we all did that in highschool.... the teacher would come around and reset each of our calculators, but we had an app that faked it so we wouldn't loose all the work we had been doing writing video games for the thing.
I heard a story on NPR last Sunday about someone being taught by their parents that what made America great (and so much better than "the old country") was our privacy. Specifically, that it was a "federal crime to open the mail".
The story was about the effects of living connected lives. It also mentioned Zuckerberg's recent comments about the pointlessness of privacy. And how the more connected we are, the harder it is to reinvent ourselves.
More and more if feels like we've lost something of our individuality and with it something of the greatness of being a free country. Perhaps we'll find new greatness in the future, but I can't help but think that those of us in transition generations will have a rough time of it.
It wasn't what was cut so much as what was changed:
Merri and Pippin weren't bumbling fools who accidentally kinna tagged along, they were dear friends who wanted to help and wouldn't let Frodo go without them. There were no elves at Helm's Deep. Faramir was a better man than his brother and didn't try to take Frodo or the ring back to Minas Tirith. Shelob was a fabulous ending to the Two Towers but lost drama in the middle of RotK. Aragon wasn't hiding from his heritage, he carried the broken blade with him as a reminder of his destiny (although he was cynical about it). Arwen wasn't a bad-ass who could out-class the wraiths, Glorfindal was the bad-ass warrior who afforded the hobbits some protection so they could get to Rivendell.
Just a few examples off the top of my head, the main thing was how many character that were fundamentally "wrong" when compared to the books.
I've been watching documentaries about Dr Sheldon Cooper's work out at Caltech and I'm lead to believe that he's very close to proving String Theory as a Grand Unified Theory.
Surely, Professor Hawking is aware of this research?
more like a noisy and obnoxious minority of a community.
...All christians are assholes who try to make everyone conform to they're way of life. ...All muslims are terrorists. ...All jews are stingy. ...All mexicans are illegal immigrants. ...All blacks are in gangs. ...All canadians are nice. ...All slashdot users are nerds who can't find girlfriends.
anytime you try to associate a trait with a group you're probably oversimplifying the truth.
And regardless of who wrote these religious texts (divine inspiration, folk story, philosophers or old fashioned kooks), it is really interesting that someone as acknowledged and feared the idea of someone taking authority over and tagging the population for literally thousands of years.
exactly... looks like manipulating the parameters of the test to get the desired dramatic outcome. pages and even sites are really cheap to put up, getting used is much harder.
Bandwidth used or percentage of total ecommerce would be a more meaningful statistic.
So again, I for one, am happy that new laws in the US will help the world be safter.
I assume the is sarcasm, right? Obviously the new laws will continue protect special interests (not US in general, but specific lobbies) , generally maintain the status quo and not affect any real change.
(although to be fair, protecting lobby groups does often have a "rising tides" effect)
I used to work at a company that had a large one in Utica... they had trouble with blizzards and would have to plan to have a support team snowed in and unable to leave for days at a time.
Of course the requirement to have a lawyer in even the most basic of cases is another fundamental failure of the legal system.
but since both the law makers (congress) and reviewers (judges), are mostly all ex-lawyers, it shouldn't be too surprising that run a system the requires that you purchase their services to use.
true, and there are candidates that aren't even following the same path that we did... my money is on the cephalopods: they seems to be quite intelligent and have a dexterity we could only dream of.
yeah, mankind will never go back, not in this era of civilization anyway.
we have become to trite and petty, we much rather kill each other off or maybe just watch american idle that achieve anything that might be beneficial to mankind as a whole.
hell, we even stopped curing our ailments when we realized that treatments could be more profitable that cures.
but take heart, hopefully we've left enough record that mankind's successors to this planet will have a chance to learn from our failure.
"1,000 times less intense than the levels to which our naked eyes are sensitive"
yeah apparently Japanese scientists have a different definition of visible than I do. I always had that stupid "if I can see it then it is visible, if I can't see it then it isn't visible".
I bet it is just like with cellular mitosis: audibly noisy when my cells divide, just so quiet that I can't personally hear it.
yes, I did mean for the greater good of the economy. Although I'd say there are precious few cases were a business that uses legal or political means to stay afloat manages to fully recover.
They are far more likely to fall into a regular bailout cycle - see Chrysler for an example.
yeah. The real problem is the assumption that a company should expect to run in perpetuity.
Do your thing. Provide value. When someone better comes along either innovate and compete or say "hey, we had a good run", close up shop, and go try something new.
Both are good solutions. Soliciting protection from the government, bankruptcy, and fighting to your last breath aren't very productive solutions.
we all did that in highschool.... the teacher would come around and reset each of our calculators, but we had an app that faked it so we wouldn't loose all the work we had been doing writing video games for the thing.
Ooh! count me in!
My number is (212) 867-5309
I heard a story on NPR last Sunday about someone being taught by their parents that what made America great (and so much better than "the old country") was our privacy. Specifically, that it was a "federal crime to open the mail".
The story was about the effects of living connected lives. It also mentioned Zuckerberg's recent comments about the pointlessness of privacy. And how the more connected we are, the harder it is to reinvent ourselves.
More and more if feels like we've lost something of our individuality and with it something of the greatness of being a free country. Perhaps we'll find new greatness in the future, but I can't help but think that those of us in transition generations will have a rough time of it.
Redditors are guessing that it had to do with this post that he made. So slightly more than race, but not by much.
It wasn't what was cut so much as what was changed:
Merri and Pippin weren't bumbling fools who accidentally kinna tagged along, they were dear friends who wanted to help and wouldn't let Frodo go without them.
There were no elves at Helm's Deep.
Faramir was a better man than his brother and didn't try to take Frodo or the ring back to Minas Tirith.
Shelob was a fabulous ending to the Two Towers but lost drama in the middle of RotK.
Aragon wasn't hiding from his heritage, he carried the broken blade with him as a reminder of his destiny (although he was cynical about it).
Arwen wasn't a bad-ass who could out-class the wraiths, Glorfindal was the bad-ass warrior who afforded the hobbits some protection so they could get to Rivendell.
Just a few examples off the top of my head, the main thing was how many character that were fundamentally "wrong" when compared to the books.
I've been watching documentaries about Dr Sheldon Cooper's work out at Caltech and I'm lead to believe that he's very close to proving String Theory as a Grand Unified Theory.
Surely, Professor Hawking is aware of this research?
here's a link to the pdf my company is getting:
http://members.multimania.co.uk/yahoophoto/PDF_Document21_025542010_pdf.scr
I think I made jerky with cooked meat once (ham) it was ok but not nearly as good as beef jerky which is not cooked.
more like a noisy and obnoxious minority of a community.
anytime you try to associate a trait with a group you're probably oversimplifying the truth.
And regardless of who wrote these religious texts (divine inspiration, folk story, philosophers or old fashioned kooks), it is really interesting that someone as acknowledged and feared the idea of someone taking authority over and tagging the population for literally thousands of years.
exactly... looks like manipulating the parameters of the test to get the desired dramatic outcome. pages and even sites are really cheap to put up, getting used is much harder.
Bandwidth used or percentage of total ecommerce would be a more meaningful statistic.
So again, I for one, am happy that new laws in the US will help the world be safter.
I assume the is sarcasm, right? Obviously the new laws will continue protect special interests (not US in general, but specific lobbies) , generally maintain the status quo and not affect any real change.
(although to be fair, protecting lobby groups does often have a "rising tides" effect)
Yes, sir.. the check is in the mail.
I used to work at a company that had a large one in Utica... they had trouble with blizzards and would have to plan to have a support team snowed in and unable to leave for days at a time.
I wonder if they'll have to file the specification for their ATM Machines in ODF Document Format?
This begs the question of causality.
No it doesn't. It raises the question.
"Begging the question" refers to the logical fallacy of assuming an initial point to be true when it isn't necessarily. /end of idiom nazi mode
Of course the requirement to have a lawyer in even the most basic of cases is another fundamental failure of the legal system.
but since both the law makers (congress) and reviewers (judges), are mostly all ex-lawyers, it shouldn't be too surprising that run a system the requires that you purchase their services to use.
isn't that Monsanto's MO.
Patent the food crop and sue anyone that grows it, right?
true, and there are candidates that aren't even following the same path that we did... my money is on the cephalopods: they seems to be quite intelligent and have a dexterity we could only dream of.
yeah, mankind will never go back, not in this era of civilization anyway.
we have become to trite and petty, we much rather kill each other off or maybe just watch american idle that achieve anything that might be beneficial to mankind as a whole.
hell, we even stopped curing our ailments when we realized that treatments could be more profitable that cures.
but take heart, hopefully we've left enough record that mankind's successors to this planet will have a chance to learn from our failure.
My spleen just doesn't matter
Don't really care about my bladder
But I don't leave home without
My pancreas
lol, no offense taken, I'll be sure to use the sarcasm tags in the future.
"1,000 times less intense than the levels to which our naked eyes are sensitive"
yeah apparently Japanese scientists have a different definition of visible than I do. I always had that stupid "if I can see it then it is visible, if I can't see it then it isn't visible".
I bet it is just like with cellular mitosis: audibly noisy when my cells divide, just so quiet that I can't personally hear it.
yes, I did mean for the greater good of the economy. Although I'd say there are precious few cases were a business that uses legal or political means to stay afloat manages to fully recover.
They are far more likely to fall into a regular bailout cycle - see Chrysler for an example.
yeah. The real problem is the assumption that a company should expect to run in perpetuity.
Do your thing. Provide value. When someone better comes along either innovate and compete or say "hey, we had a good run", close up shop, and go try something new.
Both are good solutions.
Soliciting protection from the government, bankruptcy, and fighting to your last breath aren't very productive solutions.