acemonster
ACEMONSTER
acemonster

Posted earlier, but worth the repost:

I bet her boyfriend thinks she's as annoying as sand in the vagina . . .

I bet she was stoned . . .

Good - then she saved money on these:

Hrmm - My Gizmodo Sarcast-a-meter is not functioning that well today . . .

The more important question is:

I guarantee that if a replica of the Millennium Falcon was built, the situation would have been wildly different . . .

Ahhh brings back memories of playing Mechwarrior 3 online for the StarLance league. Go Clan Snow Raven!

We'll hear their incessant bitching and moaning from here, no doubt.

A good 'ole pair of Asics Kayanos does it for me.

You're a student of law too, correct?

That's because Apple is the greedy party here. While they feel their patent is valid (and it was classified limited by the Office of Patents, not by the general public), they are protecting their financial interests by preemptively and reactively suing those they feel are infringing on their technology.

..Only if all of them were touching the web. More hairs mean it is less likely that more of the leg is touching the web, and only some of the hairs.

The legal system is an extension of rights and principles, some of which are intrinsic in our "being" and others that are socially agreed-upon. The system is not flawed - but human thought and rationality could be. As such, the extension is only natural that a system built from rational thought in re: principle and

I did a double-take to see whether this was a Jezebel article or not . . .

Show me evidence where Yahoo! tried to patent a style. Their patents, if you cared to investigate it further, include:

Hah - get over yourself. I could care less if my "condescension" comes off as impolite to you. Fact is (and I'm not just a law student, but I have studied information technology for years, including having owned my own business in the field), something as specific as "pinch to zoom" encompasses an idea. We all

Lol, I was half-expecting for her to hit the fence . . .

Mark Cuban can kiss my hairy ass. He is ADAMANTLY against patent suits, which gets my panties in a bunch. The whole point of patenting one's own work is to promote innovation.

So how secure would the network/systems/etc be, then, if someone was planted as a NASA employee, but was secretly stealing information, or maliciously implanting code or backdoors?