I am confused. Respectfully, how is this even relevant? I was under the impression that the recording of him using MAME was done for a documentary (possibly, other times for fun?). But, all the record attempts were done on non-MAME machines.
My source is the Slashdot article about this from last month, have I missed a major development in this story somewhere?
A cursor glance over the article (Sarah Paulson & Kendall Jenner + fear of small holes) had me coming to the conclusion that, some celebrities had been brainwashed by their experiences selling 'pore cleansing' make-up remover liquids (ie. pores are bad, clean 'fresh' skin is good, etc).
I am still confused as to what the iphone has to do with celebrity 'skin care', but feel like Trypoophobia has already been weaponized.
hypnosec writes: The Internet Archive has a great collection of books, music, visual items and websites but, it had one thing lacking up until now – archive of software. This has changed recently as The Internet Archive now holds the largest collection of software in the world and has challenged everyone to find a bigger one. The expansion at the Internet Archive has come through collaboration with other independent archives like that Disk Drives collection, the FTP site boneyard, Shareware CD Archive, and the TOSEC archive. The archive doesn’t hold just the software – it also holds documentation as well.
Posted
by
samzenpus
from the extreme-navel-gazing dept.
After three years of research, including examining 503 pieces of fluff from his own belly button, Georg Steinhauser has discovered a type of body hair that traps stray pieces of lint and draws them into the navel. Dr Steinhauser's observations showed that "small pieces of fluff first form in the hair and then end up in the navel at the end of the day." Chemical analysis revealed the pieces of fluff were not just made up of cotton from clothing. Wrapped up in the lint were also flecks of dead skin, fat, sweat and dust. Unfortunately, further study has failed to yield a hair or fiber that would give Dr. Steinhauser the last three years of his life back.