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boyblue's Profile
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Filed under: OpEd, Bones, Episode Reviews
I have to say that this was the most dramatic I have seen Booth, Bones and the Squints in a long time. Even the season premiere where they first discovered the silver skeleton had more lighter moments than tonight's episode. Oh, there were a few smiles here and there, but for the most part it was non-stop action from beginning to end. I have no problem with this since we have had plenty of episodes this season that contained a giant dollop of dark humor (Pony Play, anyone?). %Gallery-10659% Continue reading Bones: The Knight on the Grid
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Femtocells are hot, but is the hype premature? We answer 18 burning questions about this emerging technology.
THQ has released a new trailer of Frontlines Fuel of War that shows the military drones.
Nantero's nano-technology. Start-up Nantero has built a carbon nanotube-based memory wafer using standard semiconductor fabrication processes. This removes a significant hurdle in commercialising the seemingly exotic NRAM (non-volatile RAM) that could replace DRAM, SRAM and flash memory with a universal memory design. ![]() Three in one! Half-Life 2: Episode 2, Portal and Team Fortress 2 -- all in one exclusive Peep Show package.
George Carlin once wondered aloud how it was possible to be nostalgic about a concept like "a little while ago," but if any band proves it to be possible, it's The Hives. The Hives were leaders of the garage-rock explosion in the early 2000's, along with The Strokes and The White Stripes, and while both of the latter bands evolved drastically over the years to follow, The Hives still stand entrenched in their energetic, punk-laced rock 'n' roll.
From the opening yelps of "Tick Tick Boom," Howlin' Pelle Almqvist transports us back to a time when The Hives were set to be the next great saviours of rock 'n' rollthunderous rhythm sections, matching white suits and senseless, ego-driven lyrics are still the band's M.O.
Most songs on the album are interchangeable bursts of infectious energy, but the Hives throw in just enough curveballs to justify the 45 minute running time. "Well All Right!" hijacks a swing rhythm and turns it into a demented GAP ad, while
Dell's acquisition of EqualLogic is still likely to cause some friction between Dell and EMC especially with EMC's entry level Clariion storage systems are concerned.
01 [360] Call Of Duty 4: Modern Warfare (Activision)
02 [PS3] Call Of Duty 4: Modern Warfare (Activision) 03 [PS2] Wwe Smackdown Vs Raw 2008 (Thq) 04 [PS2] The Simpsons Game (Electronic Arts) 05 [NDS] Dr Kawashima's Brain Training (Nintendo) 06 [NDS] More Brain Training From Dr Kawashima (Nintendo) 07 [PS2] Pro Evolution Soccer 2008 (Konami) 08 [PC] Call Of Duty 4: Modern Warfare (Activision) 09 [360] Halo 3 (Microsoft) 10 [360] Wwe Smackdown Vs Raw 2008 (Thq) Top 40 Break down DS = 13 X360 = 8 PS3 = 8 PS2 = 6 Wii = 2 PC = 2 PSP = 1
Date Added: Eye Test 11/05/2007 01:01
Soldiers' Angels - About Project Valour-IT
Full Auto 2: Battlelines (PS3) Trashing Meridian City one district at a time.
Many consumers see retail bank products and services -- and the institutions themselves -- as commodities. As a result, standing out from the competition and building customer loyalty are growing challenges. While community bank executives understand the need to differentiate their institutions and their brands, shifting market challenges keep altering the playing field.
Mozilla CTO Brendan Eich and Microsoft's Chris Wilson are trading heated rhetoric over the proposed next version of ECMAScript, better known as JavaScript. Microsoft is quibbling with the ECMAScript Edition 4 effort, which is supported by Mozilla, maker of the Firefox browser. "As I've frequently spoken about publicly, compatibility with the current web ecosystem -- not 'breaking the Web' -- is something we take very seriously," Wilson wrote on the Internet Explorer team blog this week. "In our opinion, a revolution in ECMAScript would be best done with an entirely new language so we could continue supporting existing users as well as freeing the new language from constraints." Eich is the creator of JavaScript, a programming language that has become a bedrock Internet technology, helping drive much of the rich content and information now common on the Web. Microsoft's implementation of it is known as JScript. Wilson is the platform architect of Microsoft's Internet Explorer platform team. He wrote on his personal blog Wednesday that Microsoft's position has been misunderstood: "Sadly, this seems to be turning into an 'ES4: yes or no' battle. That's unfortunate, because I don't think anyone should settle into the trenches, and I don't think the other Microsoft guys ever intended to say "everything about ES4 is bad." "I also think it's a shame that the response to any dissent has equated to shouting the dissenters down," he added. Writing on his blog in response, Eich accused Wilson of spreading lies. "You seem to be repeating falsehoods in blogs since the Proposed ECMAScript 4th Edition Language Overview was published, claiming dissenters including Microsoft were ignored by me, or 'shouted down' by the majority, in the ECMAScript standardization group," Eich wrote. "Assuming you didn't know better, and someone was misinforming you, you (along with everyone reading this letter) know better now. So I'll expect to see no more of these lies spread by you." As for ECMAScript 4's purported shortcomings, Wilson wrote that the proposed new standard may result in complications and incompatibilities with existing Web sites and applications. "As I understand it, on the other hand, the ES4 proposal introduces a lot of new language functionality that essentially changes the character of the language," he said. "I don't personally have a problem with that language as a language -- but I think grafting that different-in-character-language together with a compatible-and-performant implementation of the Javascript of today is both super-hard (if even possible) to get right, and is ignoring the bigger problems of language-for-web, namely interoperating with all the script that is out there." Eich charged in turn that Microsoft's arguments are self-serving. "At best, we have a fundamental conflict of visions and technical values between the majority and the minority," he wrote. "However, the obvious conflict of interest between the standards-based web and proprietary platforms advanced by Microsoft, and the rationales for keeping the web's client-side programming language small while the proprietary platforms rapidly evolve support for large languages, does not help maintain the fiction that only clashing high-level philosophies are involved here."
Namco Bandai has announced that its upcoming Soul Calibur spin-off for the Wii has gone gold and is now ready for launch
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