I agree and it's not just coding where people want the hard earned knowledge quick. There are tons of ads for guitar courses that say things like "become a shredding master in 2 weeks!" or "master the fretboard and become a guitar god with these easy steps!". It's the same thing where you might be able to train your fingers to play lead guitar like Slash but if you had new material could you write equally good guitar parts?
There's always little tricks to make learning easier but there's no quick fix for experience. If you want to learn to do something, you just have to start doing it and keep doing it until you're good.
There is no employer liability. If he was working for a staffing agency it's the staffing agencies responsibility. In fact, if he complained about unsafe work (which in Ontario at least, you supposedly have a "right to refuse unsafe work") they could just let him go with no cause because temp contracts have a clause saying you agree to be let go for any reason with no recourse.
Couple this up with the fact that almost all factory/manufacturing jobs are now hired through agencies and all those labour laws that people fought and died for are pretty much impotent now. This isn't tin foil hat speculation, it's been in action for years and years in distribution, manufacturing and other unskilled positions.
I'd actually have to say that a lot of the time it's more of an inconvenience to the drivers around me when I am FOLLOWING traffic laws on my bike. Coming to a full stop at a sign means everyone else has to wait for me to get going again after I stop.
Part of the problem here is only about a quarter of the cyclists actually bother to follow the laws that ARE there, meaning drivers can't reliably expect cyclists to stop at signs anyways. If you're just expected to yield right of way to bikes no matter what at least everyone's on the same page.
A good friend of mine recently died of a heart attack quite young. It was quite a shock, and there's not much to remember him with but I do have many years of MSN Messenger chat logs that I always made a point to keep for some reason. I haven't gone through them yet, but I would like to soon.
I wouldn't mind if my data was left up after I'm gone, in case anybody cares to see it. If you've ever contributed to a site or an online community, I think that information is nice to see for your still living loved ones. The memories I have with my friends online are sometimes just as good as the ones we've had in person, especially with people I don't get to see as much anymore.
What I imagine happening is people making a big stink about it being online only, buying it anyway, then still complaining that it's online only.
I love how people buy a product, then complain on the forums about a feature they knew was there but don't like. As if posting poorly thought out complaints about something negates the fact that they supported the company in pretty much the only way that matters: buying their shit.
I don't much care for the idea of single-player games requiring the internet, but the future is now and there's also lot of good ideas being pushed around in the gaming world. If a company dedicates itself to supporting a game long after it's release (as Blizzard is famous for), I can forgive online only. I'll play into your 'online only' crap, you make sure my game is perfect before you stop working on it, deal?
Ugh, same. I used to think those stupid 'homepage' sites were useless for the longest time, now that I found a good one (iGoogle) it's going away, boo!
Planetside is one of those games that you really need to play for a while before you can do much.
Understanding the layouts of the Bases and other objectives give you a way better idea of where enemies are coming from, and being aware of your surroundings is necessary to not get insta-killed.
If you play as a medic you can get lots of easy XP by healing and ressurecting allies, The engineer hands out spare ammo and can repair vehicles and MAX units, all of which give XP. He also has a sweet stationary turret.
Another good cert grab is getting the AMS addon for the Sunderer vehicle, allowing your Sunderer to act as a mobile spawn point and weapons terminal. Everytime someone spawns from your Sunderer you get XP!
Almost all the comments I see on the internet are narcissistic and/or angry.
The use of the period doesn't really surprise me, the biggest internet wankers absolutely relish in using perfect grammar, probably because it makes them feel superior to everybody else.
Gotta love getting insta-railed in DM1 from the top where the 'nade launcher is and from the ledge where the hyperblaster spawns.
The cheaters were few and far between from my experience - although it only takes 1 to ruin a game. Once knowledge of botting got out, however, lots of really good players would get accused of cheating and sometimes booted from public servers. Sore losers and poor sportsmanship ruined online gaming for me, even more so than flagrant cheating.
Here in Canada the 'toxic emissions' are listed on the side of the pack. The different brands of course vary in how much tar, nicotine formaldehyde, hydrogen cyanide etc. they contain. It's all nasty stuff, but I still love the damn things.
I think seeing a slightly larger, brighter moon will be nifty. "Extreme supermoon" may be selling it a bit much, but I'm looking forward to having a look tonight.
free speech
Those words, I don't think they mean what you think they do...
What a preposterous argument. Should Walmart then, also be illegal for selling inferior products and driving quality out of business?
I agree and it's not just coding where people want the hard earned knowledge quick. There are tons of ads for guitar courses that say things like "become a shredding master in 2 weeks!" or "master the fretboard and become a guitar god with these easy steps!". It's the same thing where you might be able to train your fingers to play lead guitar like Slash but if you had new material could you write equally good guitar parts?
There's always little tricks to make learning easier but there's no quick fix for experience. If you want to learn to do something, you just have to start doing it and keep doing it until you're good.
There is no employer liability. If he was working for a staffing agency it's the staffing agencies responsibility. In fact, if he complained about unsafe work (which in Ontario at least, you supposedly have a "right to refuse unsafe work") they could just let him go with no cause because temp contracts have a clause saying you agree to be let go for any reason with no recourse.
Couple this up with the fact that almost all factory/manufacturing jobs are now hired through agencies and all those labour laws that people fought and died for are pretty much impotent now. This isn't tin foil hat speculation, it's been in action for years and years in distribution, manufacturing and other unskilled positions.
I'd actually have to say that a lot of the time it's more of an inconvenience to the drivers around me when I am FOLLOWING traffic laws on my bike. Coming to a full stop at a sign means everyone else has to wait for me to get going again after I stop.
Part of the problem here is only about a quarter of the cyclists actually bother to follow the laws that ARE there, meaning drivers can't reliably expect cyclists to stop at signs anyways. If you're just expected to yield right of way to bikes no matter what at least everyone's on the same page.
Can't fuckin' wait. I usually prefer the more peaceful victory conditions and it sounds like brave new world is gonna deliver.
Freebirth scum.
A good friend of mine recently died of a heart attack quite young. It was quite a shock, and there's not much to remember him with but I do have many years of MSN Messenger chat logs that I always made a point to keep for some reason. I haven't gone through them yet, but I would like to soon.
I wouldn't mind if my data was left up after I'm gone, in case anybody cares to see it. If you've ever contributed to a site or an online community, I think that information is nice to see for your still living loved ones. The memories I have with my friends online are sometimes just as good as the ones we've had in person, especially with people I don't get to see as much anymore.
What I imagine happening is people making a big stink about it being online only, buying it anyway, then still complaining that it's online only.
I love how people buy a product, then complain on the forums about a feature they knew was there but don't like. As if posting poorly thought out complaints about something negates the fact that they supported the company in pretty much the only way that matters: buying their shit.
I don't much care for the idea of single-player games requiring the internet, but the future is now and there's also lot of good ideas being pushed around in the gaming world. If a company dedicates itself to supporting a game long after it's release (as Blizzard is famous for), I can forgive online only. I'll play into your 'online only' crap, you make sure my game is perfect before you stop working on it, deal?
Ugh, same. I used to think those stupid 'homepage' sites were useless for the longest time, now that I found a good one (iGoogle) it's going away, boo!
I didn't know anybody else liked the UCB http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DO1Q7F23DxM
Planetside is one of those games that you really need to play for a while before you can do much.
Understanding the layouts of the Bases and other objectives give you a way better idea of where enemies are coming from, and being aware of your surroundings is necessary to not get insta-killed.
If you play as a medic you can get lots of easy XP by healing and ressurecting allies, The engineer hands out spare ammo and can repair vehicles and MAX units, all of which give XP. He also has a sweet stationary turret.
Another good cert grab is getting the AMS addon for the Sunderer vehicle, allowing your Sunderer to act as a mobile spawn point and weapons terminal. Everytime someone spawns from your Sunderer you get XP!
Pictures from a magazine. Diagrams and charts, mending broken hearts and making WEIRD SCIENCE!
I'll just stick with my stillsuit thank you very much.
Until the iYacht 2 comes out next year...
Darmok and Jilad, at Tenagra
The only feature I really want in Borderlands 2 is the ability to abandon quests from your log. I hope they fixed that!
I love the smell of toasted zergling in the morning.
Almost all the comments I see on the internet are narcissistic and/or angry.
The use of the period doesn't really surprise me, the biggest internet wankers absolutely relish in using perfect grammar, probably because it makes them feel superior to everybody else.
Gotta love getting insta-railed in DM1 from the top where the 'nade launcher is and from the ledge where the hyperblaster spawns.
The cheaters were few and far between from my experience - although it only takes 1 to ruin a game. Once knowledge of botting got out, however, lots of really good players would get accused of cheating and sometimes booted from public servers. Sore losers and poor sportsmanship ruined online gaming for me, even more so than flagrant cheating.
Where do you think "YMMV" came from? :P
Here in Canada the 'toxic emissions' are listed on the side of the pack. The different brands of course vary in how much tar, nicotine formaldehyde, hydrogen cyanide etc. they contain. It's all nasty stuff, but I still love the damn things.
But the only people allowed to pull a fast one on us Canadians are our politicians and our telecom companies.
I think seeing a slightly larger, brighter moon will be nifty. "Extreme supermoon" may be selling it a bit much, but I'm looking forward to having a look tonight.