Seat 29A = 666 on hexadecimal.
Seat 29A = 666 on hexadecimal.
Actually it's safer when it isn't the exact same speed, in order for vehicles to get noticed. What I wrote is a very common and correct motorcycle driving advice, but yeah I get the premise of the video.
Is it in your interest to pursue a career in any turning right series? Maybe one without roofs?
There was no way I was going to draw the Gesamtstrecke.
I'll share this, though most probably doesn't meet the rules thus not participating, because is the first thing that to me comes to mind when the article says "Nürburgring-dwarfing size"
Where's Harris? It's been two weeks without videos and he was uploading one weekly.
lol autoreply. Had to make sure people get funding matters a lot more than just advertising and that in his latest video Harris reviewed his very own car against the competition, so the comparison has to be taken with a grain of salt. That's not the first time he does it (and remember two more) and he praised all…
First things first: funding is different than advertising.
On funding, would you review a Ford car badly if Ford helped you create your company and it pays your bills every single day, plus the free trip and all expenses included to go there and review a particular car? Wouldn't you praise every single Ford car and…
No one bites the hand that feeds him/her and so far there's barely any ethic involved in internet journalism. On ad revenue there's the gamespot case, from some years ago.
Anyway, in podcasts in particular there's two worth noting aspects:
1.- They show that each reviewer has personal preferences and biases -like any…
An impartial car reviewer cannot review a Citroen wearing a Ford shirt. That's literally what happens in all these sites, the sole exception being giantbomb as the financing behind it does not come from gaming related companies and their ads do not directly come from certain companies but just have what google…
Most big reviewing sites (to call them that) are funded and/or have advertising of certain companies and their products. That makes them instantly biased and is a very common way of paying for reviews, not only present in this industry.
On this month's how to make money easily:
Fine doesn't mean perfect. Perfection costs at least twice and people aren't willing to pay that much.
On the first point, that's not true.
The sentence includes the word 'proper'.
Most probably the first batch will be sold at a lower price than what it should be to make enough profit, or profit at all. It's a common business strategy in this type of products. But we'll see.
The Oculus is not going to be the next PS1 controller. It will always remain a niche that's available at stores; sort of mainstream yet too expensive for the avg gamer.
Think of it as forcefeedback wheels: easily less than 1% of racing games players have one (lets say g27, though it's kind of old by now) and then by…
The main problem with id software is not its coding team: it's the lack of people working on content, which is the reason why all their games from 1999 and onwards had massive delays.