Sandman Lives!
Ξ August 16th, 2008 | → 0 Comments | ∇ Uncategorized |
Where is Spiderman when you need him?

Where is Spiderman when you need him?

Almost everything we do is affected by laws. There are so many laws that it would take a person with an average reading skill over a thousand years just to read the law book. As if we have nothing else to do with our lives but read laws. So what do we do when a legal situation arises? Do we handle it ourselves or do we call a lawyer who’s been trained in the legal field? For many people, the thought of calling a lawyer may be frightening. Sometimes they might not even know if they need a lawyer or how to even choose one, so they might avoid contacting a lawyer even when it is in their best interests to do so. However, do your homework before you hire a lawyer for yourself and your business. At the time when you are faced with serious legal or medical problems, you still need to make a good, informed decision about who will represent you. And it doesn’t have to be as hard or as costly as you may think to find a good lawyer. Provided below are some quick tips that can take the stress out of finding a lawyer.
Quick Tips on How to Find a Lawyer : personal laws.
Hopefully this bit of info is not needed… but in case it ever IS helpful…
Ball that bounces on water is latest beach toy - Telegraph
The Waboba ball which bounces on water
Photo: WABOBA.COMThe Waboba ball, which is about the size of a golf ball, has taken off around the world after videos were posted on YouTube.
Made of a combination of plastics with a lycra coating, it is described as having the consistency of a breast implant.
The ball is about the same density as water and floats when at rest, but bounces high and true when thrown. It continues to bounce until it is caught or runs out of steam.
The ball took Swedish inventor Jan von Heland several years to perfect, but it is now being sold around the world after first taking off on the beaches of Australia.
“I first got the idea when I was throwing a frisbee upside down on the water trying to get it to bounce,” he said.
“I thought it would be good to get something that used the water to bounce off and began to experiment.”
He added: “It has been very successful and we sell the balls all over the world - Australia is our biggest market.
“It seems a bit odd that a Swede should invent this because it is best for a hot climate where people are in the sea and in swimming pools all the time.”
The ball, which works well in the sea and in swimming pools but is not intended to be thrown at hard surfaces, is available from several online retailers.
A spokeswoman for Volumeload, which supplies the balls in the UK, said that it had already sold around 15,000 this year and it was having to order more stock to keep up with demand.
The most amazing hoop dancing/hula hooping that I have ever seen. Way to represent Edmonton, SaFire!
0:20 is crazy, as is 0:50.
In Disney/Pixar’s surprisingly good Wall-E, fat, lazy Humans are catered hand-and-foot by sleek, semi-intelligent robots who ultimately teach their creators a lesson in the merits of industry, activism, and self-reliance.
Besides the movie’s cutesy references to classic movies and pop culture, the theme of humans relying completely on their creations - and the often-unfortunate results of that dependency - is definitely not a new one. Although such works as Asimov’s “I, Robot” or Philip K. Dick’s “Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep” (on which “Bladerunner” was based) have a significant emphasis on the various ways in which robots of different types and intelligence levels will assist humans in The Future, they do not go so far as to describe a civilization completely void of Human endeavor.
Here are a few that do:
The Origins Of Wall-E « THE CESSPOOLS OF MEGA CITY ONE.