Just as long as he doesn't voice act in this game....he did the voice acting for a game called Sanity: Aiken's Artifact. The only redeeming quality of that game was that its inanity was mildly amusing. Ice T was mostly just irritating.
Kazaa by Sharman is seperate from Kazaa Lite and K++. Kazaa the original program, along with being stuffed with spyware et al is also being touted as a legitimate program for distribution because of their partnership with a company which provides such content. K++ and Kazaa Lite are unauthorized versions of Kazaa with the spyware and so forth removed, and with this new RIAA-proofing. This shouldn't affect Kazaa proper's legal argument.
Piers Anthony wrote a book on this called "But What of Earth?". He essentially has the take that the people you can't/don't initially take out to the colonies are forced to devolve. I'd recomend this as a nice piece of apocalyptic fiction, but it also has the interesting bonus of having a rather detailed discussion of Anthony's experiences with the publishing industry.
Just as long as he doesn't voice act in this game....he did the voice acting for a game called Sanity: Aiken's Artifact. The only redeeming quality of that game was that its inanity was mildly amusing. Ice T was mostly just irritating.
This isn't good yet You must await patiently Porn won't come that fast
Kazaa by Sharman is seperate from Kazaa Lite and K++. Kazaa the original program, along with being stuffed with spyware et al is also being touted as a legitimate program for distribution because of their partnership with a company which provides such content. K++ and Kazaa Lite are unauthorized versions of Kazaa with the spyware and so forth removed, and with this new RIAA-proofing. This shouldn't affect Kazaa proper's legal argument.
Piers Anthony wrote a book on this called "But What of Earth?". He essentially has the take that the people you can't/don't initially take out to the colonies are forced to devolve. I'd recomend this as a nice piece of apocalyptic fiction, but it also has the interesting bonus of having a rather detailed discussion of Anthony's experiences with the publishing industry.