While I can't stand the organization for its politics, policies, origins, higher-up administrators and more recent scandals, I will admit that going out and camping once a month with zero electronics helped give me the patience I need to proudly say amongst a group of internet addicted college-student peers: "Nah, I'll check [my e-mail] later."
I'm so tired of this crap. The Greek's stole from the Egyptians. The Romans from the Greeks. Great artists always imitate and copy from their predecessors so they can learn--Science and Technology should be no different. Progress is going to crawl to a greedy halt if we keep up this patent bullcrap. Ultimately society becomes a better place when people do things for the greater good. Thank god Penicillin wasn't patented. Putting a patent on a strand of DNA is ridiculous. I just wish I was old enough to have thought of patenting the patent process.
Don't forget schools. Art schools have to buy tons of licenses with each new version release (although they are usually a version or two behind since CS2).
Did they sign a contract you made to that or another effect along the lines of "if I ever want to charge you, I will." (Of course they send prior notice...albeit usually in 5 point font in what feels like a spam mailing to encourage it being dumped and forgotten about.)
If more people cooked their own food they'd have not only a better appreciation of it and be more likely to eat everything they made (and eat healthier), but would save money and stop the wasteful practices of many prefab food companies. I know a lot of these companies sell their excess food to one another (or use it in other products), but I wouldn't be surprised if a majority of the "30% waste" is on the developer's end, not the consumers.
A device that can help us find lost people, victims in disaster areas and potentially dangerous criminals seems doesn't sound like anything but trying to solve new problems.
But I'll be the first to admit that the article scared the ever living crap out of me. If I was some kind of rogue agent sent to blahblahdystopianrebelsblahblahblah I'm sure I'd be really scared too.
I am not a physicist. But I've read somewhere that sand can work better than water since it would seal in the radiation when it turns to glass...again this is probably just science fiction being spread through the tubes and anyone who reads this should know I only got the idea from another news site...but is there any legitimacy to this claim?
(Also: Water, on a coastal plant, is considerably easier to get and transport than sand).
Actually, most of the world pre-WWII thought Hitler was one of the best and more brilliant leaders of the 20th century. Especially following the Olympic games. He was even praised as being multicultural and liberal during the Olympics (which, in case you didn't know, was the Reich's first true and widest international showcasing). Mind you he temporarily took down all the anti-Semitic signs, forced the citizens to treat the international guests like pampered kings and queens and hid any evidence of his anti-[insert one of several groups here] throughout the entirety of the games. But the Third Reich was thought of as a peaceful, wonderful and even Utopian society by the masses at the time. Heck--the Nuhrenburg Rally canceled immediately prior to the "justified" invasion of Poland was going to be themed around "Peace" that year. Of course, later we found out the invasion was entirely unjustified and the Polish attacks on the Reich were fabricated...etc...etc...
Why not sue everyone whose ever got the song stuck in their head? I mean, its the rights of the artist to recreate the emotive responses you have to their work. Its only fair.
Not that I'm saying you believe what will soon follow, but it's a general misconception due to many (usually comic) depictions of them in popular media. But the amish don't believe technology is wicked because of any kind of supernatural fear of the technology itself (i.e. they don't believe electricity is evil) so much as they believe that relying on things outside their immediate community is wrong and will lead to dire complications. Plus they believe electricity leads to unnecessary wants that distract people from their physical, ethical and spiritual development. While I'm not saying their lifestyle is more or less suitable for man in general, I do understand where they are coming from.
Says the graphic design and marketing major posting 23 minutes before midnight instead of getting some much needed sleep.
Because a good portion of the political spectrum believes that you have to be "tough on crime". "Criminal Justice" has become synonymous with "support of the [backwards and evil] agenda!" The way the news pimps every little awful thing that happens around the world to grab at people's attention makes people feel the world is more corrupt. So people feel that their "protectors" need more "protection" from these awful "pro-Criminal" activists who are just being "brainwashed" by the "agenda".
And the people who take the most action are those who aren't already beaten sober by the system (i.e. too tired to fight back). Unfortunately, disillusionment in the system leads to apathy and melancholy regarding wanting to fix it, despite the fact the disillusioned are oftentimes the ones with the best hindsight as to what needs to be fixed.
Fine arts in the states is struggling enough without the need to import bulbs. I've had teachers talk about this in the past--its almost impossible to do (quality, physical medium) fine arts under incandescent lighting.
I turn on Sci-Fi expecting Fiction and get stuff about hunting down ghosts and big-foot. Which would still at least be fiction if the people hunting the creatures didn't themselves act as though they believed in it (and if it had writers).
I turn on History expecting biographies and documentaries and see Ice Road Truckers and other "history in the making" crap that isn't even significant enough in the long run to be considered "news".
I turn on Discovery expecting documentaries and instead get Myth Busters.
I turn on MTV and... well no. No one expects Music on MTV anymore.
I don't think Musicians should be able to make a living performing music. It should be a hobby--something to do that's more productive than watching TV or writing thousands of posts on Slashdot. It takes a lot of time and effort to release a single album--but not so much that you can't supplement your income with other jobs. Or doing concerts/tours/charity events/something-other-than-selling-digital-copies-of-your-music. Which most artists do anyway.
This is coming from the son of a musician father and dancer mother who were lucky enough to be able to become agents in the industry instead of pursuing careers as "artists". This is also coming from an artist who was lucky enough to be able to enjoy expressing myself doing commercial works like UIs, websites and ads.
That being said: even if these musicians only get minimum wage, they are getting more doing their creative and expressive hobby than most at-home tabletop game developers (especially since most wind up just giving their game away since its so expensive to publish).
You guys forgot Richard Garfield, the creator of Magic: The Gathering. He proposed to his wife with a custom card.
http://howell.seattle.wa.us/games/MtG/Proposal.html
Its currently one of the most expensive cards in the game (there are other copies of it handed out as wedding invitation gifts or something similar).
Again I must ask: why was the emergency response system connected to the world wide web in the first place? Was the virus specifically designed/targeted to attack them? Or was it installed through a physical medium? Either way, it seems like having a back-up system, ready to be up in only a few hours with frequent tests, would be something the group should look into.
If there is such a law, it'd completely destroy the Viral Marketing industry. There are such laws in political advertising. But I know of several older ad campaigns that didn't declare what they were for (for viral purposes) until weeks after they launched (creating "internet buzz" in advance).
Plus they kinda are showing us who they are advertising for...whether or not they are being paid shouldn't be an issue since the intent of the advertiser can't be fully taken into consideration. Even if they are being compensated, we don't know whether or not they themselves are such fans of the company they work for that they wouldn't enjoy doing this irregardless.
I for one don't like to condense all my tools/toys into a single device. I like my games on my DS, my phone in my cellphone, my e-mail and internet in my laptop and my important documents/files/backups at my computer at home. That way if one crashes, I'm not completely screwed. if I drop my DS while I play a game, I don't lose access to my phone and internet. Its also usually cheaper (since most people I know who have a smart phone also have portable game systems and laptops), leads to more battery life for each individual device and usually more quality in each individual device (I'd much rather have a full keyboard and google than any "local information app" or "map app").
Or the thief buys tons of starbucks gift cards, claiming they are for an office event or something if the cashier lifts a brow, and sells them back to people outside. Or some of the merch starbucks has--cups, books, board games, CDs. They sell far more than just coffee.
This makes perfect sense. Natural oil leaks occur quite often. But they are usually less concentrated and in lower volumes at any single point in time and space than an artificial oil leak such as at the gulf. But, nevertheless, nature has mechanisms in place that can deal with oil. Many of them don't work in spills of this magnitude, but many others will, over time, do more than we projected. The other problem that the article doesn't mention, however, is the ecosystem unbalance caused by the increase of the particular chemicals that creatures (usually bacteria) devour in that given area. While I'm sure the food-chain will eventually work its magic and all will be well and good again, it is a startling upset to the balance of nature when predators (fish) suddenly die out at the same time prey (the bacteria) begin to flourish.
So Japanese games will now have revolutionary western game ideas like hit points, potions, oozes/slimes, experience points, levels and the idea of using a single unit on foot instead of an army to complete a series of quests? Oh wait. Japan has been using that forever. Now if your talking about setting like the article seems to imply...no wait, most Japanese games don't actually take place in Japan (if you ignore the indie dating sim developers, since most of their games never get official ports). From Final Fantasy to Zelda, most Japanese games have always been very "western" in almost every way...
While I can't stand the organization for its politics, policies, origins, higher-up administrators and more recent scandals, I will admit that going out and camping once a month with zero electronics helped give me the patience I need to proudly say amongst a group of internet addicted college-student peers: "Nah, I'll check [my e-mail] later."
I'm so tired of this crap. The Greek's stole from the Egyptians. The Romans from the Greeks. Great artists always imitate and copy from their predecessors so they can learn--Science and Technology should be no different. Progress is going to crawl to a greedy halt if we keep up this patent bullcrap. Ultimately society becomes a better place when people do things for the greater good. Thank god Penicillin wasn't patented. Putting a patent on a strand of DNA is ridiculous. I just wish I was old enough to have thought of patenting the patent process.
Don't forget schools. Art schools have to buy tons of licenses with each new version release (although they are usually a version or two behind since CS2).
Did they sign a contract you made to that or another effect along the lines of "if I ever want to charge you, I will." (Of course they send prior notice...albeit usually in 5 point font in what feels like a spam mailing to encourage it being dumped and forgotten about.)
If more people cooked their own food they'd have not only a better appreciation of it and be more likely to eat everything they made (and eat healthier), but would save money and stop the wasteful practices of many prefab food companies. I know a lot of these companies sell their excess food to one another (or use it in other products), but I wouldn't be surprised if a majority of the "30% waste" is on the developer's end, not the consumers.
A device that can help us find lost people, victims in disaster areas and potentially dangerous criminals seems doesn't sound like anything but trying to solve new problems.
But I'll be the first to admit that the article scared the ever living crap out of me. If I was some kind of rogue agent sent to blahblahdystopianrebelsblahblahblah I'm sure I'd be really scared too.
I am not a physicist. But I've read somewhere that sand can work better than water since it would seal in the radiation when it turns to glass...again this is probably just science fiction being spread through the tubes and anyone who reads this should know I only got the idea from another news site...but is there any legitimacy to this claim?
(Also: Water, on a coastal plant, is considerably easier to get and transport than sand).
Actually, most of the world pre-WWII thought Hitler was one of the best and more brilliant leaders of the 20th century. Especially following the Olympic games. He was even praised as being multicultural and liberal during the Olympics (which, in case you didn't know, was the Reich's first true and widest international showcasing). Mind you he temporarily took down all the anti-Semitic signs, forced the citizens to treat the international guests like pampered kings and queens and hid any evidence of his anti-[insert one of several groups here] throughout the entirety of the games. But the Third Reich was thought of as a peaceful, wonderful and even Utopian society by the masses at the time. Heck--the Nuhrenburg Rally canceled immediately prior to the "justified" invasion of Poland was going to be themed around "Peace" that year. Of course, later we found out the invasion was entirely unjustified and the Polish attacks on the Reich were fabricated...etc...etc...
Fanta is made by Coke. Coke is available in all these places. Hence, so is Fanta.
Its not their fault. Google is still in beta!
Why not sue everyone whose ever got the song stuck in their head? I mean, its the rights of the artist to recreate the emotive responses you have to their work. Its only fair.
From what I've seen on my friend's PC, this is another article that needs the tag "except in Japan".
Not that I'm saying you believe what will soon follow, but it's a general misconception due to many (usually comic) depictions of them in popular media. But the amish don't believe technology is wicked because of any kind of supernatural fear of the technology itself (i.e. they don't believe electricity is evil) so much as they believe that relying on things outside their immediate community is wrong and will lead to dire complications. Plus they believe electricity leads to unnecessary wants that distract people from their physical, ethical and spiritual development. While I'm not saying their lifestyle is more or less suitable for man in general, I do understand where they are coming from. Says the graphic design and marketing major posting 23 minutes before midnight instead of getting some much needed sleep.
Because a good portion of the political spectrum believes that you have to be "tough on crime". "Criminal Justice" has become synonymous with "support of the [backwards and evil] agenda!" The way the news pimps every little awful thing that happens around the world to grab at people's attention makes people feel the world is more corrupt. So people feel that their "protectors" need more "protection" from these awful "pro-Criminal" activists who are just being "brainwashed" by the "agenda". And the people who take the most action are those who aren't already beaten sober by the system (i.e. too tired to fight back). Unfortunately, disillusionment in the system leads to apathy and melancholy regarding wanting to fix it, despite the fact the disillusioned are oftentimes the ones with the best hindsight as to what needs to be fixed.
Fine arts in the states is struggling enough without the need to import bulbs. I've had teachers talk about this in the past--its almost impossible to do (quality, physical medium) fine arts under incandescent lighting.
I turn on Sci-Fi expecting Fiction and get stuff about hunting down ghosts and big-foot. Which would still at least be fiction if the people hunting the creatures didn't themselves act as though they believed in it (and if it had writers). ... well no. No one expects Music on MTV anymore.
I turn on History expecting biographies and documentaries and see Ice Road Truckers and other "history in the making" crap that isn't even significant enough in the long run to be considered "news".
I turn on Discovery expecting documentaries and instead get Myth Busters.
I turn on MTV and
I don't think Musicians should be able to make a living performing music. It should be a hobby--something to do that's more productive than watching TV or writing thousands of posts on Slashdot. It takes a lot of time and effort to release a single album--but not so much that you can't supplement your income with other jobs. Or doing concerts/tours/charity events/something-other-than-selling-digital-copies-of-your-music. Which most artists do anyway.
This is coming from the son of a musician father and dancer mother who were lucky enough to be able to become agents in the industry instead of pursuing careers as "artists". This is also coming from an artist who was lucky enough to be able to enjoy expressing myself doing commercial works like UIs, websites and ads.
That being said: even if these musicians only get minimum wage, they are getting more doing their creative and expressive hobby than most at-home tabletop game developers (especially since most wind up just giving their game away since its so expensive to publish).
You guys forgot Richard Garfield, the creator of Magic: The Gathering. He proposed to his wife with a custom card.
http://howell.seattle.wa.us/games/MtG/Proposal.html
Its currently one of the most expensive cards in the game (there are other copies of it handed out as wedding invitation gifts or something similar).
Again I must ask: why was the emergency response system connected to the world wide web in the first place? Was the virus specifically designed/targeted to attack them? Or was it installed through a physical medium? Either way, it seems like having a back-up system, ready to be up in only a few hours with frequent tests, would be something the group should look into.
If there is such a law, it'd completely destroy the Viral Marketing industry. There are such laws in political advertising. But I know of several older ad campaigns that didn't declare what they were for (for viral purposes) until weeks after they launched (creating "internet buzz" in advance).
Plus they kinda are showing us who they are advertising for...whether or not they are being paid shouldn't be an issue since the intent of the advertiser can't be fully taken into consideration. Even if they are being compensated, we don't know whether or not they themselves are such fans of the company they work for that they wouldn't enjoy doing this irregardless.
I for one don't like to condense all my tools/toys into a single device. I like my games on my DS, my phone in my cellphone, my e-mail and internet in my laptop and my important documents/files/backups at my computer at home. That way if one crashes, I'm not completely screwed. if I drop my DS while I play a game, I don't lose access to my phone and internet. Its also usually cheaper (since most people I know who have a smart phone also have portable game systems and laptops), leads to more battery life for each individual device and usually more quality in each individual device (I'd much rather have a full keyboard and google than any "local information app" or "map app").
Or the thief buys tons of starbucks gift cards, claiming they are for an office event or something if the cashier lifts a brow, and sells them back to people outside. Or some of the merch starbucks has--cups, books, board games, CDs. They sell far more than just coffee.
This makes perfect sense. Natural oil leaks occur quite often. But they are usually less concentrated and in lower volumes at any single point in time and space than an artificial oil leak such as at the gulf. But, nevertheless, nature has mechanisms in place that can deal with oil. Many of them don't work in spills of this magnitude, but many others will, over time, do more than we projected. The other problem that the article doesn't mention, however, is the ecosystem unbalance caused by the increase of the particular chemicals that creatures (usually bacteria) devour in that given area. While I'm sure the food-chain will eventually work its magic and all will be well and good again, it is a startling upset to the balance of nature when predators (fish) suddenly die out at the same time prey (the bacteria) begin to flourish.
This can't be true. I googled it and nothing showed up that gave me the impression that google was doing anything wrong!
So Japanese games will now have revolutionary western game ideas like hit points, potions, oozes/slimes, experience points, levels and the idea of using a single unit on foot instead of an army to complete a series of quests? Oh wait. Japan has been using that forever. Now if your talking about setting like the article seems to imply...no wait, most Japanese games don't actually take place in Japan (if you ignore the indie dating sim developers, since most of their games never get official ports). From Final Fantasy to Zelda, most Japanese games have always been very "western" in almost every way...