LotR: The story of a young hobbit coming of age who must, with the help of his sidekicks and old guy mentor, destroy a powerful object to defeat the evil Dark Lord. HP: The story of a young boy coming of age who must, with the help of his sidekicks and old guy mentor, destroy 7 powerful objects to defeat the evil Dark Lord. Star Wars: The story of a young man coming of age who must, with the help of his sidekicks and old guy mentor, destroy a moon-sized powerful object to defeat the evil Darth Lord. King Arthur: The story of a young man coming of age who must, with the help of his sidekick and old guy mentor, destroy a powerful army to defeat the evil Dark Witch.
I'm not trying to argue with anyone, I'm as big a Harry Potter fan as most. I'm just making the point that so many great books/movies are essentially the same story. They always seem to boil down to Jung's archetypes.
No, Voldemort had intended to make 7 all along and was planning on using the death of the Potters to make the 7th horcrux. He had only made 6 when he tried to kill Harry.
The problem I have with the price of movies is the shit they play. If I want to see a movie, I'll sure pay 10$ for it and if it's good I'll see it a few more times. But sometimes I'll be going to the movies with some friends who don't always have the same taste as myself and I'll be damned if I'm going to spend 10$ on some movie I only half care about. That and the advertisements. I love trailers, but I hate the commercials.
We have the same problem at my college. I work in the IT dept and I almost feel bad for the people who bring their laptops in about it, but then I remember they bought Vista and suddenly feel like they got what they deserved.
Oh, Vista.
I'm taking a C# class now and the book we use is pretty good. Beginning Visual C# 2005
Of course, I'm not familiar with any other books on the subject, but my professor picked this one out of a whole bunch, so he must have had a reason!
That really depends on where you go. I'm a CS major now and the only math I'm required to take is Calc 1 and 2. They don't even offer Discrete math; I'm going to a local state college to take it this semester.
LotR: The story of a young hobbit coming of age who must, with the help of his sidekicks and old guy mentor, destroy a powerful object to defeat the evil Dark Lord.
HP: The story of a young boy coming of age who must, with the help of his sidekicks and old guy mentor, destroy 7 powerful objects to defeat the evil Dark Lord.
Star Wars: The story of a young man coming of age who must, with the help of his sidekicks and old guy mentor, destroy a moon-sized powerful object to defeat the evil Darth Lord.
King Arthur: The story of a young man coming of age who must, with the help of his sidekick and old guy mentor, destroy a powerful army to defeat the evil Dark Witch.
I'm not trying to argue with anyone, I'm as big a Harry Potter fan as most. I'm just making the point that so many great books/movies are essentially the same story. They always seem to boil down to Jung's archetypes.
No, Voldemort had intended to make 7 all along and was planning on using the death of the Potters to make the 7th horcrux. He had only made 6 when he tried to kill Harry.
The problem I have with the price of movies is the shit they play. If I want to see a movie, I'll sure pay 10$ for it and if it's good I'll see it a few more times. But sometimes I'll be going to the movies with some friends who don't always have the same taste as myself and I'll be damned if I'm going to spend 10$ on some movie I only half care about. That and the advertisements. I love trailers, but I hate the commercials.
We have the same problem at my college. I work in the IT dept and I almost feel bad for the people who bring their laptops in about it, but then I remember they bought Vista and suddenly feel like they got what they deserved. Oh, Vista.
I'm taking a C# class now and the book we use is pretty good. Beginning Visual C# 2005 Of course, I'm not familiar with any other books on the subject, but my professor picked this one out of a whole bunch, so he must have had a reason!
That really depends on where you go. I'm a CS major now and the only math I'm required to take is Calc 1 and 2. They don't even offer Discrete math; I'm going to a local state college to take it this semester.