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NicoleBee (Member Profile)

Rufus, Moby, Sean Lennon - Across The Universe

T-Rex and His Girl

Stingray (Member Profile)

Ventrilo - Bill O'Reilly vs Some Gamers

EndAll (Member Profile)

Schapelle Protest Song Exposes Prime Minister Rudd!

Ciao For Now... (Sift Talk Post)

rougy says...

"Whenever I find myself growing grim about the mouth; whenever it is a damp, drizzly November in my soul; whenever I find myself involuntarily pausing before coffin warehouses, and bringing up the rear of every funeral I meet; and especially whenever my hypos get such an upper hand of me, that it requires a strong moral principle to prevent me from deliberately stepping into the street, and methodically knocking people's hats off--then, I account it high time to get to sea as soon as I can. This is my substitue for pistol and ball."

Moby Dick, Melville

I'll be with you in spirit.

Speedpainting Dr. House (Hugh Laurie) in MS PAINT

siftbot says...

Tags for this video have been changed from 'house md, hugh, laurie, ms paint, speed, airbrush, black, white' to 'house md, hugh, laurie, ms paint, speed, airbrush, black, white, Moby' - edited by JTZ

(Member Profile)

Two Year Old Drum Jam

The Biggest Star Known to Man

thinker247 says...

Fair enough, but I hope you at least understand the point I was trying to make.

>> ^rychan:
>> ^thinker247:
It reminds me that I should finish reading Moby Dick. Well, by read, I mean that I should judge the quality of the paper and binding used to make the copy I'm reading. I'll get to the content of the book later.

The texturing is a significant part of the video content. I think your analogy is flawed. Complaining about the paper and binding of Moby Dick would be like complaining about the compression codec or your LCD monitor. Complaining about the texturing and the transitions would be like complaining about the spelling, grammar, clarity, realism or flow of a novel. All valid complaints.

The Biggest Star Known to Man

budzos says...

>> ^thinker247:
I know I feel cheapened and humiliated because the pictures in this video are not of the actual stars. How can I even begin to make the comparison of our infinitesimal existence to that of the giant stars in the giant universe, when I am too busy judging the quality of the video posted?
It reminds me that I should finish reading Moby Dick. Well, by read, I mean that I should judge the quality of the paper and binding used to make the copy I'm reading. I'll get to the content of the book later.


Analogy fail.

The Biggest Star Known to Man

rychan says...

>> ^thinker247:
It reminds me that I should finish reading Moby Dick. Well, by read, I mean that I should judge the quality of the paper and binding used to make the copy I'm reading. I'll get to the content of the book later.


The texturing is a significant part of the video content. I think your analogy is flawed. Complaining about the paper and binding of Moby Dick would be like complaining about the compression codec or your LCD monitor. Complaining about the texturing and the transitions would be like complaining about the spelling, grammar, clarity, realism or flow of a novel. All valid complaints.

The Biggest Star Known to Man

thinker247 says...

I know I feel cheapened and humiliated because the pictures in this video are not of the actual stars. How can I even begin to make the comparison of our infinitesimal existence to that of the giant stars in the giant universe, when I am too busy judging the quality of the video posted?

It reminds me that I should finish reading Moby Dick. Well, by read, I mean that I should judge the quality of the paper and binding used to make the copy I'm reading. I'll get to the content of the book later.



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