have over 500+ games in my Steam Library. This is my "best of the best" of modern games are in alphabetical order (I've included the "genre" in parenthesis):
* Borderlands 1 and 2 (FPS)
* Dishonored 1 and 2 (FPS)
* Doom (2017) (FPS)
* Elite: Dangerous (Space)
* Inside (Adventure)
* Left for Dead (1 not 2) (FPS)
* Limbo (Adventure)
* Luftrausers (2D shmup)
* Minecraft (3D Survival)
* Path of Exile (RPG)
* Portal 1 and 2 (Puzzle)
* Tom Clancy's Rainbow Six: Vegas 1 and 2
* Serious Sam 1, 2, and 3 (FPS)
* Terraria (2D Survival)
* Team Fortress 2 (FPS)
* The Stanley Parable (Story)
* The Talos Principle (FPS)
* The Vanishing of Ethan Carter (Puzzle)
* The Witness (Puzzle)
* Torchlight 1 and 2 (RPG)Stay away from grind-shift-fests like:
* Defiance
* Destiny
* Diablo 3
* Evolve
* Fashionframe, er, WarframeThere are still some good games out there -- but about 95% of them are shit. i.e. Any game that has non-cosmetic MTX is crap.
-
Re:Nothing
> Games haven't changed, I have.
Yes they HAVE changed -- often times for the worse. FPS Map Design 1993 vs 2010
Modern games are full of bullshit:
* unskippable cut-scenes
* MTX (micro-transaction) because the game devs don't respect your Time, Space, nor Wallet.
* Season Pass
* bullshit DLC (DownLoadable Content)
* QTE (Quick-Time Events) You remember Dragon's Lair ? Yup, that's what modern "AAA" gaming has devolved into.
* Grindfests aka Skinner boxes
* Flat UI that you can't fucking tell what are UI elements you can interact with vs static elements.
* Multiplayer games that don't allow you to run your own server -- typical EA bullshit.When the "gaming industry" refers to its customers as "whales" you know they don't give a fuck about you -- only how long they can keep "milking" you. If you wat to know the general state of the "industry" Jim Sterling excellent Jimquisition pretty much sucks up the fuckery that publishers and devs try to pull.
With that said I'm a professional game developer and have over 500+ games in my Steam Library. This is my "best of the best" of modern games are in alphabetical order (I've included the "genre" in parenthesis):
* Borderlands 1 and 2 (FPS)
* Dishonored 1 and 2 (FPS)
* Doom (2017) (FPS)
* Elite: Dangerous (Space)
* Inside (Adventure)
* Left for Dead (1 not 2) (FPS)
* Limbo (Adventure)
* Luftrausers (2D shmup)
* Minecraft (3D Survival)
* Path of Exile (RPG)
* Portal 1 and 2 (Puzzle)
* Tom Clancy's Rainbow Six: Vegas 1 and 2
* Serious Sam 1, 2, and 3 (FPS)
* Terraria (2D Survival)
* Team Fortress 2 (FPS)
* The Stanley Parable (Story)
* The Talos Principle (FPS)
* The Vanishing of Ethan Carter (Puzzle)
* The Witness (Puzzle)
* Torchlight 1 and 2 (RPG)Stay away from grind-shift-fests like:
* Defiance
* Destiny
* Diablo 3
* Evolve
* Fashionframe, er, WarframeThere are still some good games out there -- but about 95% of them are shit. i.e. Any game that has non-cosmetic MTX is crap.
-
conspiracies in conspiracies!
You conspiracy theorists need to keep your stories straight. There were no controlled demolitions in the world trade buildings on 9/11. Sure, the conspiracy theorists keep harping on about how jet fuel doesn't burn hot enough to melt steel, even though the structural engineers have proven time and time again that the steel doesn't have to melt to collapse, just be softened and weakened by the heat.
However, remember the other big conspiracy about airplanes: Chemtrails!
Those planes had just taken off so their fuel tanks were full of jet fuel. The Chemtrail people will inform you that this also means that their chemtrail tanks were full of chemtrail chemicals! As we all know from high school chemistry (or high school musical 3? I forget which now...), the active chemical dispersant used in the chemtrails is Benzo-dioxy-teraphylone-glycosamate and it burns at a temperature of 3,723 degrees Celsius. This is more than hot enough to melt steel.
Of course the government can't admit that the planes were full of chemtrail chemicals because that would reveal the chemtrail conspiracy! So quit falling for the false fake conspiracy of controlled demolition, it is merely a counter intelligence psy-ops rumor designed to hide the true fake conspiracy of chemtrail chemicals!
-
Re: Low what ?
Poor people don't know what to do with internet. What Berkeley students say anyway https://www.youtube.com/watch?...
They said black people, not poor people. I'm walking away from this RIGHT NOW.
:) -
Re:Comforting
There was this guy who pulled up a 20-year-old bug in Bugzilla that works because lists are processed by iterating as an expression (e.g. if you do $x = (1, 2, 3, 4, 5), you get $x=1; $=x2; $x=3... and end up with $x=5). As a result, if you put the same entry in a hash twice, you get the second one--and, along with a flaw in DBI, he managed to get admin access to Mozilla's bugzilla.
So everyone whined a lot, and said he's just dumb, and he came back a year later and (at 21:45) shot a remote code execution at something he found in perl's CGI docs by using a special case of file handle interpretation.
So there are a number of things going on here. For one, perl does some really strange things, and so stuff needs extreme defensive programming because the very language is trying to fuck it all up for you. On top of that, libraries on the back-end--like DBI and the CGI library--don't handle shit very well, at all, and so it becomes possible to pass a parameter as a list and end up overwriting the next parameter to a subroutine call, which lets you do such fun things as disable input validation in DBI; or, even better, actually use perl right, except that the CGI module had a check to see if a variable is a file, but if you gave it a list containing any file it would return true even though many things in the list aren't files. This was all exacerbated by some core perl modules handling user input by turning it into lists, which means end-user input caused polymorphic code.
So imagine what it's like to be a programmer. Can you tell me every function call you make is only doing exactly what you expect? Of course not; there's too much code back there for you to review. You can verify that it also does what you expect--but not that it does nothing and also what you expect. You've got limited time to invest in gaining the certainty of what any particular library or function does in total, so there will only be a subset of such things to which you can attest.
Interestingly, Reveal Mobile has this in their documentation:
"While traditional lat/long audiences require the app to be open and running, detecting or 'bumping' beacons can occur when apps are not in use," the company writes. "This allows Reveal Mobile to build larger, and more accurate, location-based audiences."
And they issued this statement:
We don't attempt to reverse engineer a device's location if someone opts out of location services, regardless of the data signal it comes from. In looking at our current SDK's behavior, we see how that can be misconstrued. In response to that, we're releasing a new version of our SDK today which will no longer send any data points which could be used to infer location when someone opts out of location sharing.
"It sends things, but we don't use those things for that purpose. I know, it looks weird, but trust us."
......... well okay then! -
Re:Comforting
There was this guy who pulled up a 20-year-old bug in Bugzilla that works because lists are processed by iterating as an expression (e.g. if you do $x = (1, 2, 3, 4, 5), you get $x=1; $=x2; $x=3... and end up with $x=5). As a result, if you put the same entry in a hash twice, you get the second one--and, along with a flaw in DBI, he managed to get admin access to Mozilla's bugzilla.
So everyone whined a lot, and said he's just dumb, and he came back a year later and (at 21:45) shot a remote code execution at something he found in perl's CGI docs by using a special case of file handle interpretation.
So there are a number of things going on here. For one, perl does some really strange things, and so stuff needs extreme defensive programming because the very language is trying to fuck it all up for you. On top of that, libraries on the back-end--like DBI and the CGI library--don't handle shit very well, at all, and so it becomes possible to pass a parameter as a list and end up overwriting the next parameter to a subroutine call, which lets you do such fun things as disable input validation in DBI; or, even better, actually use perl right, except that the CGI module had a check to see if a variable is a file, but if you gave it a list containing any file it would return true even though many things in the list aren't files. This was all exacerbated by some core perl modules handling user input by turning it into lists, which means end-user input caused polymorphic code.
So imagine what it's like to be a programmer. Can you tell me every function call you make is only doing exactly what you expect? Of course not; there's too much code back there for you to review. You can verify that it also does what you expect--but not that it does nothing and also what you expect. You've got limited time to invest in gaining the certainty of what any particular library or function does in total, so there will only be a subset of such things to which you can attest.
Interestingly, Reveal Mobile has this in their documentation:
"While traditional lat/long audiences require the app to be open and running, detecting or 'bumping' beacons can occur when apps are not in use," the company writes. "This allows Reveal Mobile to build larger, and more accurate, location-based audiences."
And they issued this statement:
We don't attempt to reverse engineer a device's location if someone opts out of location services, regardless of the data signal it comes from. In looking at our current SDK's behavior, we see how that can be misconstrued. In response to that, we're releasing a new version of our SDK today which will no longer send any data points which could be used to infer location when someone opts out of location sharing.
"It sends things, but we don't use those things for that purpose. I know, it looks weird, but trust us."
......... well okay then! -
Re:Not real useful
Tesla actually did have a battery swap station. It turned out to be uneconomical and unpopular.
Rapid charges are generally good enough, and it's possible to make them even faster with higher charge powers and charger-provided coolant. And with Supercharger v3, there will be a battery buffer in the charger, so the charging station's max power is no longer limited by the grid.
For people talking about the "time wasted stopping to charge", several important points.
1. In the EU, you have to stop frequently. Minimum 45 minutes per 4 1/2 hours for commercial drivers. You can lose your license if you don't. So rapid charging stops aren't a slowdown at all.
2. Paying the driver is under 20% of the cost of shipping by truck, and amortizing the truck's capital cost a bit over 20%. But fuel is around 40% for the total cost (the rest is things like maintenance, insurance, etc). So if you can halve fuel costs in half and slash maintenance, you're cutting a quarter off of your shipping costs, which can more than pay for the additional drivers and trucks to compensate for the ~half an hour charging every ~3 hours.
3. This shouldn't need to be said... because it was in the article... but the guy was talking about regional haul shipping, not long haul. Believe it or not, not every shipment travels thousands of miles.
Now lets bring up the side benefits.
1. An EV drivetrain will be ridiculously powerful. I have little doubt that Tesla will be making these as the most powerful semis in the world, as it's much easier to do with an EV drivetrain. Hills will be laughed off. To be more specific, Tesla has stated that they plan to use the M3's drivetrain (which propels a 1600kg car from 0-60 in 5,1-5,6 seconds) in Tesla... except that they plan to have one motor for each wheel. That's going to be a crazy amount of power. And speaking of hills, they'll recoup the energy on the downslope.
2. Semis waste a huge amount of energy idling, to power accessory loads for the driver and/or the cargo. Because the engines are so large, idling guzzles huge amounts of fuel. A variety of solutions have been come up with over the years, such as auxilliary microgenerators and window-mounted "tethers" at truck stops (TSE) which provide climate control and 120V power for drivers. EVs, however, have what owners often refer to as "camping mode". Since you never have to idle an engine, they use only the power that is needed to provide climate control and accessory loads while you're parked. Sleeping in an EV is a quiet, perfectly climate-controlled experience, and depending on the weather usually only takes 1-2% of the battery per hour if you're not plugged in (nothing if you are).
3. An EV semi would not be affected by noise, pollution, and idling regulations, which limit or prohibit semi access to some areas, and which have become more common with time.
4. While the earlier price analysis was for the US, it's a much more extreme difference in other places in the world. Where I am, for example, diesel is about $7/gal, and they're looking to hike taxes on it soon - it'll probably end up around $8/gal. I don't know what percentage of a fleet operator's costs here are fuel, but it's going to be a lot more than in the US.
5. We're so far just comparing base vehicles. But Tesla is working on value-added features as well, such as EAP and platooning. The latter is, from a technical standpoint, much easier than EAP (locking onto a vehicle and holding position relative to it). Even if you don't take the driver out of the loop, you're saving a ton of energy for the trailing vehicles. Meaning not only reducing costs, but also that you can periodically swap who's the lead vehicle and extend the whole platoon's range.
Versus passenger EVs, semis have a number of other big things going for them.
1. Unlike the passenger vehicle market, the shipping industry is all about the numbers, all about the bottom line - and c
-
Re:Ad manager here...
-
Re:This is insane
This political climate - the one we are living in right now - is insane.
Correction: It is a "demoralized" climate. This is the same climate created prior to any communist revolution. Watch this vid if you care about reality. Ex-KGB agent explains the demoralization campaign and predicts our current society decades ago. Leftists don't like it, because they don't want to admit their party has been hijacked and the pro-workers-party is now on the right. However, the science is solid. The hypothesis has been tested and found valid, IMO.
-
Re:recharge
Sorry, posted the wrong video link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pWCS0If2W1c
-
Re:recharge
You could even recharge while driving if you have the right infrastructure. There is a 2 km long test road in Sweden for electric trucks.
References:
http://sandvikenpurepower.se/in-english/electric-highway.html
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pWCS0If2W1c -
Re: 2 million gigabytes of porn
Rephrasing a guy rephrasing one guy - if 90% of internet is porn and kittens, nobody forces you to watch it all
-
Semi-related: Kill Switches Incoming... When?
I am wondering how long will it be until police have the ability to remotely shut off cars?... While the cars are underway?
Obligatory existing movie reference--Idiocracy: "Why are we slowing down?" ,,, "They turned off my battery!"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?...
(and it's even an electric car too. Mike Judge is psychic)
Without trying too hard, I can imagine a few instances where an automatic-driving car could end up rolling down the road on its way to (somewhere) with nobody alive in it, or nobody old enough in it to possibly intervene if necessary.
It only stands to reason that the police will need to have a way to instantly and quickly shut the vehicle's motive power off, in some safe fashion.
And while the police having that ability doesn't worry me much, hackers learning how to do it will be able to cause quite a worry.
Any hardware or software process that is quick and simple (that can literally be done at the press of a button) won't be difficult to hack... -
This is really important
As history taught us, even the tiniest difference should immediately provoke divisions; coming up with catchy names for each faction is also quite important (excellent work!). But this situation is harder than usual because, as everyone knows, fully agreeing with the code of conduct is a basic requirement before starting to use any programming language.
In fact and despite not using Node.js at all, I cannot ignore what is likely to become one of the most relevant episodes of our generation. During the next months, I will be living in a cave and hunting my food with my bare hands, just to get closer to mother nature such that I can reach the peace of mind required to even start thinking about what will be my position regarding a so extremely relevant issue.
Just in case: LOL. -
Re:JavaScript should replace C
Have her watch this video? Yes, it is from the same guy who did the hilarious nosql == webscale video that was popularly posted here.
-
Re:Been developing in NodeJS for 3 years now
-
Node.js sucks
I maybe in the minority with the young hipsters, but this summarizes my thoughts on Node.js from the same guy who did nosql webscales video where he pointed out non SQL databases don't have data protection or integrity.
Basically the video states node.js has the complexities of assembler with the syntax of javascript. You have to write your own freaking threads with callback after callback loop. Why?? It makes no sense in 2017 where NGINX has async threading models built in. Javascript is bad language too and while node.js looks cool for simple things if you already know Javascript it gets sucky very very quickly when you need something complex.
So why build your own multitasking when you can use built in threads?
-
Re:They sound smarter than us
Almost a minute? What are you smoking.
Also, the transaction is taking nearly the same total time, the only difference is that before you would swipe the magstripe and then more stuff would happen whereas now you can't remove the chip until the last step. So granted it's more convenient to swipe and put the card away in your wallet while the terminals finishes up, but that's nothing to do with how long it actually takes to acquire the transaction.
By the way, did you know that you can copy a magstripe card with a olde time two-cassette boombox?
-
Re:flag?
"Pressure drops" are a common misconception. Pressure actually increases the deeper you go in space.
-
Re:"clean" "meat"
And i'm suspecting that this synthetic meat can be processed organically.
While I accept that definitions vary the first one I can across for "organic food" was:
Organic food is the product of a farming system which avoids the use of man-made fertilisers, pesticides; growth regulators and livestock feed additives. Irradiation and the use of genetically modified organisms (GMOs) or products produced from or by GMOs are generally prohibited by organic legislation.
I'm sure you don't think that vat grown meat can be produced without man-made growth regulators, but I'm not sure what this does mean for your version of organic. I'm also pretty sure that the cells will have to be 'modified', otherwise growing them will prove not only impractical but 'uneconomical'. Please note I'm not saying impossible, just impractical. The market for $35,000 hamburgers is somewhat limited!
And my last response is that I believe that this synthetic meat will advertise as such because a lot of people will want it.
It will be labeled as such because legislation will ensure it must be. It will be branded and advertised to make people want it. No vegan will eat it, as it is still very much an animal product. Most vegetarians will not eat it, either because of the taste or texture, or because it's still animal flesh at the end of the day. A reasonably large number of people will not eat it because of either trust issues or the yuck factor, and finally some people will eat it because it's cheap / expensive. People are funny like that...
-
GAY NIGGERS LOVE COCK IN ASS FUCK ME HARDG_N_A_A (G.A.Y N1GGER ASSOCIATION OF AMERICA) is the first organization which
gathers G.A.Y N1GGERS from all over America and abroad for one common goal - being G.A.Y N1GGERS.
Are you G.A.Y ?
Are you a N1GGER ?
Are you a G.A.Y N1GGER ?
If you answered "Yes" to any of the above questions, then G_N_A_A (G.A.Y N1GGER ASSOCIATION OF AMERICA) might be exactly what you've been looking for!
Join G_N_A_A (G.A.Y N1GGER ASSOCIATION OF AMERICA) today, and enjoy all the benefits of being a full-time G_N_A_A member.
G_N_A_A (G.A.Y N1GGER ASSOCIATION OF AMERICA) is the fastest-growing G.A.Y N1GGER community with THOUSANDS of members all over United States of America. You, too, can be a part of G_N_A_A if you join today!
Why not? It's quick and easy - only 3 simple steps!First, you have to obtain a copy of G.A.Y N1GGERS FROM OUTER SPACE THE MOVIE and watch it.
You can watch G.A.Y N1GGERS FROM OUTER SPACE on Youtube.Second, you need to succeed in posting a G_N_A_A "first post" on slashdot.org , a popular "news for trolls" website
Third, you need to join the official G_N_A_A irc channel #G_N_A_A on EFNet, and apply for membership.
Talk to one of the ops or any of the other members in the channel to sign up today!
If you are having trouble locating #G_N_A_A, the official G.A.Y N1GGER ASSOCIATION OF AMERICA irc channel, you might be on a wrong irc network. The correct network is EFNet, and you can connect to irc.secsup.org or irc.easynews.com as one of the EFNet servers.
If you do not have an IRC client handy, you are free to use the G_N_A_A Java IRC client by clicking here.
If you have mod points and would like to support G_N_A_A, please moderate this post up.
This post brought to you by Penisbird , a proud member of the G_N_A_A
G_____________________________________naann_______ ________G
N_____________________________nnnaa__nanaaa_______ ________A
A____________________aanana__nannaa_nna_an________ ________Y
A_____________annna_nnnnnan_aan_aa__na__aa________ ________*
G____________nnaana_nnn__nn_aa__nn__na_anaann_MERI CA______N
N___________ana__nn_an___an_aa_anaaannnanaa_______ ________I
A___________aa__ana_nn___nn_nnnnaa___ana__________ ________G
A__________nna__an__na___nn__nnn___SSOCIATION_of__ ________G
G__________ana_naa__an___nnn______________________ ________E
N__________ananan___nn___aan_IGGER________________ ________R
A__________nnna____naa____________________________ ________S
A________nnaa_____anan____________________________ ________*
G________anaannana________________________________ ________A
N________ananaannn_AY_____________________________ ________S
A________ana____nn_________IRC-EFNET-#G_N_A_A________ ________S
A_______nn_____na_________________________________ ________O
*_______aaaan_____________________________________ ________C
Gary Niger gary_niger@G_N_A_A.us G_N_A_A Corporate Headquarters 143 Rolloffle Avenue Tarzana, California 91356
Enid Al-Punjabi enid_al_punjabi@G_N_A_A.us G_N_A_A World Headquarters No.33 Kyutei Bld. 2F, Shinjuku 2-11-7, Shinjuku-ku, Tokyo, Japan ????????2??11-6
Copyright (c) 2003-2015 G.A.Y N1GGER Association of AmericaIch Bindawalross (London) - G_N_A_A (NYSE:
-
Re:That's it.
I think the proper Internet etiquette is to tell them "Up your butt with a cashew nut".
-
Re:Trust comes on foot but leaves on horseback
cool trick:
$ vlc http://youtube.com/somevideoYou're welcome
:) -
Re:How did companies survive before extensive spyi
Because that https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nvks70PD0Rswas before all the kewl millennials decided to use Agile/Scrum as the only way to develop code. No QA as your users are the testers with smily or frowns. Windows 10 has had no QA at all whatsoever as an example.