A 1.3% problem rate for customer service is pretty damn good, and much better than what some companies I've been invloved with consider an acceptable rate. Just like the delivered product, there are bound to be failures in service. Restaraunts try to deliver a meal the same way each time it's served, but sometimes the steak is overcooked, and every now and then a ride is down at Six Flags. Get over it. Mistakes happen.
"Waiting for Star Wars is an art project designed to capture the evolution and journey of one person's wait for a single event (Star Wars Episode II). It will be captured by time-indexed photographs taken every hour as well as pictures and video of the people we interact with."
And I thought it was all because of Nsync getting Cameos! Silly me, I guess that's what the 13 year old girls in line behind them are doing.
Privacyrights.org has some very useful information on this very subject:
Privacy Rights.org
There's a form letter available to let companies know that you wish to opt-out of their information sharing:
Opt-Out
AHHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAH!AAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAH!AHAHAHAHAHAH AH!....Not only does is the copy protection half baked, but the people that did the testing must have been as well!
I don't know why this hasn't been mentioned yet. This is a GREAT game. The system requirements are a bit steep, but the single player campaign is as tight and suspenseful as any I've seen lately, and the Multiplayer in Coop mode is a blast.
About 12 years ago I felt the same way about food. I went to an excellent and expensive culinary school and worked at top restaraunts, thinking that one day I'd put my mark on the food world by having a famous dish named after me that would cause generations of people to drool when it was mentioned.
"A 1.3% problem rate for customer service"
I wasn't talking about the hardware failure rate.
A 1.3% problem rate for customer service is pretty damn good, and much better than what some companies I've been invloved with consider an acceptable rate. Just like the delivered product, there are bound to be failures in service. Restaraunts try to deliver a meal the same way each time it's served, but sometimes the steak is overcooked, and every now and then a ride is down at Six Flags. Get over it. Mistakes happen.
And I thought it was all because of Nsync getting Cameos! Silly me, I guess that's what the 13 year old girls in line behind them are doing.
Privacyrights.org has some very useful information on this very subject: Privacy Rights.org There's a form letter available to let companies know that you wish to opt-out of their information sharing: Opt-Out
The History Channel is having a marathon of 'In Search of...' I love this stuff.
AHHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAH!AAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAH!AHAHAHAHAHAH AH!....Not only does is the copy protection half baked, but the people that did the testing must have been as well!
I don't know why this hasn't been mentioned yet. This is a GREAT game. The system requirements are a bit steep, but the single player campaign is as tight and suspenseful as any I've seen lately, and the Multiplayer in Coop mode is a blast.
It does not do progressive scan for DVD's
About 12 years ago I felt the same way about food. I went to an excellent and expensive culinary school and worked at top restaraunts, thinking that one day I'd put my mark on the food world by having a famous dish named after me that would cause generations of people to drool when it was mentioned.
I work in IT now. Try culinary school maybe?