They won't come out and deny that type of overpriced estimate. It worked great for the PSP, which was going to cost you at least $500. When the PSP came out, it was a steal at $250 (thanks to slowly getting your mind used to some ridiculously higher price). You even got a free rag.
The "CBS" article is not surprisingly really from a local news organization under the CBS umbrella. "Reporting" such as this show why there is never any reason to watch the local news outside of sports and maybe the weather if you like to pretend they can make good predictions.
It's all fear-mongering and inane chatter. Instead of mindlessly sitting on the couch watching reports of violence and learning more ways that I will soon die, I will do one of the following activities:
1. Play video games.
2. Go running.
3. Enjoy electronic interactive entertainment.
4. Transport body at a greater rate than typical walking.
5. React to stimuli on a viewing device with hand and digit movements on a mechanism that then controls activity occurring on viewing device.
6. Move body without assistance of vehicle from origin to a mid-point and back to origin in a manner that requires both feet to occasionally leave the ground.
7.....
Yes, what a community service Microsoft is doing by allowing the unfortunate to buy electronic entertainment. Microsoft is a business and their pricing has nothing to do with helping out the poor. The shareholders expect Microsoft to maximize profits and not to ensure all citizens their God-given right to waste their spare time on the newest console. The author is questioning whether or not Microsoft (or any other high-demand product manufacturer) should change their prices due to demand because he probably often thinks about ways to make more money so he can raise his children to be right-wing-rich-kids.
I watched "Monty Python and the Holy Grail" the other day to learn more about Arthurian legends. I came away thinking that the movie wasn't very informative and could have been done better.
If you didn't think the article was funny, that's fine (I thought it was some of Seanbaby's worst), but don't criticise it for not being a well-written thesis on video game history.
I know it sold little, but there should be a little red bar in the GTA line shouldn't there? Maybe it's too small to show up.
It meant: "Hi, I am a businessman skilled at using a lot of neat-o words strung together to make it sound like I said something but I didn't."
They won't come out and deny that type of overpriced estimate. It worked great for the PSP, which was going to cost you at least $500. When the PSP came out, it was a steal at $250 (thanks to slowly getting your mind used to some ridiculously higher price). You even got a free rag.
The "CBS" article is not surprisingly really from a local news organization under the CBS umbrella. "Reporting" such as this show why there is never any reason to watch the local news outside of sports and maybe the weather if you like to pretend they can make good predictions.
....
It's all fear-mongering and inane chatter. Instead of mindlessly sitting on the couch watching reports of violence and learning more ways that I will soon die, I will do one of the following activities:
1. Play video games.
2. Go running.
3. Enjoy electronic interactive entertainment.
4. Transport body at a greater rate than typical walking.
5. React to stimuli on a viewing device with hand and digit movements on a mechanism that then controls activity occurring on viewing device.
6. Move body without assistance of vehicle from origin to a mid-point and back to origin in a manner that requires both feet to occasionally leave the ground.
7.
I think it is released in the US. Saw it over in a kiosk at Galleria in Dallas. It was the big kiosk with no customers.... at Chrismas-time!!
They should have used better Japanese advertising, such as: "XBOX 360 - Beautiful Happy Exuberance Maker!!"
Yes, what a community service Microsoft is doing by allowing the unfortunate to buy electronic entertainment. Microsoft is a business and their pricing has nothing to do with helping out the poor. The shareholders expect Microsoft to maximize profits and not to ensure all citizens their God-given right to waste their spare time on the newest console. The author is questioning whether or not Microsoft (or any other high-demand product manufacturer) should change their prices due to demand because he probably often thinks about ways to make more money so he can raise his children to be right-wing-rich-kids.
I watched "Monty Python and the Holy Grail" the other day to learn more about Arthurian legends. I came away thinking that the movie wasn't very informative and could have been done better. If you didn't think the article was funny, that's fine (I thought it was some of Seanbaby's worst), but don't criticise it for not being a well-written thesis on video game history.
You must be doing metric division or something else with which I am unfamiliar. 3,000,000/200,000 = 15