septentriones
septentriones
septentriones

I completely agree, I just take it a step further and use my backed up movies to make portable copies. Only for myself or my family, but If I bought it, I feel I can modify and copy the media I own in any way I see fit for my personal use (just not making it available to the rest of the world). I create copies of old

Exactly, I just got my dad's original copy of "Potatoshop" off of an old HP with Windows 98 sitting in storage. I won't buy the new version unless I really need it, and if I do it will only be with my student discount. In the context of this article I really don't consider this pirating. The closest I get to pirating

It says on his twitter account:

@McLovin_: I searched and I can't find any, sorry. TinEye drew a blank, he doesn't have a website(that I saw so far), and I checked out his flicker stream for better versions but there aren't any. There are higher res small images on his stream that could be stitched together.

@Mike Worldcrusher: So that's where I saw it. Thanks, it was driving me mad. ;)

@FeyerbrandX: In a dual or for target shooting it's not so much quantity but quality.

@GetOutOfBox: Or if you drill out the air restrictors. It's really nice work though all he needs is an ammunition holder that matches it and hides the bright orange of the darts.

Books (though I will also get more ebooks), my fountain pen for notes and brainstorming, my record player, my skis and bike (no wii fit only lifestyle), sketchbook, ti-84 for on the go (though wolfram alpha when I'm at the computer), my analog watch, leatherman? (and other tools: the digital equivalent being to call

@Jaredu: It has been quite interesting to talk to someone else about perspective and perception. Usually people don't have time or aren't interested in these types of questions. Being a 3d artist it must be convenient to be able to work with perspectives in that fashion since it's as close to the real thing as one

@Jaredu: I never meant to suggest that people are unable to further develop beyond their own experiences. As you explained people are capable of synthesizing experiences in their minds by manipulating refined concepts from what they have observed or felt in their lives. On the other hand though, you are not truly

@Jaredu: We are the sum of our experiences so we can't truly believe what we think since our thought is a product outside of our own control. Unless of course we were raised to believe that the assimilation of experiences into our identity is controlled by our responses to them. One could argue that our response to

What frightens me even more than the disorganization that I have to face in my files is the sheer amount of stuff I've accumulated. In this past year since I built my new pc, I picked up at least 400gb worth of media of all types. I don't know about anybody else's usage but it certainly opened my eyes. I got a new

@Iceman B.: When I went through the settings I made sure to turn that on. I'm not that worried though, I have everything relatively locked down and 99% of the time I only log onto Facebook at home on my desktop.

I would use this with a few changes. Keep the tabs since Firefox 4 has a lower profile already (once you turn off the bookmark bar) and add the little windows, not as recently used sites but bookmarked (personalized) quick access links (like Speed Dial is in Chrome). Then, once you start to type in the search bar,

@ygolohcysP: Whenever I get upset about my inability to multitask I just remember: humans are not meant for true multitasking; our brains switch threads at high speeds giving us an illusion of working on multiple things at the same time, but really we are simply flip flopping jobs (and only sometimes in an efficient

@Iceman B.: Thanks for posting this. I sat there for a good 10 minutes wondering why I didn't have the secure browsing option yet. Do you have any idea when it rolls out globally?

Wow...just wow.... I'm going to have to try this when I have some time off.