Comment Re:yes but... (Score 3, Interesting) 1251
The flat earthers deserve more respect they are closer to the right answer than the ID crowd
http://chem.tufts.edu/AnswersInScience/RelativityofWrong.htm
The flat earthers deserve more respect they are closer to the right answer than the ID crowd
http://chem.tufts.edu/AnswersInScience/RelativityofWrong.htm
It was only then I noticed his outfit. Everyone else was in smart-ish jeans and shirts, but the entrepreneur was carefully dressed in a hoodie and a pair of open-toed flip flops. Later investigation would reveal that his 'billion dollar' app was a social network for people with
.edu addresses. The secret sauce? The fact that it gave college kids a way to flirt around campus.
Any of this sounding familiar? All he needed to complete the picture was a couple of embittered rowing twins baying for his blood...
Carr says the real tech innovation is happening in places like New York where old media is dying, where people take risks because they have nothing left to lose.
They can't even come up with something original after the words "the daily"
of 230 games in about half an hour.
The worst way of doing proper science.
On an other note, all civilisations that have fallen till now where in some way religious. Why wouldn't we give no religions at all a shot at the longest civilisation to ever live.
If you want a internet for emergency situations you make legislation that forces a first page in cases of emergency's you don't close off the whole internet. There really is no way to justify complete control of information other than forcing a certain view of the world on the people. And if the government wants to protect their own network make it so there is a kill-switch for closing of any government website for the outside not every site for everybody.
HOLY MACRO!