Wednesday, March 31, 2010
Thursday, March 18, 2010
probabil sau posibil
colors
Thursday, March 4, 2010
fericirea intr-un red bull
Apoi a venit cineva cu un Red Bull! Draguti astia de la Red Bull. Ne imparteau doze si ne faceau poze. Asa au facut si anul trecut numai ca eu eram in examen, si pe cand am iesit plecasera tipele si nu puteam sa fac nimic decat sa ii admir pe altii cum se bucura de mirificul gust.
Oricum. Tipele alea erau foarte tari. Erau sociabile. Dar nu asta conteaza. Echipamentul conteaza. Erau imbracate 'in Red Bull' din cap pana-n picioare!!! Tricou, ghiozdan frigorific, cartzulii, sepci si ... INEL! Aveau un minunat inel Red Bull! In fata avea semnul specific cu cerul si cei 2 tauri iar pe spate [interiorul mainii daca tii pumnul strans] avea o chestie cu care deschidea dozele. Ceva bucata din inel, tacticos iesita putin in afara. Era minunat.
Tipa imi zicea ca nu am cum sa-mi fac rost de articole originale numai eventual daca gasesc pe ebay... Trist. Nu gasesti chestii Red Bull simple! Numai sepci si alte chestii de la formula unu sau alte chestii sponsorizate de ei. Nimic doar cu ei!
Fir-ar sa fie!
Aruncati o privire si aici daca aveti chef.
suntem limitati
Robin Dunbar, a professor of evolutionary anthropology at Oxford University, developed a theory in the 1990s dubbed Dunbar's Number. The theory contends that the human brain is only capable of managing relationships--staying in contact at least once per year and knowing how friends relate to others--with about 150 people.
Until recently, it was believed that that only pertained to "offline" relationships.

Dunbar has now decided to shift focus to see whether Facebook has changed the number.
It hasn't.
"The interesting thing is that you can have 1,500 friends, but when you actually look at traffic on sites, you see people maintain the same inner circle of around 150 people that we observe in the real world," Dunbar told the London-based Sunday Times. "People obviously like the kudos of having hundreds of friends but the reality is that they're unlikely to be bigger than anyone else's."
For now, Dunbar's study is in its preliminary stages, meaning more testing needs to be done. Regardless, Dunbar doesn't believe that anything will change: no matter how many thousands of friends we might have on Facebook, we can't manage relationships with more than 150 of them.
Dunbar's study will be released later this year.
copy+paste: news.cnet
ah, da.. era sa uit: astia de la go4it.ro au copiat stirea....cam asa..cu o sapt mai tarziu..urat.. ei s-au obosit sa o traduca si sa nu puna nici un link. eu nu.
yumm yumm
Pe parcursul zilei de azi vor fi mai multe post-uri...
De ce? Pentru ca am chef. [si material]
punct