How did people interpret the scene where there faces are "merge" in the window when Dr Mark sees Prot for the first time?
Re:Ending not consistent
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Review: K-PAX
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· Score: 1
Someone else's idea [universalpictures.com] about the ending
Anyone read the books?
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Review: K-PAX
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· Score: 1
A couple different ways you can reason it...
He's not an Alien... She just decided to leave and escaped
He "possesed" Rober Porters body and used him as a means of healing Dr Marko, making him realize the importance of family... and The other's body was part of Betty's escense and left with her
I think it's main purpose was to just make you think a little.
I wonder if the books have a different ending, anyone read them?
I think it depends on the size of the organization.
I have worked in a couple small organizations (<150) where IT was very easy to deal with. We were allowed "power user" to the machines and individual requests for anything else that needed full admin.
I larger organizations, it was usually agreed upon that we would seperate the devs from the global network, and the manager was held accountable for the software licenses. Then the manager (or other lead) would be the contact to IT for any network or other support issues.
Without atleast "power user" rights, I can't see that the machines would give the users a comfortable work environment. I've been known to have to uninstall and reinstall software packages 2-3 times when I did something bone-headed.
I saw 13 ghosts friday... there was more then a nipple... there was the crazy lady, naked, knife welding ghost.
How did people interpret the scene where there faces are "merge" in the window when Dr Mark sees Prot for the first time?
Someone else's idea [universalpictures.com] about the ending
A couple different ways you can reason it...
He's not an Alien... She just decided to leave and escaped
He "possesed" Rober Porters body and used him as a means of healing Dr Marko, making him realize the importance of family... and The other's body was part of Betty's escense and left with her
I think it's main purpose was to just make you think a little.
I wonder if the books have a different ending, anyone read them?
I think the market is a little hard for some out there now... it may not be that simple for some.
but you'll atleast have to be willing to push mgmt if you don't want to be subjected to it.
I think it depends on the size of the organization.
I have worked in a couple small organizations (<150) where IT was very easy to deal with. We were allowed "power user" to the machines and individual requests for anything else that needed full admin.
I larger organizations, it was usually agreed upon that we would seperate the devs from the global network, and the manager was held accountable for the software licenses. Then the manager (or other lead) would be the contact to IT for any network or other support issues.
Without atleast "power user" rights, I can't see that the machines would give the users a comfortable work environment. I've been known to have to uninstall and reinstall software packages 2-3 times when I did something bone-headed.
just my 2