Actually, Wall-E was much different than I expected. I know the critics really liked it, but I found it to be a bit heavy for younger kids, and probably not enough to grab very young kids' attentions. As an adult though, I thought the movie was incredible. I hadn't really read up on it before viewing it and had no idea it was going to be an entire social commentary-esque movie.
Definitely makes you think, though! And the animation was absolutely breathtaking at times.
And no, I don't want to patch it every five seconds. I wouldn't mind waiting a little longer for a release that's stable as opposed to what happened with Vista.
> "The dog ate my homework" is no excuse here.
Sure, now it's...my hard drive melted or the server's down.
Seriously? Kids are starting too young. I love how people are worried that people are too connected to their technology and that kids aren't getting out enough anymore, and yet, we're starting them with a need for technology at the age of 11.
Has anyone else been at the supermarket when the computers go down? No one knows what the hell to do. It's a madhouse.
Technology can be exceptionally helpful, but I don't think this is a move in the right direction.
Tufts *does* provide that one-year license of song download service, but it sucks because you can't put the songs on your ipod or rip them to a CD.
Actually, Wall-E was much different than I expected. I know the critics really liked it, but I found it to be a bit heavy for younger kids, and probably not enough to grab very young kids' attentions. As an adult though, I thought the movie was incredible. I hadn't really read up on it before viewing it and had no idea it was going to be an entire social commentary-esque movie.
Definitely makes you think, though! And the animation was absolutely breathtaking at times.
Joss Whedon cannot be mentioned without a plug to bring back firefly! :)
Security.
And no, I don't want to patch it every five seconds. I wouldn't mind waiting a little longer for a release that's stable as opposed to what happened with Vista.
> "The dog ate my homework" is no excuse here. Sure, now it's...my hard drive melted or the server's down. Seriously? Kids are starting too young. I love how people are worried that people are too connected to their technology and that kids aren't getting out enough anymore, and yet, we're starting them with a need for technology at the age of 11. Has anyone else been at the supermarket when the computers go down? No one knows what the hell to do. It's a madhouse. Technology can be exceptionally helpful, but I don't think this is a move in the right direction.