I think TOS was based more on the civil rights movement. it was in full swing during the development and filming of TOS, 64-66,67. Hippie movement was a niche thing until 67, summer of love.
I think TOS was a product of its time. it was developed in 64 and first aired in 66-67 season. By 64 the Civil rights movement was well under way. In May 64 Johnson gave the first Great Society Speech at Athens Ohio. Then, the summer of 64 was when Chaney, Goodman and Scherner were killed. Also, the problems with colonization in Africa and South East Asia were recoginized and lead to the formation of the Prime Directive (I'm looking for more sources on that).
One thing I always laugh about it how people say things will be in the future. One thing the future won't be is any particular way, the future will (hopefully) last a long time and there will be lots of change, so there is plenty of time for lots of predictions to come true. If the Star Trek franchise rigidly applied elements from TOS to later series it would have been pretty boring.
One humorus (IMO) side note about Spock. Star Trke Enterprise, S2E2 had TPol and 2 other vulcans go to late 1950s united states and were stuck there. they had some postitive interactions with humans so one of the vulcans decided to stay and TPol reported he was killed. I always thought they should have gone a little futher with that plot and had the vulcan (Mestral) go to California and become involved in acting. I tried to explain this to some other trekkies but they didn't see the humor in it.
American rock was doing pretty good until 1959 when Booper, Holly and Valens died in the place crash, 'the day the music died'. For the next couple years the top music reverted back to lightweight pop crap. I'm not sure why and I am researching it some. I suspect rock music had a 'rocky' start in the US partly because of racism and religion. Once the British invasion started it wasn't black music any more, (at least you could pretend that).
so whats your point, record industry purposely keeps the music from the American people that they really want and instead sells them something else, presumably something else that makes them bigger profits? Or are you saying the billboard numbers are completely fabricated and people are really listening to something else that I've been missing out on all my life?
I've looked over and listened to the top us sales hits since the 50s. In the late 50s us rock really picked up steam until 59 when Booper, Valens and Holly died. I really understand what the mclean lyric 'day the music died' means now. Until 64 Music really reverted back to the light weight pop tunes popular in the early 50s. Then throughout the 60s the british really dominated the top charts. America had a lot of really good rock bands but the break out was slow until the late 60s when mostly California and Southern bands started doing well. Then wham, in 70-71, Hendrix, Morrison, Joplan, Allman died. Light weight pop took over again in the early 70s, then disco and dance music in late 70s. 80s were a resurgance of rock but it seemed more corporate and marketing oriented, big hair bands. Early 90s the grunge rock, bass guitar was interesting but short lived, there is only so much you can get from a bass guitar. Since the mid 90 good guitar rock has been dead.
thats my analysis.
New York Times had an article about it a few years ago:
Farewell, With Love and Instructions,By LIZETTE ALVAREZ
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/10...
One thing that would be nice is take some pictures from family vacations or school events and tell some funny or heatwarming stories about it. the focus should be split between the photos and your reactions to them. your laugh, smile, twinkle in the eye.
Sorry to hear and bless you and your family
Oh yeah, I remember how the internet works, tubes. can't the ISP have two tubes one for net-neutral and one for net-'freedom', Then let the user decide.
Treddinick and his family with withdraw from the NHS and use astrology for 10 years as a test of the effectiveness. If he's still alive then we can talk.
I only have a lightweight understanding of how the internet works, but is it possible a some future date that the providers could offer both net-neutral and net-freedom (my name for the a Comcast, Verizon optimized package). I suppose it would only be really feasible if there could be one hardware solution for the ISP that both packages could run in since a lot of people might start out with the net-neutral package but quickly switch to the net-freedom package when they see how awesome it is.
I was aware of ms 'support' for node.js. I tried to use it about a year ago and it was buggy enough that I decided I couldn't trust it for anything associated with a paycheck. I think MS is 'embracing' it because they are scared of it and don't know what else to do. If node does gain in popularity, MS will just be one of many vendors for it and the profit margins they are used to will no longer be there. And I'm still waiting for MS to support JSON in MSSQL (just had to get that off my chest).
As for your comment about DHTML and DOM being 20 yrs old, JQuery came out in 2007-2008 because of the failures to fix browser compatibility problems. And I never said node had anything to do with fixing browser compatibility, its just Node is not worth much without it.
I think the whole stack, javascript + html5 browser, node.js server has great potential for CS education. they just need to improve some of the object oriented capabilities in javascript.
I think node.js has Microsoft scared..net is setup to allow mostly server side code spit out bland, minimal html and work on any browser. but browsers are becoming standardized so javascript acting on the DOM is portable across browsers. node.js on the server, javascript and html on the client has the potential to make.net irrelevant. I'm surprised node.js didn't come along awhile ago, but it would have been useless without html 5 and cross browser support for javascript.
i think the kin lasted about 2 months. total investment by ms was 1 billion. i remember seeing the first ads (the first time i knew of it), i got a really good laugh. this thing will last about as long.
I have a 7yr old dell e6500 laptop with a 1920x1200 screen. cpu is only a c2d 2.93 but with a SSD its pretty good. between this laptop and smartphones with slide out keyboards i think things have gone nothing but downhill since.
I agree with parent. 720 projectors are great. I have both a lcd tv and projector in my basement. I can pull the screen down infront of the tv and watch the projector instead. I greatly prefer the projector for movies. partly the bigger screen, but also the 'mat' look of the projector screen looks more realistic than the 'glossy' or I call it 'wet' look of an lcd. Often with the projector I have to go back in a movie and watch scenes again because I was so lost in the picture. never happened on the lcd tv (Samsung).
We shot a lot of slides when I was a kid. When I first saw kodachrome it blew my mind. I wish there was anything today that could compare. I have a 4k monitor and view 10MP pictures on it but its not even close. I guess i'll have to wait for the 8k projectors.
I think people who don't have vaccinations should have to wear arm bands so the rest of us know to avoid them. They are petri dishes of infectious disease.
I'd like to see whole biofuel process end to end to better understand how green it really is. Biofuel might look pretty growing in the field, but i'll bet the refinery process is as big ugly, industrial as the petro refinery process. There was a 60 minutes show one time where they showed glycerin being dumped from a biofuel refinery into a stream. Glycerin is not toxic but the concentration was so high the fish and everything else in the stream were suffocating.
I'm also not interested in watching a whole game played but do enjoy great plays. I've often thought about an app that turns a game into a graph. time along the x-axis and score on y. user can select an interval where points are scored and see the video. the x axis can have a lot of things, like yards gained. Even things like volume of crowd roar could be graphed on the y axis. I've brought this up to sports enthusiasts and they generally have no interest. once the game is over they could care less. how it unfolds in realtime is the only thing that is important to them. The other issue is NFL owns the video so I couldn't do anything with the app without working through them. I haven't looked around much lately either, something like that could exist now.
the processes to turn biomass into biofuel are anything but eco-local-natural. when scaled out they will look as bad as the current petro-industry. As far as storage goes, the power grid is a very practical way to store solar power, especially since daytime is peak electrical usage.
I used to call Steve Jobs the computer pimp. I thought woz was the real genius at the early Apple. The whole NeXT computer fiasco seemed to prove it. Then what Steve Jobs did at Pixar really impressed me. then when he went back to Apple the results were just incredible.
I think its a double edge sword that makes Apple double the profit and then some. Also, the technologies advancements that windows hardware manufactures innovate aren't exclusive to Microsoft. Especially since Apple has switched from PowerPC to x86, Apple now can leverage all windows hardware advances.
why would they say it publicly? seems like something you would want to keep to yourself until you have the product in hand. I also think that Apple had been grooming their supply chain system for the mac very effectively and when they decided to make a pocket device they pulled it off very effectively.
The difference as I've seen it is Apple has always worked on both the hardware and os. That gave them the ability to control the end user experience very precisely. Microsoft has farmed out hardware, and that has hurt them and created blind spots. Microsoft has never taken the whole user experience seriously. One big problem is Microsoft has never seriously handled the issue of viruses and that has hurt them immensely. I think the service pack for windows 7 has the message on it during install that says 'Free'. (I think they had conversations about charging for it). Every time I see that message I think how crazy MS is to think that making something work right is something the user should pay for. I think Microsoft's surface is and interesting development although is too expensive for me and most of the home users I know.
I think TOS was based more on the civil rights movement. it was in full swing during the development and filming of TOS, 64-66,67. Hippie movement was a niche thing until 67, summer of love.
I think TOS was a product of its time. it was developed in 64 and first aired in 66-67 season. By 64 the Civil rights movement was well under way. In May 64 Johnson gave the first Great Society Speech at Athens Ohio. Then, the summer of 64 was when Chaney, Goodman and Scherner were killed. Also, the problems with colonization in Africa and South East Asia were recoginized and lead to the formation of the Prime Directive (I'm looking for more sources on that). One thing I always laugh about it how people say things will be in the future. One thing the future won't be is any particular way, the future will (hopefully) last a long time and there will be lots of change, so there is plenty of time for lots of predictions to come true. If the Star Trek franchise rigidly applied elements from TOS to later series it would have been pretty boring. One humorus (IMO) side note about Spock. Star Trke Enterprise, S2E2 had TPol and 2 other vulcans go to late 1950s united states and were stuck there. they had some postitive interactions with humans so one of the vulcans decided to stay and TPol reported he was killed. I always thought they should have gone a little futher with that plot and had the vulcan (Mestral) go to California and become involved in acting. I tried to explain this to some other trekkies but they didn't see the humor in it.
American rock was doing pretty good until 1959 when Booper, Holly and Valens died in the place crash, 'the day the music died'. For the next couple years the top music reverted back to lightweight pop crap. I'm not sure why and I am researching it some. I suspect rock music had a 'rocky' start in the US partly because of racism and religion. Once the British invasion started it wasn't black music any more, (at least you could pretend that).
so whats your point, record industry purposely keeps the music from the American people that they really want and instead sells them something else, presumably something else that makes them bigger profits? Or are you saying the billboard numbers are completely fabricated and people are really listening to something else that I've been missing out on all my life?
I've looked over and listened to the top us sales hits since the 50s. In the late 50s us rock really picked up steam until 59 when Booper, Valens and Holly died. I really understand what the mclean lyric 'day the music died' means now. Until 64 Music really reverted back to the light weight pop tunes popular in the early 50s. Then throughout the 60s the british really dominated the top charts. America had a lot of really good rock bands but the break out was slow until the late 60s when mostly California and Southern bands started doing well. Then wham, in 70-71, Hendrix, Morrison, Joplan, Allman died. Light weight pop took over again in the early 70s, then disco and dance music in late 70s. 80s were a resurgance of rock but it seemed more corporate and marketing oriented, big hair bands. Early 90s the grunge rock, bass guitar was interesting but short lived, there is only so much you can get from a bass guitar. Since the mid 90 good guitar rock has been dead. thats my analysis.
New York Times had an article about it a few years ago: Farewell, With Love and Instructions ,By LIZETTE ALVAREZ
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/10...
One thing that would be nice is take some pictures from family vacations or school events and tell some funny or heatwarming stories about it. the focus should be split between the photos and your reactions to them. your laugh, smile, twinkle in the eye.
Sorry to hear and bless you and your family
Oh yeah, I remember how the internet works, tubes. can't the ISP have two tubes one for net-neutral and one for net-'freedom', Then let the user decide.
Treddinick and his family with withdraw from the NHS and use astrology for 10 years as a test of the effectiveness. If he's still alive then we can talk.
I only have a lightweight understanding of how the internet works, but is it possible a some future date that the providers could offer both net-neutral and net-freedom (my name for the a Comcast, Verizon optimized package). I suppose it would only be really feasible if there could be one hardware solution for the ISP that both packages could run in since a lot of people might start out with the net-neutral package but quickly switch to the net-freedom package when they see how awesome it is.
if I point my viewmaster at an electric light is that a problem? guess I stick to my kerosene lamp then.
I was aware of ms 'support' for node.js. I tried to use it about a year ago and it was buggy enough that I decided I couldn't trust it for anything associated with a paycheck. I think MS is 'embracing' it because they are scared of it and don't know what else to do. If node does gain in popularity, MS will just be one of many vendors for it and the profit margins they are used to will no longer be there. And I'm still waiting for MS to support JSON in MSSQL (just had to get that off my chest). As for your comment about DHTML and DOM being 20 yrs old, JQuery came out in 2007-2008 because of the failures to fix browser compatibility problems. And I never said node had anything to do with fixing browser compatibility, its just Node is not worth much without it. I think the whole stack, javascript + html5 browser, node.js server has great potential for CS education. they just need to improve some of the object oriented capabilities in javascript.
I think node.js has Microsoft scared. .net is setup to allow mostly server side code spit out bland, minimal html and work on any browser. but browsers are becoming standardized so javascript acting on the DOM is portable across browsers. node.js on the server, javascript and html on the client has the potential to make .net irrelevant. I'm surprised node.js didn't come along awhile ago, but it would have been useless without html 5 and cross browser support for javascript.
i think the kin lasted about 2 months. total investment by ms was 1 billion. i remember seeing the first ads (the first time i knew of it), i got a really good laugh. this thing will last about as long.
I have a 7yr old dell e6500 laptop with a 1920x1200 screen. cpu is only a c2d 2.93 but with a SSD its pretty good. between this laptop and smartphones with slide out keyboards i think things have gone nothing but downhill since.
I agree with parent. 720 projectors are great. I have both a lcd tv and projector in my basement. I can pull the screen down infront of the tv and watch the projector instead. I greatly prefer the projector for movies. partly the bigger screen, but also the 'mat' look of the projector screen looks more realistic than the 'glossy' or I call it 'wet' look of an lcd. Often with the projector I have to go back in a movie and watch scenes again because I was so lost in the picture. never happened on the lcd tv (Samsung).
We shot a lot of slides when I was a kid. When I first saw kodachrome it blew my mind. I wish there was anything today that could compare. I have a 4k monitor and view 10MP pictures on it but its not even close. I guess i'll have to wait for the 8k projectors.
I think people who don't have vaccinations should have to wear arm bands so the rest of us know to avoid them. They are petri dishes of infectious disease.
I'd like to see whole biofuel process end to end to better understand how green it really is. Biofuel might look pretty growing in the field, but i'll bet the refinery process is as big ugly, industrial as the petro refinery process. There was a 60 minutes show one time where they showed glycerin being dumped from a biofuel refinery into a stream. Glycerin is not toxic but the concentration was so high the fish and everything else in the stream were suffocating.
But if someone is paying for ginseng they should get ginseng.
isn't that called regulation?
I'm also not interested in watching a whole game played but do enjoy great plays. I've often thought about an app that turns a game into a graph. time along the x-axis and score on y. user can select an interval where points are scored and see the video. the x axis can have a lot of things, like yards gained. Even things like volume of crowd roar could be graphed on the y axis. I've brought this up to sports enthusiasts and they generally have no interest. once the game is over they could care less. how it unfolds in realtime is the only thing that is important to them. The other issue is NFL owns the video so I couldn't do anything with the app without working through them. I haven't looked around much lately either, something like that could exist now.
the processes to turn biomass into biofuel are anything but eco-local-natural. when scaled out they will look as bad as the current petro-industry. As far as storage goes, the power grid is a very practical way to store solar power, especially since daytime is peak electrical usage.
I used to call Steve Jobs the computer pimp. I thought woz was the real genius at the early Apple. The whole NeXT computer fiasco seemed to prove it. Then what Steve Jobs did at Pixar really impressed me. then when he went back to Apple the results were just incredible.
I think its a double edge sword that makes Apple double the profit and then some. Also, the technologies advancements that windows hardware manufactures innovate aren't exclusive to Microsoft. Especially since Apple has switched from PowerPC to x86, Apple now can leverage all windows hardware advances.
why would they say it publicly? seems like something you would want to keep to yourself until you have the product in hand. I also think that Apple had been grooming their supply chain system for the mac very effectively and when they decided to make a pocket device they pulled it off very effectively.
The difference as I've seen it is Apple has always worked on both the hardware and os. That gave them the ability to control the end user experience very precisely. Microsoft has farmed out hardware, and that has hurt them and created blind spots. Microsoft has never taken the whole user experience seriously. One big problem is Microsoft has never seriously handled the issue of viruses and that has hurt them immensely. I think the service pack for windows 7 has the message on it during install that says 'Free'. (I think they had conversations about charging for it). Every time I see that message I think how crazy MS is to think that making something work right is something the user should pay for. I think Microsoft's surface is and interesting development although is too expensive for me and most of the home users I know.