Urban_Tribesman said:
Low said:MakeItStopMakeItStopMakeItStopMakeItStopMakeItStopMakeItStopMakeItStopMakeItStopMakeItStopMakeItStopMakeItStopMakeItStopMakeItStopMakeItStopMakeItStopMakeItStopMakeItStopMakeItStopMakeItStopMakeItStopMakeItStopMakeItStopMakeItStopMakeItStopMakeItStopMakeItStopMakeItStopMakeItStopMakeItStopMakeItStopMakeItStopMakeItStopMakeItStopMakeItStopMakeItStopMakeItStopMakeItStopMakeItStopMakeItStopMakeItStopMakeItStopMakeItStopMakeItStopMakeItStopMakeItStopMakeItStopMakeItStopMakeItStopMakeItStopMakeItStopMakeItStopMakeItStopMakeItStopMakeItStopMakeItStopMakeItStopMakeItStopMakeItStopMakeItStopMakeItStopMakeItStopMakeItStopMakeItStopMakeItStopMakeItStopMakeItStopMakeItStopMakeItStopMakeItStopMakeItStopMakeItStopMakeItStopMakeItStopMakeItStopMakeItStopMakeItStopMakeItStopMakeItStop
This reminds me of about 100 years ago when computers first appeared to the general public and we were learning basic Dos programming. If you typed Line 10: Type/MakeItStop then shifted to the next line and wrote Line 20: Repeat Line 10 and then Enter, it would fill the screen with MakeItStop like above.
Simpler times!
Low said:
Urban_Tribesman said:
This reminds me of about 100 years ago when computers first appeared to the general public and we were learning basic Dos programming. If you typed Line 10: Type/MakeItStop then shifted to the next line and wrote Line 20: Repeat Line 10 and then Enter, it would fill the screen with MakeItStop like above.
Simpler times!
And here I am slaving away with copy and paste 8->
Ponygurl said:You know I watched the 20/20 special remembering both George Michael and Carrie Fisher, and realized they had alot in common. Fame at a young age, substance abuse, depression. Both had troubled family histories. Fame, recognition, money..but at a cost of loss of privacy and surface love. Fame it seems is love from a distance, when they both needed real love right beside them..an anchor. Highest of highs and lowest of lows, the makings of a mental breakdown if not anchored.
whispered said:John Berger's death, 2 days ago, is not the start to 2017 I was looking for. His introduction to art criticism, "Ways of Seeing" was exactly the sort of TV we no longer get these days - politically radical, and treating the viewer as an intelligent person interested in ideas. It's still on YouTube, though.
Urban_Tribesman said:Ju put er in a box ? Mind you, I know sweet FA-08.
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