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Comment Balls on your art (Score 0) 29

Here's an idea. Turn the cameras to the drawing board. Make a drawing for the harsh robot art critic. The robot will indicate its distaste by drawing a large cock and balls over what you've just drawn. That's just for you, though, since the robot will quickly remove your awful art so that it doesn't soil the world's eyeballs with its awfulness.
Apple

Submission + - iPad Owners Are ‘Selfish Elites.’ (wired.com)

An anonymous reader writes: t’s not exactly official, but should also surprise no one: According to a new study the psychological profile of iPad owners can be summed up as “selfish elites” while have-not critics are “independent geeks.”

Consumer research firm MyType conducted the study, in which opinions of 20,000 people were analyzed between March and May. The firm’s conclusion was that iPad owners tend to be wealthy, sophisticated, highly educated and disproportionately interested in business and finance, while they scored terribly in the areas of altruism and kindness. In other words, “selfish elites.”

They are six times more likely to be “wealthy, well-educated, power-hungry, over-achieving, sophisticated, unkind and non-altruistic 30-50 year olds,” MyType’s Tim Koelkebeck told Wired.com.

Comment Re:What slays me... (Score 0) 48

What slays me is that your blog is no different than millions of other blogs, detailing the mind-numbing minutiae of your day-to-day life. One of your posts is about writing a post, for shit's sake. If you have to sit and think about what you're going to write, maybe you shouldn't write anything at all and wait for something interesting to happen instead. This is the problem with blogs and why any "blogger" can expect a stellar 20-40/wk readership consisting mainly of close family members. Show me a guy getting donkey punched in the sack, add a gong sound-effect and wacky graphics, and if it turns out hilarious expect your hits to increase drastically.

2.5" Drives On the Desktop 291

An anonymous reader points out an article on XYZ Computing exploring the use of a 2.5" notebook hard drive in a desktop computer. From the article: "The tradeoff for these qualities has always been limited capacities, high costs, and slow transfer rates, but a the recent progression in portable storage techology has changed the 2.5" drive greatly. We put the Seagate Momentus 5400.3 160GB SATA notebook drive in our test system and took it for a spin."

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