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Comment They listened. (Score 1) 249

We said we wanted digital distribution. Granted, a lot of us said it by using illegal digital distribution, but now there are legal options to rent nearly any popular movie online and I think it's great. But I doubt that Bittorrent or services like it will ever go away unless obscure films become available for streaming as well. Netflix has some, but with older and weirder cinema there are a lot of holes.

Comment Re: Sin and Jesus (Score 1) 1293

The problem here is that you've in essence created a straw man argument. You're saying, "All Christians must believe X" and then asserting that Christianity is a problem because X is false. In reality, a great many liberal Christians do in fact believe in evolution and that's perfectly as it should be. You do not get to dictate what other people are allowed to believe.

Comment Re: Sin and Jesus (Score 1) 1293

That statistic is terrifying, but I would want to see their methodology before assuming it's correct. Nice of you to tell me what I have to believe, but the concept of original sin is entirely absent from the Jewish reading of the garden of Eden story. It is a Christian concept developed later to convince people they "need" Jesus. More importantly, the bible isn't one book or even two... it's 66 booksfif you're looking at a Christian bible or 39 with a Jewish bible. Most of the books have different authors and come from different time periods, so to speak of it as one book is ludicrous. Some of the authors were pro war and others were not; some were misogynistic and others were not. Some of the prophets openly disagree with each other, and there are plenty of other internal contradictions as well, especially if you're ignoring historical context. Yes, the book is violent and sanctions many things we think of as immoral today. However, it also forbids human sacrifice, which was a common practice in ancient times. That makes it revolutionary if you're reading it in context. And it contains plenty of commandments that are just a good idea - treating others with kindness, not lying about people, not stealing or murdering. Our society gets its mores against these things from the Bible. So to say it's worthless is completely missing the point. It contains things that no longer apply to modern life, and also things that do. I find it really interesting that your article doesn't mention interviewing any Jews. From my perspective, the way Christians (and atheists only familiar with Christian doctrine) look at the Bible makes no sense. For someone who sends to be an atheist, you show remarkably little inclination to apply critical thinking to religion. It seems you prefer to resort to generalizations about things you don't know very much about. I'm sorry if you're prejudiced against all religious people because you don't like Christian doctrine, but let me set the record straight on something. You didn't have the right to tell anyone what they should believe it how they should read the bible. Neither does a rabbi. No more than I get to tell you what scientific theories you should prefer. There is more than just one way to interpret scripture, and ultimately as many different ones as there are people willing to engage the text and analyze it for historical, cultural, mystical, religious, psychological or act other level if meaning. It is by no means perfect, but neither is it worthlesss or evil like you so ignorantly suggest. It is a collection of many books, all written by fallible humans who were trying to express what they thought was right. It's also a work of literature that forms one of the most basic foundations of western culture. have you even read it all?

Comment Re:Faith is Fragile? (Score 1) 1293

Faith is only fragile if your faith is founded on a five-year-old's understanding of what the bible says. In other words, if you're a literalist (i.e., a fundamentalist). Biblical literalism is a relatively new phenomenon, appearing mainly in America in the last 100 years. Because most Americans are bloody fools. (I'm an American myself, just always been partial to the Britishisms.)

Comment Another easy solution (Score 1) 270

Since Office 2013 includes a cloud service anyway, why not let subscribers get their app for free? The subscription fees are where they're getting their money in that model, not the app sales, and the only way to keep Apple from getting your money is to charge nothing for the app itself. It works fine for Carbonite, CrashPlan, Dropbox, Google Drive... Oh wait, I know why Microsoft won't do that. Because they've always been more motivated by profit than by making things convenient for their users. Say what you want about Apple, but they are extremely user-focused... except when they're convinced they know better than the user what the user *should* want. Sometimes that leads to great things, and other times it's bloody infuriating when they remove a feature people actually used.

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