This gives me just enough time to become a master oil-driller and put together a crack team of oddballs to drill to the center of the asteroid and nuke it.
Hopefully I will not bear a beautiful child that the hunky oil-driller will fall in love with...
Mine currently says Godzilla Supermonkey... that is far more fun:)... (new window) Fishmonger Egocat... etc...
I love this extension far too much. I suggest adding in many more entries for more randomization.
It seems that the technology that was created will be used to hear words that have not yet been created... perhaps if this technology was created earlier, we would have all been spared the abomination that is: METROSEXUAL!
Eventually the pressure will regulate itself. Unfortunately the astronauts will then find their insides now on the outside.
It seems to me that if I were in an enclosed vessel orbiting the Earth I would want to find that leak as quickly as possible. The nonchalance of NASA and the astronauts given in the article seems a little questionable. I wonder if the trapped people are capable of sleeping before finding the leak. I think that this sort of vague fear would creep up on even the hardened astronauts.
My suggestion for the astronauts is similar to finding a puncture in a rubber raft; one of the them should go on a spacewalk and spray soapy water on the outside of the ISS and look for bubbles
Wow... I was wondering if the Yoplait yogurt story would elicit that response. That is too bad that a person that says spells "gay" as "ghey" was able to pervert and distort my childhood memory in such a way. If only he would have finished his story about "How to lose a guy in 10 days;" I bet it was hilarious.
I have a feeling that this person is just jealous that my friend had "New" Coke and Yoplait yogurt while he had plain, generic yogurt and was drinking Shasta while playing his Atari 7200, which he thought was just as cool as a NES.
Wow... that article was an ordeal. 33 pages of Mega Man games.
I have decided to whittle it down for the people with dial-up modems (such as myself):
There have been several Mega Man series for multiple platforms. Each series is excellent, then, as the the series progresses, they lessen in quality and cease to be innovative.
The best part of the article is the comparison with the Japanese version of the same game.
I fondly remember sitting at my friend's house in grade school, watching him play Mega Man, while eating srawberry Yoplait yogurt and drinking "New" Coke...
I think that this increase in difficulty, instead of dissuading hardcore players, will in fact cause more to try it and see if they are affected. They may think of it as a challenge or perhaps a proper test of their skills.
This idea may cause a new wave of piracy by people that would have generally not done so. Or, perhaps even stranger, cause people that have purchased the game to copy it and reinstall it in a legally-spurious manner in order to ramp-up the difficulty.
I believe that these price cuts will substantially increase the Cube's user base. The Game Cube has a fantastic array of superb 1st and 3rd party games that are far and above the mediocre PC ports that are made for the X-Box. If you crave original console action, you should buy a Game Cube.
The Game Cube is portable, has fantastic graphics and the most comfortable controller ever made. For 99 bucks, everybody should buy one and give them to a kid that they know.
I heard about this yesterday from a posting by Random Nut (the individual that discovered this exploit as well as earlier security holes in Kazaa) on Zeropaid.com (forum link: http://www.zeropaid.com/bbs/showthread.php?t=15259 ).
The security exploit is being tested by members of the p2p community and has been shown to be a viable exploit (forum link: http://www.p2pforums.com/viewtopic.php?p=20323#203 23)
The operators of ESV have been slow to directly answer questions regarding this exploit:(http://forums2.es5.com/index.php?act=ST&f =40&t=5645&s=1ec6bf29bb73061ed185cbc3018f04b8) . Registration required to view forums, but it is worth it! The ESV forums are interesting since they make allegations of other site's involvement with the RIAA, MPAA, etc. yet have included a questionable exploit in their own software. These forums are rife with rhetoric and double-talk of Orwellian proportions.
I have wondered for years why this idea had not yet come to fruition. If you want opinions on movies, there are an infinite number of reviewers, filmophiles and media oulets focused only on the goal of giving you information about films.
A database of books for the public (not trying to sell them) is an idea whose time has come.
I have always wanted to have the opportunity to see what people think about fiction (especially contemporary). Perhaps now I shall write some reviews of my own...
This gives me just enough time to become a master oil-driller and put together a crack team of oddballs to drill to the center of the asteroid and nuke it.
Hopefully I will not bear a beautiful child that the hunky oil-driller will fall in love with...
Mine currently says Godzilla Supermonkey... that is far more fun :)... (new window) Fishmonger Egocat... etc...
I love this extension far too much. I suggest adding in many more entries for more randomization.
It seems that the technology that was created will be used to hear words that have not yet been created... perhaps if this technology was created earlier, we would have all been spared the abomination that is: METROSEXUAL!
Eventually the pressure will regulate itself. Unfortunately the astronauts will then find their insides now on the outside.
It seems to me that if I were in an enclosed vessel orbiting the Earth I would want to find that leak as quickly as possible. The nonchalance of NASA and the astronauts given in the article seems a little questionable. I wonder if the trapped people are capable of sleeping before finding the leak. I think that this sort of vague fear would creep up on even the hardened astronauts.
My suggestion for the astronauts is similar to finding a puncture in a rubber raft; one of the them should go on a spacewalk and spray soapy water on the outside of the ISS and look for bubbles
Wow... I was wondering if the Yoplait yogurt story would elicit that response. That is too bad that a person that says spells "gay" as "ghey" was able to pervert and distort my childhood memory in such a way. If only he would have finished his story about "How to lose a guy in 10 days;" I bet it was hilarious.
I have a feeling that this person is just jealous that my friend had "New" Coke and Yoplait yogurt while he had plain, generic yogurt and was drinking Shasta while playing his Atari 7200, which he thought was just as cool as a NES.
Wow... that article was an ordeal. 33 pages of Mega Man games.
I have decided to whittle it down for the people with dial-up modems (such as myself):
There have been several Mega Man series for multiple platforms. Each series is excellent, then, as the the series progresses, they lessen in quality and cease to be innovative.
The best part of the article is the comparison with the Japanese version of the same game.
I fondly remember sitting at my friend's house in grade school, watching him play Mega Man, while eating srawberry Yoplait yogurt and drinking "New" Coke...
I think that this increase in difficulty, instead of dissuading hardcore players, will in fact cause more to try it and see if they are affected. They may think of it as a challenge or perhaps a proper test of their skills. This idea may cause a new wave of piracy by people that would have generally not done so. Or, perhaps even stranger, cause people that have purchased the game to copy it and reinstall it in a legally-spurious manner in order to ramp-up the difficulty.
I believe that these price cuts will substantially increase the Cube's user base. The Game Cube has a fantastic array of superb 1st and 3rd party games that are far and above the mediocre PC ports that are made for the X-Box. If you crave original console action, you should buy a Game Cube.
The Game Cube is portable, has fantastic graphics and the most comfortable controller ever made. For 99 bucks, everybody should buy one and give them to a kid that they know.
I heard about this yesterday from a posting by Random Nut (the individual that discovered this exploit as well as earlier security holes in Kazaa) on Zeropaid.com (forum link: http://www.zeropaid.com/bbs/showthread.php?t=15259 ).
3 23)
f =40&t=5645&s=1ec6bf29bb73061ed185cbc3018f04b8) . Registration required to view forums, but it is worth it! The ESV forums are interesting since they make allegations of other site's involvement with the RIAA, MPAA, etc. yet have included a questionable exploit in their own software. These forums are rife with rhetoric and double-talk of Orwellian proportions.
The security exploit is being tested by members of the p2p community and has been shown to be a viable exploit (forum link: http://www.p2pforums.com/viewtopic.php?p=20323#20
The operators of ESV have been slow to directly answer questions regarding this exploit:(http://forums2.es5.com/index.php?act=ST&
I have wondered for years why this idea had not yet come to fruition. If you want opinions on movies, there are an infinite number of reviewers, filmophiles and media oulets focused only on the goal of giving you information about films. A database of books for the public (not trying to sell them) is an idea whose time has come. I have always wanted to have the opportunity to see what people think about fiction (especially contemporary). Perhaps now I shall write some reviews of my own...