Late night girl talk
Grok Headline matches for Late night girl talk
Late Night with VPN
Late Night with VPN
12/02/2003 02:32 PMDavid Letterman-style, Glynn Taylor of HotSpotVPN.com released his top
ten list of reasons to secure your network traffic this holiday
season: 10. Your Dad won’t know what web sites you've visited. 9. You
will never have to change your email settings again. 8. Your traffic
is encrypted at every hotspot; free, paid or stumbled upon. 7. You can
improve on WEP without buying new hardware. 6. You can keep the
neighbor’s script kiddy brats out of your Internet traffic. 5. You can
say you took one more step to prevent identity theft. 4. You can
easily encrypt your traffic when attached to someone else’s network.
3. You can safely plug in at a hotel without other guests reading your
email. 2. You can prevent "wiretaps" on your VOIP calls. 1. Your Mom
won't know what web sites you’ve visited....
Late Night Consoling
Late Night Consoling
06/23/2004 05:10 PMshacknews.com/onearticle.x/32369
track this
site | 4 links
Late at Night, That's NBC Crowing
Late at Night, That's NBC Crowing
11/04/2003 06:26 AMLetterman Lost .. NYT today ..
NYT
nytimes.com/2003/11/03/business/media/03dave.html
track this
site | 4 links
The Late Night Triad
The Late Night Triad
11/10/2003 11:33 PMI can't remember how I got there, but somehow I stumbled onto Jason
Salavon's works page. He's got some very...
Vodkapundit - Late Night Rambling
Vodkapundit - Late Night Rambling
08/17/2004 08:43 PMVodkapundit has further comments: .. [LINK] ..
here
vodkapundit.com/archives/006469.php
track this
site | 3 links
Late night thoughts on barbarism
Late night thoughts on barbarism
06/04/2004 02:32 AMI liked Josh Marshall's summary of the opera-bouffe-like character of
the slow-motion Beltway meltdown underway, in his
commentary on the Tenet resignation:
|   |
...Beside the possibility that the White House's favored Iraqi exile
was an Iranian agent, that the spy chief just got canned, that the OSD
is wired to polygraphs, and that the president has had to retain
outside counsel in the investigation into which members of his staff
burned one of the country's own spies, I'd say the place is being run
like a pretty well-oiled machine. |
It does seem as though one of George Bush's chief legacies may be
the complete implosion of the C.I.A. -- at a time when the nation
desperately needs its services. (Bush's father served as director of
the C.I.A. for many years. Is there some sort of Oedipal lunacy at
work?)
So now Bush will be running on a platform of -- competence?
Effectiveness in the war on terror? Isn't a war on terror
first and foremost a war dependent on good intelligence? At what point
can we declare this charade of Republican knowhow at an end?
If you're a pragmatist, you should be running from Bush as fast as
you can, out of sheer desire to see the nation's business restored to
good management. If you think in moral terms, of course, it's even
worse.
My friend Charlie Varon
recently e-mailed me with a pointer to a diary
Wallace Shawn published in The Nation on the eve of the invasion of
Iraq over a year ago -- a piece of writing I missed at the time of its
publication. It's a typical slice of Shawn's brand of self-lacerating
thought, which will infuriate those on the right who disagree with
him, trouble those on the left who might be thought to be in his camp,
and cause any reader to think hard.
Shawn has always tried, in works like "The Fever" as in this diary,
to unearth the connection between the comfortable lives of Americans
-- Red and Blue staters -- and the privation and suffering in
other parts of the world that seems to make our comfort possible. The
position is beyond bleeding-heart -- it's spurting-arteries-of-guilt
liberalism. However you feel about that, it has the singular virtue of
cutting through abstract cant and partisan rhetoric and talking about
the particulars of real human suffering.
All of which is a roundabout way of introducing this observation by
Shawn:
|   |
Why are we being so ridiculously polite? It's as if there were some
sort of gentlemen's agreement that prevents people from stating the
obvious truth that Bush and his colleagues are exhilarated and
thrilled by the thought of war, by the thought of the incredible power
they will have over so many other people, by the thought of the
immensity of what they will do, by the scale, the massiveness of the
bombing they're planning, the violence, the killing, the blood, the
deaths, the horror. |
Now, I'm sure this sounded over the top when Shawn published it in
March 2003. And it may still sound over the top to you today. What a
thing to say about a president! Or about any human being!
Still, it's always seemed critically important, in trying to
understand the Bush administration's march of folly, to remember that
its entire top leadership (with the exception of its one half-hearted
multilaterist at the State Department, who nobody listens to) consists
of men (Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld) who never served in combat. The next
level down of leadership -- the architects of the Iraq policy, men
like Wolfowitz and Feith and Perle (and let's not forget Rove) -- have
no record at all of any military service. For such leaders, I
can't help thinking, "the violence, the killing, the blood, the
deaths, the horror" must necessarily remain abstractions -- at best,
matters that one can turn one's gaze away from (as the government has
literally done with the taboo photos of returning military coffins),
and at worst, as Shawn argued, bearers of vague quasi-sexual
excitement (as we saw with the pumped-up macho display of the "Mission
Accomplished" tableau, now so painfully embarrassing).
The experience of combat service doesn't inoculate a leader against
making mistakes, nor does it turn more than a few people into
pacifists. But surely in most cases it burns into the brain an
awareness of the essential seriousness of war. And that, finally,
seems to have been Bush's failure with Iraq, one that even
conservative supporters of the president -- like the historian Paul Johnson in today's Wall Street Journal -- are
beginning to admit.
Bush drove the nation to war and threw an army into the field
without taking the enterprise seriously enough. He didn't plan,
he didn't study, he didn't question, because these are things he
does not do. He has told us as much. And the people he trusted to
do these things for him were equally unwilling to treat the situation
with the gravity it deserved, instead using it as an opportunity to
settle political scores or put into motion long-hatching schemes and
delusional geopolitical chess moves.
I can't help thinking that, had more people in the White House ever
been on the receiving end of a bombing raid or taken barrages of enemy
fire, this administration might have proceeded with somewhat less
criminal a level of recklessness and incompetence.
Future Shock, "Late at Night"
Future Shock, "Late at Night"
01/16/2004 11:02 AM Just what you wanted, break dancing
Japanese geezers Still photos, live action and animation
melted into a music video (streaming Quicktime) by Neo, a duo made up
of Londoners Jake Knight and Ryoko Tanaka. More clips on their site.
(via
Jeansnow.net)
HP-Apple negotiations ran late into Wed.
night
HP-Apple negotiations ran late into Wed.
night
01/09/2004 10:08 PMAs previously reported on MacMinute, Hewlett Packard said Thursday
that it would begin selling a branded version of Apple's iPod and
bundling iTunes with its desktops and notebooks as part of a new
partnership...
Late Night with John and Elizabeth
Edwards
Late Night with John and Elizabeth
Edwards
07/28/2004 01:02 PMLate night thoughts on browsing the Iraq
tag on Flickr
Late night thoughts on browsing the Iraq
tag on Flickr
12/17/2004 06:40 PMOne of the most striking developments in the web over the last year
has been the sudden popularity of sites like Furl, Flickr and
Del.icio.us, where users can categorize the data or photos they save
with keywords, more colloquially called tags. Everybody in what Kellan
has called the Internet chattering classes has been talking about
tags, and a word for them, folksonomy, has even been coined, discussed
and debated. Even Mr. Metacrap himself has signed on as an advisor to
Flickr, and can be found on Flickr happily adding metadata to his
photos. I've always been reluctant to rely on someone else to store my
data. I tried each service soon after it was released, but didn't find
any of them compelling enough to use on a daily basis. Furl I liked,
but I was nervous about having all my data stored for me on the net by
a company without an obvious business model, and then I found a better
way to store data locally using Slogger. Del.icio.us I tried but
couldn't make heads or tails of until Joshua Schachter explained it in
person at ETech 2004. Flickr I tried at the same ETech, but at the
time I was blocking Flash in my browser, so all I ever got was a blank
screen. So much for being an early adopter. However, I have recently
started to use Flickr and Del.icio.us on a regular basis. Why? Because
they turn out to be great ways of following a conversation on the web.
I display the RSS feed for my Del.icio.us subscriptions on one of my
personal portal pages, and it updates hourly with what other people
have bookmarked about topics that interest me. I couldn't make the
John Battelle's Web 2.0 conference this year, but in addition to
reading the blog coverage and press coverage, I searched Flickr's
web20 tag and got a good idea of who I know who was there. Once,
months before the fact that US soldiers were torturing Iraqis at Abu
Ghraib was revealed to the world, I came across a site where American
soldiers in Iraq were posting photographs on the internet and wrote
about it. I wondered at the time what the effects on our democracy
would be of soldiers being able to send photos of their experience
directly to the citizens, unmediated by our media conglomerates. As we
found out from the photos...
Late-night internet cafes risk losing
assets
Late-night internet cafes risk losing
assets
12/17/2003 03:43 PMBangkok Post Dec 17 2003 2:45PM ET
Late night snack nabs hungry thief
(Reuters)
Late night snack nabs hungry thief
(Reuters)
05/04/2004 10:56 AMReuters - A German burglar who took a bite out of a meatball during
a night raid on a sandwich shop was caught after forensic scientists
ran a DNA
test on it.
Late Night With Senate Majority Leader
Bill Frist
Late Night With Senate Majority Leader
Bill Frist
11/14/2003 06:59 AMmarathon of
jackassery
one38.org/a177/2003_11_09_archive.html#106870012541082426
track this
site | 6 links
"Late Night With Senate Majority Leader
Bill Frist"
"Late Night With Senate Majority Leader
Bill Frist"
11/15/2003 03:18 AMJobs places late night phone call to
iTunes winner
Jobs places late night phone call to
iTunes winner
07/12/2004 05:55 PMAs noted earlier today, the 100 millionth song downloaded from the
iTunes Music Store was purchased by Kevin Britten, of Hays, Kansas...
Note to Self: Don't Read Scoble Late at
Night or Microsoft Bloggers Now Added
Note to Self: Don't Read Scoble Late at
Night or Microsoft Bloggers Now Added
03/19/2003 10:27 PMNote to Self: Don't Read Scoble Late at Night or Microsoft
Bloggers Now Added and a Rant
A wee bit tired this morning. I made a quick round of my
normal stops in the blogosphere last night and I happened by the Scobleiz
er. Now I've met Robert in the real world and I always get
something out of reading his stuff -- but it usually doesn't cost me
sleep. You see what happened is Robert pointed me off to Microsof
t Watch and a list of Mi
crosoft bloggers with weblogs. So I thought "Wouldn't it be
nice if they were all indexed". And there I was making sure they
got stuffed into the system. Here's what I found:
- Probably more than 50% of them were already in our database.
Go figure. I guess that either a) people are adding themselves
or b) the RSS auto discovery routines I wrote work better than I
initially thought ;-)
- Microsoft bloggers use a plethora of different tools. I do
think, however, that the dominant one is Radio. Blogger, Movable
Type and other systems are also represented
- Not all Microsoft bloggers have RSS feeds
- Topics span work and personal
- Devhawk.net did a really
smart thing with Feedster -- he added it to has blog's UI essentially
as a "virtual table of contents". Good idea. I think I
need to offer some viewing improvements if people are going to do
this.
- Someone needs to teach the "gotdotnet" folks what RSS
is. Also I couldn't believe their HTML source when I was poking
around. So get ready for a vent.
<RANT CLASS=NASTY BILE=HIGH
FRUSTATION=SEVERE>Go look here and look at the
__VIEWSTATE input element. To me that's just plain lame.
Use a session, send a cookie and use your horsepower for this, not my
bandwidth with every page view. And if you really want to barf
then click around a bit and go here.
They seem to be encoding the entire viewing history in a really nasty
way and shipping it back to you every single time. It just gets
bigger. After navigating thru like 3 pages I had 6,554 bytes
sent down the wire that did nothing for me. Thanks for
nothing.</RANT>
I guess its not all that bad actually but it just seems damn
silly. I hope that's not a dot net feature but I'm afraid that
it is. Sigh.
Dean's Late-Night Battle Cry May Have
Damaged Campaign (Los Angeles Times)
Dean's Late-Night Battle Cry May Have
Damaged Campaign (Los Angeles Times)
01/22/2004 11:39 AMLos Angeles Times - MANCHESTER, N.H. — Howard Dean's overheated
concession speech in Iowa may have inflicted irreparable harm on his
campaign, intensifying concerns that Vermont's former governor is
prone to outbursts and fits of pique that make him unqualified to be
president, analysts said Wednesday.
Some software I've been meaning to talk
about late ...
Some software I've been meaning to talk
about late ...
11/19/2003 08:08 PM
Some software I've been meaning to talk about lately:
Poisoned -- A P2P
open-source file sharing application that aggregates "FastTrack
(Kazaa, iMesh, Grokster), Gnutella(LimeWire, BearShare, Shareza),
OpenNap (Napster), and OpenFT". If you really feel like paying for it,
they have links to the EFF among others. One thing I find interesting
about this app is that everybody has the username "poisoned" so who
will the RIAA sue?
LaunchBar --
surely this has been blogged before here but LaunchBar is an app
switching utility that has an uncanny ability to know which app you
mean. I find myself using Expose and command-tab more now but others I
know swear by LaunchBar.
iSeek -- Puts
a search box in your menu bar, allowing you to search Google,
Dictionary.com, and wikipedia easily.
iChatStatus -- a great, dorky little open source app that
will display what music you're listening to (from iTunes) over
iChat.
5:28 PM
| steve jenson
'Suicide pact' girl ready to talk
'Suicide pact' girl ready to talk
09/05/2004 08:30 PMA teenager who survived what is thought to be a suicide pact in which
her friend died has begun talking about what happened.
Blogging/Roller talk last night in
Orlando
Blogging/Roller talk last night in
Orlando
12/19/2004 03:30 PM I gave my blogging and Roller talk to
the combined Orlando and Gainesville Java User Groups last
night. I think the talk was pretty well received among the 30 or 40
Java users in attendance, but I've only given a half dozen
presentations so I felt a little wobbly. There were a couple of times
where I could not find quite the right words to complete a thought,
but overall I think I'm improving at public speaking (I just noticed
that Sun-U offers a course called "executive presentations" -- maybe I
should sign up for that).
The talk was really two talks in one, a blogging talk and a Roller
talk. I call the blogging talk "Blogging: What's the Big Deal." It
covers the basics of blogging and includes newsfeeds, newsfeed
readers, web services API, blogs at work, K-logs, Cluetrain in a
nutshell, and blogs for community building. In my opinion, the big
deal is simple: blogging technologies make it easy for people and
programs to read and write the web. That empowers writers of all
varieties and creates lots of opportunities for software developers.
The Roller talk is designed to give potential Roller users an
overview of Roller features, the status of the Roller project itself,
and Roller architecture/internals. I also include some lessons learned
about performance and scalability. The Roller talk is informative, but
much less thought provoking than the blogging talk and that was
reflected in the number of questions I recieved.
The questions were pretty interesting and almost all concerned
blogs at work. Here are the questions and answers I remember:
Q: What role does ownership play in blogs and wikis? Is it
really important that you put your name on your blog?. Ownership
and identity play an important role in blogs and wikis, but more so
blogs. Putting your name on your blog is how you get credit for your
writing and the cool links you are pointing out. That said, anonymous
bloggers play an important role too. Anonymous bloggers can safely
speak more freely than named bloggers and this can be very important
in some situations. Anonymous bloggers get credit too and can gain
trust and authority by writing well, being honest, gaining readers,
and earning links from other bloggers.
Q: Isn't there a risk that employees will be judged by the
quantity and quality of their blogs, and we will therefore
discriminate against introverts, people who'd rather work than write
about working, and folks who's blogs are just not that cool? I
guess there is some danger of this. As we do now, we'll have to trust
folks to understand that people are different. Some people are quiet
and private and prefer to work rather than to write and talk about
work. I think this is mitigated by the fact that some folks who are
introverts in a social setting might not be so introverted when online
or writing in their blogs.
Q: I can understand allowing your employees to blog publicly,
but was is the benefit of supporting them by providing them with
company servers and support to do so? This question came before I
got to my Cluetrain in a nutshell slide, so my answer was that
providing employees with public blogs is a way to encourage them to
blog and once I explain the Cluetrain you'll understand why I say that
is a good thing.
Q: Blogs are essentially UseNet newsgroups "minus minus" without
easy way to search all posts on a topic and without threading.
Usually, with a new communications medium we move forward, not
backwards. Are bloggers concerned about that? Yes, bloggers are
concerned with this and there are efforts to make it easier to search
blogs (e.g. Feedster) and to support
threading of blog-to-blog "conversations" (e.g. permalink based
threading in BlogLines and SharpReader). But blogs are a
different medium and they don't replace newsgroups and forums.
Subscribing to a blog is different that subscribing to a newsgroup.
With newsgroups, you subscribe to a topic but with blogs you typically
subscribe to a person or a group of people and topics can vary widely.
I think that is a good thing; people are more interesting than
topics.
Q: Is it possible for a blogger to sell subscriptions to his
blog content? I admit that I have not been following the blogging
for money discussions very closely, but after some mumbles I managed
to come up with a couple of answers.
- Offer a free newsfeed to alert subscribers of new content, but
require them to login to their non-free user account to view they full
content.
- Use a Podcast approach to automatically download newly available
content to user, but the downloaded content is in a password protected
format.
- Require login to access your newsfeeds, but users would need a
newsreader that can handle authentication.
But, newsfeeds are lossy aren't they. I mean, what happens if a
user is offline for a couple of days and the user's newsreader misses
some entries because they have already scrolled off the bottom of the
newsfeed? Users that are paying for a subscription are going to much
less forgiving about missing a couple of items.
That's all the questions I can remember. Slides should be available
soon in PDF form on the Orlando JUG site.
Jason Anderson - Late night with the
Burton team (Visual Studio Team System),
Part II #
Jason Anderson - Late night with the
Burton team (Visual Studio Team System),
Part II #
07/16/2004 03:03 PMPart II of "Late Night with the Burton Team" takes you further into
the new world of Visual Studio Team System.
If you missed it, Part I is here. (The clip here is the second
30-minute segment out of a two-hour session filmed late at night a few
weeks ago -- the rest of the session will come next week).
In this segment, Jason Anderson and Tom Arnold talk about, and
demonstrates, Unit Testing in Visual Studio 2005.
Latest media stunt: hot girl-on-girl
gridiron action!
Latest media stunt: hot girl-on-girl
gridiron action!
12/03/2003 02:38 PM This Super Bowl halftime, make
it to the Lingere Bowl. American TV hits a new low by inventing
another sport along the lines of Foxy Boxing and Hot Oil Wrestling.
The gridiron action features
Team Dream vs.
Team Euphoria (featuring
washed-up former NFL players
as coaches) in full contact football
while wearing skimpy clothing.
Even weirder, but
there will be cheerleaders to
cheerlead the players that are already dolled up to look like
cheerleaders in some sort of subtle hot lesbian action. It's all
pay-per-view, but this "Girls Gone Football" seems more like a new low
than a step forward for
real women's sports.
Late, Late Surge Hits Online Tax Returns
Late, Late Surge Hits Online Tax Returns
02/01/2005 09:22 PMfive Feb 1 2005 11:47AM GMT
"The Starlet" goes for girl-on-girl
action -- in the 2nd episode!
"The Starlet" goes for girl-on-girl
action -- in the 2nd episode!
03/14/2005 04:50 PMphilly.com/mld/dailynews/living/11096805.htm
track this
site | 2 links
Furor grows over Riordan's remark to six
year old girl telling her that her first
name "Isis" ... "means
stupid, dirty girl"
Furor grows over Riordan's remark to six
year old girl telling her that her first
name "Isis" ... "means
stupid, dirty girl"
07/10/2004 06:48 AMCalifornia NAACP president Alice A. Huffman .. incident ..
today
sacbee.com/content/politics/story/9933357p-10855351c.html
track
this site | 5 links
Lets Talk Computers: Chris Repetto from
Intuit and Luke Chung from FMS featured
on this week's Let's Talk Comp
Lets Talk Computers: Chris Repetto from
Intuit and Luke Chung from FMS featured
on this week's Let's Talk Comp
08/28/2004 02:46 PMInvestors Business Daily Aug 28 2004 6:33PM GMT
Modern Day “Dr. Doolittle”, Joy Turner,
Debuts on Internet Talk Radio Network
VoiceAmerica Radio with Show Talk With
Your Animals
Modern Day “Dr. Doolittle”, Joy Turner,
Debuts on Internet Talk Radio Network
VoiceAmerica Radio with Show Talk With
Your Animals
01/04/2005 04:14 AMThe new radio show dedicated to helping people learn how to
communicate effectively with their animals, airs at a new time
starting on January 7, 2005 on VoiceAmerica. [PRWEB Jan 4, 2005]
To talk or not to talk - that is the
question
To talk or not to talk - that is the
question
08/09/2004 05:44 AMWhat's the future of in-flight mobile comms?
Dynamically Typed: Walk the walk vs.
talk the talk
Dynamically Typed: Walk the walk vs.
talk the talk
09/10/2004 07:30 AMAbout two years ago you may remember we were in the throes of the
SOAP revolution. "Web services everywhere!" was the cry and have to
confess I'm one of those guilty of having gone for it, for a while.
There were going to be these giant UDDI servers that would aggregate
everyone's web services and the Internet would never look the same
again...
Maybe too late, definitely too little
Maybe too late, definitely too little
05/07/2004 02:45 PMA little too late
A little too late
05/17/2004 12:05 PMOpen
Source release of Frontier?.
Wow - UserLand
plans open-source release of Frontier kernel. The kernel includes
things like the UserTalk script interpreter, all the UserTalk builtin
functions, the Frontier ODB and the Frontier web server.
I don't expect that it will gather as many developers as the big
open source scripting languages, but it would be a worthy addition to
the community. It used to be cutting-edge, and the system still has a
bunch of great ideas, despite having been surpassed in various areas
(speed, reliability, debuggability, popularity) by other competitors.
Enough to be worth saving, for sure.
Just off the top of my head, I can think of some interesting
projects to do with the Frontier source:
- remove the dependency on the GUI, so it could be run as a Windows
service on NT/2K/XP (as modern server software does).
- once that's done, a UNIX port might not be so hard. Presumably
it's fairly portable already, as right now it runs on two different
versions of Mac OS as well as Windows.
- perhaps after those two, or perhaps first, someone could rip out
UserTalk and make a standalone interpreter, so you can use it the way
you might use Perl or Python at the moment.
- this is a bit of a long shot, but if you could make the UserTalk
interpreter support the Python module API or something similar, a
whole bunch of open source libraries (DB access, etc) would suddenly
be within reach.
Anyway, that's all for now. Announcements of open-source releases
usually precede the actual releases by quite a while, so don't hold
your breath. When this release actually happens, though, it will be a
lot of fun :-)
[Second p0st]
OK - I'll say it.
Dave Winer and Frontier were my main introductions to the web, CMS,
webapps, personal publishing and open standards. Without Dave -
I wouldn't be sitting here today.
I can remember Dave telling me about this guy Eric Raymond - and
his Cathedral white paper. It really pissed off Dave. He
had made his Frontier tool available - for free - in the early 90's
and had had direct experience in dealing with people expecting a
whole lot for free. Yet Dave knew that by having a strong
developer community behind him - that's all that mattered.
So Dave spent a few years trying to figure this all out.
He then made the decision that he HAD to charge for Frontier - or else
he'd never get corporate uptake. This is just as Linux and all
the open source stuff was starting.
So now jump to years later. Frontier is finally open source -
but it's too late. Php and python came along, Zope, Drupal - all
sorts of stuff that does exactly what Frontier and..... well let me
correct myself - not EXACTLY what Frontier does - as it STILL is a
revolutionary IDE - as the integrated outliner makes o-o programming
actually culpable.
But there are still problems with Frontier - memory leaks
aside. And it sure seems like it's five years too late.
That doesn't mean folks should'nt use it. My buddy Paolo uses it for his eVectors
knowledge management stuff. Radio is built on top of Friontier
and gives unprecedented extensibility that I'm sure many a MT user
wishes they had.
I spent years pitching Frontier as the backend solution to our
front-end needs. Most people would look at me and say
"Huh?" But I'm proud of Dave and Frontier and I hope that LOTS
of college kids give it a try!
Better Late Than Never
Better Late Than Never
10/29/2003 01:13 AMThis pilot fish is up all night troubleshooting a failed payroll job,
but the boss sees him stumble in at 9:30 a.m. -- and declares that
from now on the IT shop starts work at 8 and stops at 5 -- no
exceptions.
Too little, too late?
Too little, too late?
03/19/2003 10:25 PMCNET: Microsoft plans wireless software push. Every time Microsoft
signs up another handset maker, Symbian does too. Last week, it...
help a girl out won't you?
help a girl out won't you?
12/19/2004 03:02 PMI can not seem to find a file for the new MT it's the MT-Js file if
you have it...
"-=About a Girl=-"
"-=About a Girl=-"
06/11/2004 12:52 PMWho's That Girl?
Who's That Girl?
01/04/2005 12:57 PM
Do you know Joyce
Compton? She was the blonde (sometimes a redhead) you remember
from tons and tons of movies made between 1937 and 1958, but you never
knew her name. A shrine from the guy at
Scrubbles.
Hat Girl
Hat Girl
05/18/2004 04:42 PM
Stencil graffiti often incorporates an optical illusion or something
evocative into the design. This girl in a hat is unusual and I can't
figure out why, when I look at it, I always see an asian female face.
Is it the lips? The nose? I'm not sure.
You're Too Late for This Fund
You're Too Late for This Fund
04/15/2005 10:07 AMWhen one good fund closes, others are still open.
Not too late to pile into IT
Not too late to pile into IT
01/10/2004 01:37 AMSunday Times South Africa Jan 9 2004 11:22PM ET
Grok Description matches for Late night girl talk
GrokA matches for Late night girl talk
Bonus maps for Star Wars Jedi Knight:
Jedi Academy released
Bonus maps for Star Wars Jedi Knight:
Jedi Academy released
12/10/2003 06:40 PMStar Wars Jedi Knight: Jedi Academy demo
posted
Star Wars Jedi Knight: Jedi Academy demo
posted
01/23/2004 04:15 PMAspyr has released a demo version (180MB) of Star Wars Jedi Knight:
Jedi Academy, the latest installment of the popular Jedi series...
Star Wars Jedi Knight: Jedi Academy
Update 1.01
Star Wars Jedi Knight: Jedi Academy
Update 1.01
11/11/2003 03:14 PMStar Wars Jedi Knight: Jedi Academy
1.0.1a
Star Wars Jedi Knight: Jedi Academy
1.0.1a
12/19/2003 05:06 PMTake on the role of a new student eager to learn the ways of the Force
by joining the Academy on Yavin 4.
Star Wars Jedi Knight: Jedi Academy
Star Wars Jedi Knight: Jedi Academy
01/25/2004 06:25 PMBy Bill Stiteler (Applelinks via MyAppleMenu)
Apple profiles Jedi Knight: Jedi Academy
Apple profiles Jedi Knight: Jedi Academy
12/24/2003 12:13 PMIf you're interested in
Aspyr Media
Inc.'s recently shipping Star Wars Jedi Knight: Jedi Academy but
you'd like to find out more before you put your money down, check out
Apple'
s Games site for a new feature.
Jedi Knight: Jedi Academy coming to the
Mac
Jedi Knight: Jedi Academy coming to the
Mac
11/14/2003 12:34 PMAspyr said on Friday that it plans to publish a Mac version of Jedi
Knight: Jedi Academy, the latest installment of the highly acclaimed
Jedi Knight series...
Jedi Knight II: Jedi Academy
Jedi Knight II: Jedi Academy
05/04/2004 10:44 AMIt pulls you into a beautiful 3D world populated by dozens of
characters and endless target opportunities. Plus, the replay value is
high. By Helmut Kobler, MacAddict (via MyAppleMenu)
Jedi Knight II 1.03b
Jedi Knight II 1.03b
12/23/2003 04:29 PMDefeat Imperial foes as rebel Jedi Kyle Katarn.
Romanians open Jedi Academy
Romanians open Jedi Academy
08/31/2004 08:16 AMOr 'Academiei Jedi' as it's known locally
More details emerge about Mac Jedi
Academy
More details emerge about Mac Jedi
Academy
12/02/2003 12:31 AMAspyr Media Inc. offered up more
details Wednesday about its forthcoming conversion of Jedi Knight:
Jedi Academy, the last game Aspyr has teamed up with LucasArts to
bring to Mac gamers.
Jedi Knight: Jedi
Academy is the sequel to last year's game Jedi Knight: Jedi
Outcast, also brought to the Mac by Aspyr. Based in the Star Wars
universe, this game puts players in the role of a new student learning
the ways of The Force from Master Luke Skywalker.
Photo Archives: ROTS Aayla Secura (Jedi
Knight)
Photo Archives: ROTS Aayla Secura (Jedi
Knight)
03/22/2005 04:58 PMAayla Secura
(Jedi Knight) joins our
Photo Archives today.
This Twi'lek beauty has spent the
Clone Wars trying to rescue
her former master from the dark side of the Force, mostly by accepting
undercover missions for the Republic. She's now back
Revenge of the
Sith, ready to take on the Separatists.
Aspyr ships Raven Shield, Jedi Academy
Aspyr ships Raven Shield, Jedi Academy
12/17/2003 02:26 PMEarlier on Wednesday
Aspyr Media
Inc. announced that it would publish a Mac version of Lord of the
Rings: Return of the King in April. The company later let it be known
that two other games it's already been working on are done and out the
door: Tom Clancy's Rainbow Six 3: Raven Shield and Star Wars Jedi
Knight: Jedi Academy.
Star Wars: Jedi Academy Bonus Map Pack
Star Wars: Jedi Academy Bonus Map Pack
12/10/2003 04:19 PMIn-game server buffer-overflow in Jedi
Academy 1.011
In-game server buffer-overflow in Jedi
Academy 1.011
04/02/2005 03:36 PMLuigi Auriemma (Apr 02 2005)
Vintage Photo Archives: Luke Skywalker
(Jedi Knight Outfit)
Vintage Photo Archives: Luke Skywalker
(Jedi Knight Outfit)
11/19/2003 01:33 AMHands down, the vintage
Luke Skywalker (Jedi
Knight Outfit) action figure had it going on. Not only was the
sculpt dead on, today’s addition to the
Vintage Photo Archive
came with not one, not two, but three stupid-cool accessories, thus
making it the quintessential
Luke Skywalker figure in the
vintage line.
Aspyr: Jedi Academy coming, Indiana
Jones goes gold
Aspyr: Jedi Academy coming, Indiana
Jones goes gold
11/14/2003 12:36 PMMac game publisher
Aspyr Media Inc.
announced Friday that it will soon release a Mac conversion of
LucasArts' Jedi Knight: Jedi Academy. Jedi Knight: Jedi Academy is the
followup to Jedi Knight II: Jedi Outcast, a game released for the Mac
last year by Aspyr Media. Jedi Knight: Jedi Academy is the latest Mac
game to get the Star Wars treatment. Players take on the role of a
Jedi student learning the ways of the Force by Master Luke Skywalker.
Aspyr offers Jedi Academy demo, Call of
Duty details
Aspyr offers Jedi Academy demo, Call of
Duty details
01/23/2004 02:21 PMIt's a busy Friday for
Aspyr Media
Inc.. They released a demo version of Star Wars Jedi Knight: Jedi
Academy, available for download from
MacGameFiles.
com. They also published a mini Web site containing information
about
Call of
Duty, a new World War II-era action game that took center stage
for Aspyr's announcements from Macworld Conference & Expo earlier
this month.
Bring your lightsabre to school as you
enter Star Wars: Jedi Academy
Bring your lightsabre to school as you
enter Star Wars: Jedi Academy
01/26/2004 10:58 PMCanadian Press via Canada.com Jan 27 2004 2:45AM GMT
JEDI VCS
JEDI VCS
12/23/2003 08:05 PMStandalone Appserver Beta2 released
Legacy Of The Jedi
Legacy Of The Jedi
03/19/2003 10:25 PMThe Official Site announces a new entry into the
Clone Wars
multimedia crossover event, a new hardcover book from Scholastic. Inc.
Star Wars: Legacy Of The Jedi tells the tale(s) of Lorian Nod,
a new villain who returns time and again to threaten four generations
of Jedi and their padawans. Written by Jude Watson with a cover by
David Mattingly, the new book is due in August.
Lady Jedi
Lady Jedi
03/14/2005 05:39 PMNathan Sawaya is professional LEGO artist and former LEGO Master Model
Builder with a gift for creating incredible works of art in the brick
medium - a gift that he has graciously decided to share with the
New
York Line for their eBay auction to benefit the
Starlight Starbright
Children's Foundation.
Choose Your Jedi
Choose Your Jedi
11/15/2003 04:31 PMCartoonnetwork.com is running a poll now where you can choose one of
three Jedi to be animated into the final chapter of the Clone Wars
micro series. While you are there why not enter to win a signed Clone
Wars animation cell and Hasbro Clone Wars prize pack!
Cli
ck here for the scoop!JEDI VCL for Delphi
JEDI VCL for Delphi
01/03/2004 04:32 PMdxPack and dxDotNet added to JVCL
First Look At Jedi Healer
First Look At Jedi Healer
04/15/2004 08:58 PMThe cover artwork by Dave Seeley for
Star Wars: MedStar II - Jedi
Healer, the upcoming
Clone Wars novel, is now up at the
official site. The October 2004 novel by Michael Reeves and Steve
Perry stars Barriss Offee and a tiny medical unit tending to the
wounded on the battlefields of Drongar. Click on the thumbnail above
for the full scoop.
Jedi Interview
Jedi Interview
11/10/2003 11:26 PMPC.IGN.com has posted an interview with
Galaxies producer Haden
Blackman that discusses the role Jedi will play in the massive
multiplayer game. "As of Wednesday, November 5th, a handful of players
are very close to unlocking their Force Sensitive character slots."
Read on!Jedi Bounty
Jedi Bounty
12/21/2003 10:51 AMGameSpy.com has posted up an interview with Haden Blackman and Dan
Rubenfeld of LucasArts regarding Jedi Knights finally appearing in
Star Wars Galaxies: "Not only are Jedi players happy with the
system and the powers they are receiving, but other players are just
excited about the opportunity to interact with (or hunt down) Jedi."
Check
it out.
Jedi Code Library
Jedi Code Library
05/14/2004 04:39 PMJCL 1.91 Release Candidate 1 available
Jedi Archives Update
Jedi Archives Update
12/03/2003 04:53 PMThe
Jedi Archives is
updated today with Morrita and Murillo
cig
ar bands from the Netherlands. See eBay Today for more
information on this 290 item set and a few eBay auctions to browse.
JEDI-SDL : Pascal headers for SDL
JEDI-SDL : Pascal headers for SDL
01/05/2005 06:57 AMJEDI-SDL v1.0 Beta Release 1 now available
Late night girl talk