This doesn't surprise me. If you start from a place of religious conviction based on shaky reason, but are talented with reason and problem solving, where do you end up? Many branches of engineering utilize these skills without bringing one face to face with the difficult questions and contradictions.
I completely understand how people could die from Warcraft 3. Unlike a purely reflexive shooter, it takes cognitive processing as well. After a 1v1, I feel the stress all over my body, and at the same time the urge to trigger the dopamine again. You would think an MMO would offer enough opportunity to pause and the hunger and fatigue would take over, so I don't understand spiraling into death playing those.
MM movies are awareness pieces. They're not there to make all the counterpoints, too. We're supposed to be a grown ups who go out and research these things, and the films are to provoke that.
Because you want to record encrypted HD cable. The inability to legitmately support CableCARD with open source (because you can't assure them that the media won't escape) is going to mean being stuck in the analog world for Myth and similar projects. Cable company DVRs, Windows MCE on special hardware, and the HD TiVo type devices will be the only choice. It's the first sizeable step to a future where every device between your eyeball and the studio must be 'blessed'.
On behalf of everyone who thrilled to an excellent 4-player mode on N64 Tetris, and then bought the steaming pile known as Tetris Worlds for the cube, only to find its multiplayer a tremendous disappointment, I will say that it's clear that you can slide backwards in Tetris iterations. Our N64 stays hooked up for one reason, and that is The New Tetris. I'm fine with them remaking the theme, branding or style, but the gameplay needs to be on par with this finely-tuned version.
Not convergence of the art forms. Not "Doom: The Movie". That kind of convergence is horrible for obvious reasons. Hopefully, concepts converge very little more than they have. Lucasarts knows that they can compromise a story a little to make better gameplay, or tweak a movie scene to make a better spinoff game, and I can't imagine much more integration without runing one or both.
Printing that letter was just a setup for the real joke, following the paranoid political diatribe from D.L. Graham, San Diego, to which Ebert replies:
The basic outline of the broadcast flag was approved in principle by a large and diverse group of consumer electronics, computer technology and video content companies. This consensus was reached after a thorough process involving all affected parties.
"Oh... except what is arguably the most important component, the consumer who we need to view or buy our content. But we're pretty sure they're sheep, with no input on the matter, and little ability to see through my rich euphamisms such as 'protect the magic of the movies'."
"And that is why you, the consumer, must support the broadcast flag. Hurry up and do it, you stupid consumer."
Great help for the savvy grandma in picking a mail client. Unfortunately, the rest of the computing world who deals in business has to choose based on functionality and interoperability, and no ammount of smooth GUI trumps connecting to Exchange.
OS groupware will continue to be mostly fruitless until some real focus is placed on that goal. I could actually consider an Outlook alternative, even lacking some of Outlook's foofoo features, if it played well with Exchange.
That would ruin Palpatine's role as the devil. You can't have people questioning the devil's formation and motivations. He must be accepted as unwavering evil, because he's just support for the story of temptation and fall.
Hopefully, his past remains an unchronicled mystery.
I think the great example of Nester as a poster child for Bad Gaming Attitude is lost on a lot of people who only read these when they were young. He's the original joke at the expense of the obnoxious, narcissistic gamer who cares only about showing up peers and finishing the game first. The earliest commentary on the asshole gamer.
And may woe betide the student who takes his case and red-inked paper to the teacher with the defense of, "But Word didn't say there was anything wrong with this!"
Talk about a red flare that you're phoning it in...
Nobody with skills wants a market (consumer computer service) with whiny, cash-strapped cutomers who don't think they should have to pay the time and cost it takes, when a better market (business computer service) exists.
Computers are like other service industries, except that they require a lot more knowledge and care to prevent the problems from happening in the first place. People don't realize that difference, and expect solving computer problems to be like plumbing, with easy estimates of time and cause.
They've got the shields anyway, they've got the soldiers anyway. In war, you certainly might prepare a tactic that isn't 100%, especially when the additional resource investment is small.
Your premise is shown wrong anecdotally by OneUpWeb's study and practically by the gagillions of dollars companies spend to get that rank.
Coming up high in the broad category of the service offered is important to them because it works. A part of what OneUpWeb does is track how that imporvement is turning into sales.
If you don't know who sells widgets, you'll serach for 'widget'. And the vendors who come up first will be the first ones you look at. Not all consumers are as thoughtful as you or me.
The characters have always been named with blatant reference to their looks, their role in the story, or assorted literary allusions. Han Solo the roguish cowboy, Greedo the green criminal, Darth Vader the Dark Father. In a sense, the names are a big element of the story, because they convey additional background for the viewer in what are generally fast-paced movies.
You know, the 40 years that you have spent on this planet won't even register as a blip in the entire history of this planet.
Just because it didn't happen yesterday doesn't mean we cannot observe real change.
Funny you should say that, since the ammount of climate change we've been able to empirically observe wouldn't even register as a blip. We have accurate and complete data for less than 300 years. Yet man is still confident that it's his presence and pollution that is triggering the change, and that he can actually do something to stop it.
Global warming as a political issue is the ultimate indicator of man's hubris.
For the current Right, the corporations are just a path to the real currency, socially conservative voters. And harnessing the outrage of religious voters is the single most important factor in their election success. That's better than campaign money in the bank.
And that guy in charge is talking about a demographic, not a person. It is unfair to assume that he applies that to individuals and doesn't take them seriously. Too often, recognizing demographic patterns is assumed to be tantamount to prejudice.
Tagged: whatethcouldpossiblygowrongeth
This doesn't surprise me. If you start from a place of religious conviction based on shaky reason, but are talented with reason and problem solving, where do you end up? Many branches of engineering utilize these skills without bringing one face to face with the difficult questions and contradictions.
I completely understand how people could die from Warcraft 3. Unlike a purely reflexive shooter, it takes cognitive processing as well. After a 1v1, I feel the stress all over my body, and at the same time the urge to trigger the dopamine again. You would think an MMO would offer enough opportunity to pause and the hunger and fatigue would take over, so I don't understand spiraling into death playing those.
MM movies are awareness pieces. They're not there to make all the counterpoints, too. We're supposed to be a grown ups who go out and research these things, and the films are to provoke that.
I keep punching my crotch way harder than it's supposed to be punched, and it huurts. I would like Levis to send me some better jeans.
Because you want to record encrypted HD cable. The inability to legitmately support CableCARD with open source (because you can't assure them that the media won't escape) is going to mean being stuck in the analog world for Myth and similar projects. Cable company DVRs, Windows MCE on special hardware, and the HD TiVo type devices will be the only choice. It's the first sizeable step to a future where every device between your eyeball and the studio must be 'blessed'.
Meet Embperl
On behalf of everyone who thrilled to an excellent 4-player mode on N64 Tetris, and then bought the steaming pile known as Tetris Worlds for the cube, only to find its multiplayer a tremendous disappointment, I will say that it's clear that you can slide backwards in Tetris iterations. Our N64 stays hooked up for one reason, and that is The New Tetris. I'm fine with them remaking the theme, branding or style, but the gameplay needs to be on par with this finely-tuned version.
Not convergence of the art forms. Not "Doom: The Movie". That kind of convergence is horrible for obvious reasons. Hopefully, concepts converge very little more than they have. Lucasarts knows that they can compromise a story a little to make better gameplay, or tweak a movie scene to make a better spinoff game, and I can't imagine much more integration without runing one or both.
Printing that letter was just a setup for the real joke, following the paranoid political diatribe from D.L. Graham, San Diego, to which Ebert replies:
A. And what happened to Padme's pants?
The basic outline of the broadcast flag was approved in principle by a large and diverse group of consumer electronics, computer technology and video content companies. This consensus was reached after a thorough process involving all affected parties.
"Oh... except what is arguably the most important component, the consumer who we need to view or buy our content. But we're pretty sure they're sheep, with no input on the matter, and little ability to see through my rich euphamisms such as 'protect the magic of the movies'."
"And that is why you, the consumer, must support the broadcast flag. Hurry up and do it, you stupid consumer."
Great help for the savvy grandma in picking a mail client. Unfortunately, the rest of the computing world who deals in business has to choose based on functionality and interoperability, and no ammount of smooth GUI trumps connecting to Exchange.
OS groupware will continue to be mostly fruitless until some real focus is placed on that goal. I could actually consider an Outlook alternative, even lacking some of Outlook's foofoo features, if it played well with Exchange.
That would ruin Palpatine's role as the devil. You can't have people questioning the devil's formation and motivations. He must be accepted as unwavering evil, because he's just support for the story of temptation and fall.
Hopefully, his past remains an unchronicled mystery.
You only find the really good ideas by pushing the envelope without knowing for certain if the outcome is going to be great.
Like independent film, any industry that can cultivate the dregs also allows for the diamonds to shine through.
That's why any revolution is good.
Unless it's Castro.
I think the great example of Nester as a poster child for Bad Gaming Attitude is lost on a lot of people who only read these when they were young. He's the original joke at the expense of the obnoxious, narcissistic gamer who cares only about showing up peers and finishing the game first. The earliest commentary on the asshole gamer.
And may woe betide the student who takes his case and red-inked paper to the teacher with the defense of, "But Word didn't say there was anything wrong with this!"
Talk about a red flare that you're phoning it in...
Nobody with skills wants a market (consumer computer service) with whiny, cash-strapped cutomers who don't think they should have to pay the time and cost it takes, when a better market (business computer service) exists.
Computers are like other service industries, except that they require a lot more knowledge and care to prevent the problems from happening in the first place. People don't realize that difference, and expect solving computer problems to be like plumbing, with easy estimates of time and cause.
It's like Muppet Babies. Only preachy and more farfetched.
They've got the shields anyway, they've got the soldiers anyway. In war, you certainly might prepare a tactic that isn't 100%, especially when the additional resource investment is small.
Your premise is shown wrong anecdotally by OneUpWeb's study and practically by the gagillions of dollars companies spend to get that rank.
Coming up high in the broad category of the service offered is important to them because it works. A part of what OneUpWeb does is track how that imporvement is turning into sales.
If you don't know who sells widgets, you'll serach for 'widget'. And the vendors who come up first will be the first ones you look at. Not all consumers are as thoughtful as you or me.
The characters have always been named with blatant reference to their looks, their role in the story, or assorted literary allusions. Han Solo the roguish cowboy, Greedo the green criminal, Darth Vader the Dark Father. In a sense, the names are a big element of the story, because they convey additional background for the viewer in what are generally fast-paced movies.
You know, the 40 years that you have spent on this planet won't even register as a blip in the entire history of this planet.
Just because it didn't happen yesterday doesn't mean we cannot observe real change.
Funny you should say that, since the ammount of climate change we've been able to empirically observe wouldn't even register as a blip. We have accurate and complete data for less than 300 years. Yet man is still confident that it's his presence and pollution that is triggering the change, and that he can actually do something to stop it.
Global warming as a political issue is the ultimate indicator of man's hubris.
For the current Right, the corporations are just a path to the real currency, socially conservative voters. And harnessing the outrage of religious voters is the single most important factor in their election success. That's better than campaign money in the bank.
And that guy in charge is talking about a demographic, not a person. It is unfair to assume that he applies that to individuals and doesn't take them seriously. Too often, recognizing demographic patterns is assumed to be tantamount to prejudice.