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Only 5000 tings

Posted: Thu Sep 01, 2005 4:35 pm
by Matyuv
And you will get a special surprise!

Re: Only 5000 tings

Posted: Thu Sep 01, 2005 4:35 pm
by th3()ne
i noe.

Re: Only 5000 tings

Posted: Thu Sep 01, 2005 4:38 pm
by Matyuv
No you do not! give me 5000 tings and i will give you something else! Why not risk? It could be anything :D

Re: Only 5000 tings

Posted: Thu Sep 01, 2005 4:39 pm
by th3()ne
You can easily edit HTML files using a WYSIWYG (what you see is what you get) editor like FrontPage, Claris Home Page, or Adobe PageMill instead of writing your markup tags in a plain text file.

But if you want to be a skillful Web developer, we strongly recommend that you use a plain text editor to learn your primer HTML.

Re: Only 5000 tings

Posted: Thu Sep 01, 2005 4:39 pm
by th3()ne
A refugee from Florida and Ohio, I was in a beach house in Oregon overlooking a foggy coastline and the Pacific Ocean. I placed a call to the academic department director at the Art Institute of Portland who was to hire me to develop a course in the history of graphic design, in order to finalize the arrangements and get started on the project. She proceeded to relate to me what had happened to the World Trade Centers and the Pentagon. The rest of the weekend was spent in a fog – literally, a heavy one, in front of my eyes – punctuated with assaulting and arresting visual images of the attacks on the monoliths.

Re: Only 5000 tings

Posted: Thu Sep 01, 2005 4:39 pm
by th3()ne
i noe.

Re: Only 5000 tings

Posted: Thu Sep 01, 2005 5:15 pm
by th3()ne
Along the wall, due to my abiding interest in art, I worked in three art museums, eventually becoming the director of the graphic design department at The Museum of Modern Art in New York, which produces the graphic design for exhibitions, publications and marketing.

Re: Only 5000 tings

Posted: Thu Sep 01, 2005 5:37 pm
by th3()ne
Today there is a new kind of online board called Social Networking Models. When an online community is powered by a Social Software, the software is designed to place certain limitations on the users and how relationships are formed, particularly when two strangers make initial contact. The number one advantage of this is the users’ behavior is regulated because the software sets a limit on the amount of contact they have with each other, as opposed to the physical world where the boundaries of interpersonal communication and appropriate behavior lie on societal norms and etiquette, which can easily be broken.

Re: Only 5000 tings

Posted: Thu Sep 01, 2005 5:37 pm
by th3()ne
This paper is about culture, in particular that aspect that deals with visual language, both pictorial and written. I write not as a traditional art historian, but as someone who was exposed early on to the Metropolitan and the Modern Museums in New York, and who went the way of the artist at first, then designer and art director, brand strategist and currently design professor.

Re: Only 5000 tings

Posted: Thu Sep 01, 2005 5:48 pm
by th3()ne
You can do all the training with all of the common browsers, like Internet Explorer, Mozilla, Netscape, or Opera. However, some of the examples in our advanced classes require the latest versions of the browsers.

Re: Only 5000 tings

Posted: Thu Sep 01, 2005 5:48 pm
by th3()ne
A Conversational Arse is the most personal of all four because introductions are made through actual communication instead of just a profile or a list of interests. The medium of Conversational Networks are weblogs or blogs, which is a journal published on the Internet that contains a mixture of what is happening in a person’s life as well as the latest web trends. Blogs are updated regularly and can be maintained even by people with little technical knowledge through the use of a program or script. What happens is that a person read someone’s blog, and then gets a general idea of the author based on what he or she writes in the blog. One can even participate in someone’s blog by adding comments on their entries. Bloggers—those who own and write in blogs—have the choice to ignore their readers or reciprocate by reading and placing comments on the blogs of their readers. Then they can develop a more personal relationship through e-mails, chat, or an eyeball, a term used for people from the Internet who meet face-to-face for the first time.

Re: Only 5000 tings

Posted: Thu Sep 01, 2005 5:48 pm
by Matyuv
5000 tings + matyuv = big surprise

Re: Only 5000 tings

Posted: Thu Sep 01, 2005 5:55 pm
by th3()ne
A Conversational Network is the most personal of all four because introductions are made through actual communication instead of just a profile or a list of interests. The medium of Conversational Networks are weblogs or blogs, which is a journal published on the Internet that contains a mixture of what is happening in a person’s life as well as the latest web trends. Blogs are updated regularly and can be maintained even by people with little technical knowledge through the use of a program or script. What happens is that a person read someone’s blog, and then gets a general idea of the author based on what he or she writes in the blog. One can even participate in someone’s blog by adding comments on their entries. Bloggers—those who own and write in blogs—have the choice to ignore their readers or reciprocate by reading and placing comments on the blogs of their readers. Then they can develop a more personal relationship through e-mails, chat, or an eyeball, a term used for people from the Internet who meet face-to-face for the first time.

Re: Only 5000 tings

Posted: Thu Sep 01, 2005 6:00 pm
by th3()ne
A Conversational Network is the most personal of all four because introductions are made through actual communication instead of just a profile or a list of interests. The medium of Conversational Networks are weblogs or blogs, which is a journal published on the Internet that contains a mixture of what is happening in a person’s life as well as the latest web trends. Blogs are updated regularly and can be maintained even by people with little technical knowledge through the use of a program or script. What happens is that a person read someone’s blog, and then gets a general idea of the author based on what he or she writes in the blog. One can even participate in someone’s blog by adding comments on their entries. Bloggers—those who own and write in blogs—have the choice to ignore their readers or reciprocate by reading and placing comments on the blogs of their readers. Then they can develop a more personal relationship through e-mails, chat, or an eyeball, a term used for people from the Internet who meet face-to-face for the first time.

Re: Only 5000 tings

Posted: Thu Sep 01, 2005 6:00 pm
by th3()ne
To develop a reading, I choose images in a layout from the initial entry database and import them into the lecture database via their Collection ID number. I use one layout to sort images into a sequence for presentation and another to plan. The planning layout has fields from both the entry and research databases, allowing me to synthesize both information noted from image entry as well as research found on the subject of the image from the Internet or other sources. Finally, I project the lecture using a separate layout in the same lecture database.

Re: Only 5000 tings

Posted: Thu Sep 01, 2005 6:25 pm
by Ogre
or big fake

Re: Only 5000 tings

Posted: Thu Sep 01, 2005 6:29 pm
by Matyuv
What? :|

Re: Only 5000 tings

Posted: Thu Sep 01, 2005 6:36 pm
by th3()ne
A Private Network, the network where Friendster is classified under, deals with referrals and existing connections. For instance, Ana want to meet Sam who is a friend of her friend, John. Ana then asks John to introduce her to Sam. This is very similar to the face-to-face social situation where one meets new people through the friends they already have. On Friendster one can only view the profiles that person is connected to.

Re: Only 5000 tings

Posted: Thu Sep 01, 2005 6:36 pm
by Surprise
I cost 5000 tings only. :tssk:

Re: Only 5000 tings

Posted: Thu Sep 01, 2005 6:44 pm
by th3()ne
A refugee from California and New York, I was in a beach house in Oregon overlooking a foggy coastline and the Pacific Ocean. I placed a call to the academic department director at the Art Institute of Portland who was to hire me to develop a course in the history of graphic design, in order to finalize the arrangements and get started on the project. She proceeded to relate to me what had happened to the World Trade Centers and the Pentagon. The rest of the weekend was spent in a fog – literally, a heavy one, in front of my eyes – punctuated with assaulting and arresting visual images of the attacks on the monoliths.