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LostInTheSupermarket | Shared With: Everyone - Sep 02 2008 | russia, international, Georgia
Great article detailing the enormous stakes and complexity of the ongoing shift in foreign policy relations.
Quoted: The European Union is struggling to find a common position on Russia -- as is the rest of the West. But so far, diplomatic bluster has been the name of the game. What should the world do about Russia's new-found bravado?
LostInTheSupermarket | Shared With: Everyone - yesterday | video
click to playworth the watch....if you type in 'found footage' in youtube or look on the side, you should be able to find other training videos as well as other really absurd 'found footage' (a lot of it is from the 80's, but it's still hilarious to see people in spandex, on tv, synchronized in work outs, especially on videos with titles like 'chair aerobics')
LostInTheSupermarket | Shared With: Everyone - 9 days ago | and, in, the
LostInTheSupermarket | Shared With: Everyone - 9 days ago | the, of, in
LostInTheSupermarket | Shared With: Everyone - 9 days ago | the, in, books
LostInTheSupermarket | Shared With: Everyone - 9 days ago | the, of, and
LostInTheSupermarket | Shared With: Everyone - 9 days ago
LostInTheSupermarket | Shared With: Everyone - 11 days ago | the, and, in
LostInTheSupermarket | Shared With: Everyone - 11 days ago | the, and, of
LostInTheSupermarket | Shared With: Everyone - 12 days ago | and, in, books
sounds interesting
(in full R.U.R.: Rossum's Universal Robots) Drama in three acts by Karel Capek, published in 1920 and performed in 1921. This cautionary play, for which Capek invented the word "robot" (derived from the Czech word for forced labor), involves a scientist named Rossum who discovers the secret of creating humanlike machines. He establishes a factory to produce and distribute these mechanisms worldwide. Another scientist decides to make the robots more human, which he does by gradually adding such traits as the capacity to feel pain. Years later, the robots, who were created to serve humans, have come to dominate them completely.
See: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robot
According to the etymology provided there, Capek admits to not having coined the word 'robot.' In an article in the Czech journal Lidové noviny in 1933, he explained that he had originally wanted to call the creatures laboři (from Latin labor, work). However, he did not like the word, and sought advice from his brother Josef, who suggested "roboti". The word robota means literally work, labor or serf labor, and figuratively "drudgery" or "hard work" in Czech and many Slavic languages. Traditionally the robota was the work period a serf had to give for his lord, typically 6 months of the year.
LostInTheSupermarket | Shared With: Everyone - 13 days ago | news
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Every programmer should have a copy of Numerical Recipes on their desk. There are so many great algorithms, easy to apply right away to your own problems.
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Whoa, this is pretty crazy!
1 FaverViewed: 20 TimesQuoted: In our absurdly terrorism-fearing World, and after Christmas's near tragedy, it was inevitable: Full-body scanning tech will be coming to an airport near (or not so near) you. But what are these machines, and will they invade your privacy?
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