A console in the office can be good, but I can't see giving every person their own as being good. It's better to have just one or two setup in a lounge area so it encourages the employees to play it together in the same room (as opposed to on XBL with each other) and encourages them to build stronger relationships with eachother.
You want your employees to view their desk as a work area, so when they are at their desk they will focus on work. If the console is at their desk then the barrier between work and play blurs and they'll end up being much less productive.
In short, a console in the office (in my experience) works best as a tool to encourage socialization. At their desk it just another way to avoid work, and even a good employee could fall into that trap.
So some how something being written down magically makes it true? Science doesn't depend on that, which is why scientific papers include the information needed to recreate the experiment in question so that the author's findings can be verified by others. What part of the Bible offers the information necessary to verify its claims?
Isn't HOW the scientist creates life more important than IF the scientist creates life when considering it's relevance to proving or disproving Creationism. If the scientist creates life using methods which have a decent chance of naturally occurring, wouldn't that be evidence against creation. Where if it took more extraordinary and unnatural methods to create life wouldn't it be evidence in favor of creation?
DBZ: Budokai Tenkaiechi 2 was the one that came out near the Wii's release, not 3... minor correction.
The system it used for mapping motions to moves was fairly unique and well thought out. It works mostly based on which side of the screen you move the cursor off of. So a move might require you to "move cursor off top of screen then back on" where most Wii titles just use the accelerometers to try and figure out if a particular motion was made, which ends up being fairly inaccurate in some cases.
Actually nVidia is working a new technology called HybridPower which involves a computer with both an on board and discrete graphics card, where the low power on board card is used most of the time (when you are just in your OS environment of choice), but when you need the power (for stuff like games) the discrete card boots up.
A console in the office can be good, but I can't see giving every person their own as being good. It's better to have just one or two setup in a lounge area so it encourages the employees to play it together in the same room (as opposed to on XBL with each other) and encourages them to build stronger relationships with eachother. You want your employees to view their desk as a work area, so when they are at their desk they will focus on work. If the console is at their desk then the barrier between work and play blurs and they'll end up being much less productive. In short, a console in the office (in my experience) works best as a tool to encourage socialization. At their desk it just another way to avoid work, and even a good employee could fall into that trap.
Where is the evidence to support Creationism?
The bible.
So some how something being written down magically makes it true? Science doesn't depend on that, which is why scientific papers include the information needed to recreate the experiment in question so that the author's findings can be verified by others. What part of the Bible offers the information necessary to verify its claims?
Isn't HOW the scientist creates life more important than IF the scientist creates life when considering it's relevance to proving or disproving Creationism. If the scientist creates life using methods which have a decent chance of naturally occurring, wouldn't that be evidence against creation. Where if it took more extraordinary and unnatural methods to create life wouldn't it be evidence in favor of creation?
Well put, wish I had some mod points for you.
DBZ: Budokai Tenkaiechi 2 was the one that came out near the Wii's release, not 3... minor correction. The system it used for mapping motions to moves was fairly unique and well thought out. It works mostly based on which side of the screen you move the cursor off of. So a move might require you to "move cursor off top of screen then back on" where most Wii titles just use the accelerometers to try and figure out if a particular motion was made, which ends up being fairly inaccurate in some cases.
The glossy screen also allows for easier clean up after you're done.
Actually nVidia is working a new technology called HybridPower which involves a computer with both an on board and discrete graphics card, where the low power on board card is used most of the time (when you are just in your OS environment of choice), but when you need the power (for stuff like games) the discrete card boots up.
Manhunt 2 is a far more violent game than GTA and it's on the Wii. Nintendo, like Sony and MS, only refuse games rated AO.