Sigh... Maybe I'm getting old, maybe I've seen too many episodes of Star Trek, I don't know. The image below is part of a PC design competition, for "Momenta, the PC for life." I'm not ready for my neckband just yet, thanks.
Love it! My brother used to live in Korea and he kept me in examples of bad english for years!! Of course, what goes around... I would love to know how I am laughed at whenever I travel and dare to speak a foreign tongue!! If you laugh at others (and I do) you gotta let them laugh at you. Right?
Bryan, I think you meant to post your comment on the previous entry, but no problem... In fact, I am 100% fluent in every language ever spoken on this Earth, so no, I don't have to let "them" laugh at me... ;-)
AV, I imagine that when you do something "bad" it explodes, or at least sends charges of excruciating pain through your body (again, too much Star Trek!).
I have a similar reaction to "life-blogging." But I heard of one small application that makes me not completely dismiss research into the enabling technology. Short version: Apparently, rapidly viewing a slide show at night of images taken, say, once per minute during the course of the day can really help people with memory problems retain things they want to retain, often for weeks at a time.
Love it! My brother used to live in Korea and he kept me in examples of bad english for years!! Of course, what goes around... I would love to know how I am laughed at whenever I travel and dare to speak a foreign tongue!! If you laugh at others (and I do) you gotta let them laugh at you. Right?
ReplyDeleteBryan,
ReplyDeleteI think you meant to post your comment on the previous entry, but no problem...
In fact, I am 100% fluent in every language ever spoken on this Earth, so no, I don't have to let "them" laugh at me...
;-)
Ooh er... no thanks, that just goes beyond creepy. I mean, what's the bloody point?
ReplyDeleteAh, perhaps I'm just getting too old too.
AV,
ReplyDeleteI imagine that when you do something "bad" it explodes, or at least sends charges of excruciating pain through your body (again, too much Star Trek!).
I have a similar reaction to "life-blogging." But I heard of one small application that makes me not completely dismiss research into the enabling technology. Short version: Apparently, rapidly viewing a slide show at night of images taken, say, once per minute during the course of the day can really help people with memory problems retain things they want to retain, often for weeks at a time.
ReplyDeleteLonger version here.
Brendan,
ReplyDeleteInteresting stuff. I'm definitely someone who could benefit from the slide show idea!