You are not logged in. Please register or login.

#1391 Re: Dust N' Bones & Cyborg Slunks » Slash: "(STP Reunion) won't impact Velvet Revolver" » 962 weeks ago

I first thought that this would be the end or VR, that the guys would all have that male macho bullshit going on about an STP reunion.  But from all the articles that I read, I keep getting the impression that these guys (Slash, Duff, Matt) are just laid back about it all.  They're just going to take it as it comes and not get worked up over simple bullshit anymore.

#1392 Re: The Garden » Political Influence of Music Stars » 962 weeks ago

I personally cannot stand celebrity endorsements.  I hate it when I watch someone on tv, or listen to someone on the radio and I have to hear about their opinions on who I should vote for.  Chances are I'm watching / listening to them because they entertain me not because of who I'm voting for.  I usually get very annoyed when I hear they start spewing talking points, then I tune out. 

I remember when Stern got heavily involved in bashing Bush during the 04 elections.  This is back when he still had his kickass message board up.  Alot of people got pissed and the consensus was "if I want to hear politics I'll listen to Rush". 

One a side note about the Stern board, one of the funniest things that happened on there was, someone once got Paris Hilton's cellphone number.  Everyone started calling and recording the calls then posted them on the board.... good times.

#1393 Re: The Garden » Pancake Day » 962 weeks ago

Never heard of pancake day.  But yesterday was Fausnaught (glorified donut) day.

#1394 Re: The Garden » What are you eating? » 962 weeks ago

PaSnow wrote:
Jameslofton wrote:

A hamburger, cheeseburger, and fries from In n Out Burger.

In N Out Burger rocks. Cool rabbit story also, Mmmmmmmm Hickory smoke, although it sucks eating a rabbit. It's like venicin (deer meat), it sucks eating a deer, such a peaceful animal but man they taste pretty good. I had deer bologna once too, it was awesome. I bet Tommie's eaten that.

A cool trick for making frech fries is turn em into crab fries. Just load them up with Old Bay seasoning before, during & after they are cooking. Taste pretty good & changes them up a bit. Also, everything fries where you add Old Bay, Garlic powder, salt and Oregeno/Basil etc.

Dont even get me started on deer meat.  I dont hunt, but my uncles go out every year.  The one uncle is usually good for two deer.  Whenever I go visit, he usually gives me a good chunk of the meat b/c he'd never eat it all.  He goes all out though, he gets the little links made, the big thick balogna, steaks, hell he even makes his own jerky.

#1395 Re: The Garden » The Super Tuesday thread » 962 weeks ago

Jameslofton wrote:

I think you and Flagg are the only members here voting republican. .

I'm a republican, but unfortunatly I think that by the time my primary rolls around (April 22) it will already be decided who the nominee is.  If it is Mccain... I dont know what I'll do.  probably wont vote in the primary, the general election is going to be iffy on who i cast my actual vote for.

#1396 Re: The Garden » The NFL 2007-08 Season thread » 962 weeks ago

That might have been the weirdest ending to a super bowl ever.

#1397 Re: The Garden » The NFL 2007-08 Season thread » 962 weeks ago

WTF, did Belichick leave the field?

#1398 Re: Guns N' Roses » GNRevolution Exclusive! Classic Rock Feb Mag Cover! » 962 weeks ago

Bumble4tus wrote:

It's Axl.  I am sure he'd find a way to block it.
big_smile

Are you fucking serious?  If Axl did half the shit some of you guys claim he does, he'd be a criminal mastermind with Christ like powers.

#1399 Re: The Sunset Strip » The Video Game Console Thread » 962 weeks ago

Mike wrote:

James, did you ever play Condemned? When I was looking at xbox 360 games, that one caught my attention, they're coming out with a sequel pretty soon.

That game is hands down one of the most intense melee combat games I've ever played.  Its one of the few that has the ability to actually freak me out.

#1400 Re: The Garden » Microsoft to make bid for Yahoo » 963 weeks ago

Microsoft-Yahoo deal could reshape Internet
Changes potentially huge, but probably not in short term
By Brian Bernstein
The Associated Press
updated 7:24 p.m. ET, Fri., Feb. 1, 2008
BOSTON - A combination of Microsoft and Yahoo could reshape the Internet landscape for millions of Web users: Would the two companies join their online portals? Could they rethink the desktop computer to integrate Web content more directly?

The changes are potentially huge, but probably not in the short term.

Microsoft executives did not indicate Friday exactly what they would do with Yahoo's brand if their $45 billion bid is accepted. But analysts expect the combined companies to preserve many of their separate free services, like instant-messaging and e-mail programs.

(Msnbc.com is a Microsoft-NBC Universal joint venture.)

A more likely medium-term change is that some of Microsoft's Web content could fade away or get added to Yahoo, which has a vast collection of news and features aggregated from other providers.

Microsoft's Web properties, including its Yahoo-like MSN portal, aren't exactly slouches: They rank third, trailing only Yahoo and Google, in total visitors. But while Yahoo still is profitable, Microsoft's online services are a consistent money loser. The MSN search engine is a laggard, even with recent efforts to soup it up under Microsoft's online umbrella it calls "Live."

Having Yahoo in its tent could give Microsoft a rationalization for abandoning its unprofitable online elements.

"I think MSN folds into Yahoo," said Ian Campbell, CEO of Nucleus Research. "It would be foolish to keep that separate."

Perhaps the biggest change Microsoft and Yahoo could achieve together would be creating a better way to combine the Web and desktop computing '” not to mention cell phones, TVs, cars and any other gadgets that might someday plug into the Internet.

Consumers who access the Web on cell phones and handheld computers might be the first to find something new as a result of a Microsoft-Yahoo combination. Devices that run Microsoft's Windows Mobile operating system could be better integrated with Yahoo content and possibly yield new services, like social networking functions.

New ideas will be key to compete with Google's Web presence. After all, people don't "Microsoft" or "Yahoo" anything. Microsoft in particular tends to be tolerated more than loved. Google is also leading development of an alternative cell-phone operating system it calls Android.

Eventually, a teamed-up Yahoo and Microsoft might be able to rethink the PC desktop '” where Windows still runs 90 percent of the world's PCs '” so that Internet data such as stock prices, sports scores and weather are automatically baked in.

"We all have our home page because we have a concept of a home page," Campbell said. Before long, "we may not have a home page '” it might just be the background of my desktop. There's no reason why Microsoft can't push this another level."

Microsoft might also use Yahoo's online strengths to galvanize Web-based versions of some of its powerful desktop software applications, like Word and Excel.

Open-source rivals and Google are threatening to bite into Microsoft's lucrative Office software franchise with free versions of those kinds of "productivity" software. Microsoft is developing Web-based versions of its own, but slowly.

Now Yahoo could be the face through which Microsoft offers those online applications. Perhaps one day a Microsoft-fueled package of "Yahoo Apps" will go up against "Google Apps."

Even with these possibilities, analyst David Mitchell Smith, a vice president at Gartner Inc., believes the biggest change from a Microsoft-Yahoo deal probably will be the one most Web surfers don't notice. That will come as the companies try to broaden their ability to deliver ads all over the Internet, wherever it reaches.


It's necessary because being the most popular online destination '” as Yahoo already is '” is no longer enough. The explosion of blogs, video sites and other user-generated content has made our Internet travels more wide-ranging. As a result, the biggest Internet companies now need their ad networks to reach far beyond their home portals. Google has mastered that. Microsoft and Yahoo have not.

"I think that's really what it's all about," Smith said. "It's about advertising. It's about search."

© 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
URL: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/22958236/

Board footer

Powered by FluxBB