Looking at these pictures remind me of how advanced the Sega handheld seemed for its time. Beautiful full-color screen and rich sound, while the Gameboy lagged behind with its black and white screen and one tiny speaker for years. Remember the TV tuner cartridge you could buy to turn it into a handheld television?
I'd like to see a set of movies chronicling the history of several of the notable races in the Star Trek universe.
For instance, a movie about Surak leading the violent Vulcans to passionless peace, filmed in epic cinematic style (like Spartacus).
Or a tale about a Klingon warrior wandering across the wild lands of an early Kronos, facing challenges and seeking to overthrow a tyrant and forge the Warrior's Way (taking stylistic cues from Samurai Jack).
Every cell in your body dies and is replaced over a scale of seven years or so. You're not the original you, having been replaced multiple times with a 'copy'. Care to redefine your idea of conciousness?
Speaking of T-Tex and bones... Whatever happened to the soft tissue they found inside the T-rex bone they cut open a few months ago?
Looking at these pictures remind me of how advanced the Sega handheld seemed for its time. Beautiful full-color screen and rich sound, while the Gameboy lagged behind with its black and white screen and one tiny speaker for years. Remember the TV tuner cartridge you could buy to turn it into a handheld television?
I'd like to see a set of movies chronicling the history of several of the notable races in the Star Trek universe.
For instance, a movie about Surak leading the violent Vulcans to passionless peace, filmed in epic cinematic style (like Spartacus).
Or a tale about a Klingon warrior wandering across the wild lands of an early Kronos, facing challenges and seeking to overthrow a tyrant and forge the Warrior's Way (taking stylistic cues from Samurai Jack).
Think different!
It's cool. We'll start scanning peoples' consciousnesses into computers, as per yesterday's article, and make them our database-indexing cyberslaves.
Windows can be unsafe. They are easier for criminals to break into than doors.
I greatly enjoyed The Broken. Whatever happened to it?
Every cell in your body dies and is replaced over a scale of seven years or so. You're not the original you, having been replaced multiple times with a 'copy'. Care to redefine your idea of conciousness?