Did this research notice if there were any deaths caused by getting discracted when you jumped and the camera got into such position that you tried to get a nippleslip or see the panties?
Just what we need... surround ourselves with ourselves. That will challenge us and cause us to grow into intelligent, tolerant and well rounded individuals.
I think the most reasonable solution is an eletronic device that prints the vote so the user can cast it on a ballot. You can still count the votes in a fast way, but when any doubt is risen, you can double-check it with the paper votes.
...the author talks about how smart people need to find a certain amount of intellectual challenge from day to day. If they don't find it in their workplace, they'll end up playing complex, 'smart' games, like Civilization IV or Chess
Well, I always try to find challenging games during work hours, so I don't think I classify in either category.
Its nothing new, but it might surprise those who believe in pure, not-revenue-generating OSS. It's how the free for user projects are financed.
That is really not the problem - at least for me. You can gather user data, you can generate income with it, but you do need my permission. You can't do that without a clear notice.
The multisearch add-on was only intended for the pre-release versions, as part of a research project. It will NOT be included in the final Karmic release.
Citation please?
Note that we did not necessarily foresee Multisearch as code that we would ship in a stable release. Whatever actions we take in response to the information and feedback will depend on the information and feedback that we collect from this effort.
I thought gifs couldn't be fun until I saw this: http://25.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_mdqahveJp01qdlh1io1_400.gif
I have a brazilian blog about Netflix and I've got them some time ago doing the exact same thing: http://translate.google.com/translate?sl=pt&tl=en&js=n&prev=_t&hl=pt-BR&ie=UTF-8&layout=2&eotf=1&u=http%3A%2F%2Fblog.lancamentosnetflix.com.br%2F2012%2F09%2Fnetflix-baixando-legendas-da-internet.html
I think this pretty much sums it up for Diablo and Wow: http://www.psychologyofgames.com/2011/04/the-psychology-of-loot/
I've got it today and I've played it for a while. It seems the servers are in maintenance now.
Yeah. I don't agree with this 'gravity' consensus either. These so-called 'scientists' think they know everything.
Sarcasm went waaay over the moderator's head.
*keeps
Did this research notice if there were any deaths caused by getting discracted when you jumped and the camera got into such position that you tried to get a nippleslip or see the panties?
Just what we need... surround ourselves with ourselves. That will challenge us and cause us to grow into intelligent, tolerant and well rounded individuals.
/. just keep getting weirder and weirder.
How about the naked Lara Croft modders? Which slot do they fall into?
Tricky question, don't you think? /. is a family-friendly website and nobody should answer that question.
(Insert 'you must be new here' joke now)
I just noticed I said the exact same thing you already said. Damn, sorry.
I think the most reasonable solution is an eletronic device that prints the vote so the user can cast it on a ballot. You can still count the votes in a fast way, but when any doubt is risen, you can double-check it with the paper votes.
Now, we just need to find an online activity that balances cuddling and sex.
I'd say 'posting in /.', but it's more of a replacement.
...the author talks about how smart people need to find a certain amount of intellectual challenge from day to day. If they don't find it in their workplace, they'll end up playing complex, 'smart' games, like Civilization IV or Chess
Well, I always try to find challenging games during work hours, so I don't think I classify in either category.
Homo sapiens may not be the ideal kind of advanced life form either.
I'm a little late, but Neil deGrasse has already made that point in a very funny way. After all, we breath and swallow through the same hole!
Its nothing new, but it might surprise those who believe in pure, not-revenue-generating OSS. It's how the free for user projects are financed.
That is really not the problem - at least for me. You can gather user data, you can generate income with it, but you do need my permission. You can't do that without a clear notice.
The multisearch add-on was only intended for the pre-release versions, as part of a research project. It will NOT be included in the final Karmic release.
Citation please?
Note that we did not necessarily foresee Multisearch as code that we would ship in a stable release. Whatever actions we take in response to the information and feedback will depend on the information and feedback that we collect from this effort.
That's quite a different statement.
Collecting user data without asking for agreement is wrong, whatever you say.
It happens all the time, or so it seems.
Can you make an analogy involving cars? That would be usefull to many people here.
Thank you!!! I thought nobody had posted some kind of analogy with a Beowulf cluster. ./ would be doomed!
Maybe you should check Google for that answer.
The real WTF is: why this story wasn't posted by kdawson?
Hey Slashdot, how about covering the fact that KDE 4.3 [kde.org] was just released today?
Ops.
Damn, that seems pretty good! It's even Microsoft certified!
Yeah, I started using openDNS after I saw that stupid Telefonica's page.