stefan_san
stefan_san
stefan_san

This is of course, a creative, fantastical, mindblowing and fun approach. But we all have seen what DC does to creative people with a mind of their own...

Maybe a part of you died after you watched it the first time. :)

thought that was apile of worms

Certain websites ruined me for movies featuring "stockings" in the title. :(

Uhhm... isn't a doggie bag where you put ...you know, dog feces in??

Fart monsters. Russel T. Davies actually thinks people want to see that.

If you think about it, in most jobs, 90% of what we actually DO doesn't require that much intelligence at all. And the other 10% could easily be done by one human surveilling 100 robots. So I think it will be long before machines are actually on our level that we will have become obsolete.

Oh, I'll always.

Maybe I should. The concept just seems so alien to me.

"After designing the compound on the computer, the scientists synthesized the molecules in the lab."

Uhhm, put it in the OVEN??? At least that's what we do in Germany.

FINALLY!!!!!!

bah! Humbug. :)

It just felt like cheating on the writer's part, that Korra was suddenly able to turn into a giant soul-warrior or whatever. Remember, when Aang turned into a giant monster, it was because he fused with a god-like being. It was something that actually came out of the story. It was a surprising, yet logical conclusion,

Yes, it was mentioned before. I give you that,

This can only end in tears.

Now playing

"broke my anime cherry"?? dude. phrasing.

Errm... excuse my ignorance, but how does this fit together with all the talk about quantum computers being decades away? With "3 times 5 is 15" being a huge breaktrough and all that.

Can anyone tell me how many thousands or million atoms approx. it takes today to form one "computer bit" with the latest storage technology? Just to have a comparison. Since you're all such ueber-nerds here.

I guess you missed the giant blue alien Korra made up of "Cosmic Energy". :p