So the kids do all this hard work only to be told that it was all for nothing because people can get their imaginary music for free...blah, blah, blah.
I wonder what the teachers' responses will be when some kid asks why Justin Timberlake can still afford a Jaguar.
Netscape 7.0 will not include the nifty pop-up blocking sported in Mozilla, as AOL depends on pop-up ads for annoy^H^H^H^H^Hmarketing to their "valued" customers.
AOL's "valued" customers are already paying $23.95/month for shitty dial-up access. And they're still forced to sit through pop-ups. I don't see any value there whatsoever.
The main proponents of the law are pro-business groups seeking to tie up environmental and similar regulations by challenging the government's data.
Whine, whine, piss, bitch and moan. OH NO, big business is going to destroy mother nature!!! OH NO! Quit your bitching.
Fact of the matter is, half the environmental "data" that is produced by the federal gov't comes from private organizations who are already hell-bent on saving every last inch of nature at whatever expense is necessary (fraudulent/deceiptful data). It's bullshit.
I'm glad Slashdot has finally shown its colors to be a truly left-bent political engine rather than sticking strictly to "News for Nerds".
So the kids do all this hard work only to be told that it was all for nothing because people can get their imaginary music for free...blah, blah, blah.
I wonder what the teachers' responses will be when some kid asks why Justin Timberlake can still afford a Jaguar.
The Boondock Saints http://us.imdb.com/Title?0144117 I don't think this movie ever made it to the theaters, but IMHO, it should have.
'It portrays war as the only way to resolve conflicts.'
Somehow, I don't think that "Concede and Compromise" would be a big seller.
Netscape 7.0 will not include the nifty pop-up blocking sported in Mozilla, as AOL depends on pop-up ads for annoy^H^H^H^H^Hmarketing to their "valued" customers.
AOL's "valued" customers are already paying $23.95/month for shitty dial-up access. And they're still forced to sit through pop-ups. I don't see any value there whatsoever.
The main proponents of the law are pro-business groups seeking to tie up environmental and similar regulations by challenging the government's data.
Whine, whine, piss, bitch and moan. OH NO, big business is going to destroy mother nature!!! OH NO! Quit your bitching.
Fact of the matter is, half the environmental "data" that is produced by the federal gov't comes from private organizations who are already hell-bent on saving every last inch of nature at whatever expense is necessary (fraudulent/deceiptful data). It's bullshit.
Just let me know where that's at..I'd be glad to come on over and help you out.