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DudeAsInCool

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Everything posted by DudeAsInCool

  1. These are nice people. Susanna Hoffs is married to Jay Roach, the director of the Austin Power series...
  2. Sounds cool...but I was hoping it was Jeff Beck
  3. Very sexy voice, Umma. Love to do some phone
  4. Crazy Horse always posts great stuff about getting 'in touch' with yourself. Sleeping Beauty was that good of a book? :bigsmile:
  5. Koop's drawl is more subtle than this..i would call his voice southern urbane
  6. What sampling or morons did they interview??? I dont buy those numbers...
  7. Same. I'm told I have a radio voice, whatever the hell that means...
  8. Nancy is a lot hipper than you think. She played a big r role in toning down Reagan's extreme political aids--she's really more of a moderate or liberal...
  9. Women would love that! Congrats on the degree, dude :strumma:
  10. Happy Birthday, Commander! :good job: :jammintwo: :jammin: :scratchin: :strumma: :thumpin: :frog: :frog:
  11. She's beautiful! Congrats, again. Looks like you guys had a helluva trip.
  12. Looks like a working weekend 'cause my tennis partner is away... Hopefully I can get into some mischief one of these evenings
  13. If true, this is disgusting: CNN amnesia: Forgot TNR report on Bush plans when Al Qaeda suspect arrested during Dem Convention On July 29, CNN apparently forgot a major story the network had reported just three weeks earlier. On July 8, The New Republic posted to its website an article titled "July Surprise," which was written by TNR's John B. Judis, Spencer Ackerman, and Massoud Ansari and published in the July 19 issue of the magazine. Judis, Ackerman, and Ansari quoted two sources from Pakistan's intelligence service and another from its Interior Ministry (which handles the country's internal security) saying that the Bush administration was pressuring Pakistani officials to make arrests of so-called "high-value targets" (HVTs) during the 2004 Democratic National Convention. According to "July Surprise," one source said: "The last ten days of July deadline has been given repeatedly by visitors to Islamabad and during [Pakistani intelligence director General Ehsan ul-Haq's] meetings in Washington." The article continued: "[A] White House aide had told him that 'it would be best if the arrest or killing of [any] HVT were announced on twenty-six, twenty-seven, or twenty-eight July.' -- the first three days of the Democratic National Convention in Boston.
  14. Saw Bourne Supremacy last night - not bad - Doug Liman is a good filmmaker. There have been good notices on The Manchurian Candidate and the trailers for The Village and Harold and Kumar looked ok. Any interest out there for anything this weekend? *** JULY 30 Title (Distributor) / Theater Count (Change) / Week # NEW The Village (Buena Vista) / 3,730 The Manchurian Candidate (Paramount) / 2,867 Harold and Kumar Go to White Castle (New Line) / 2,135 Thunderbirds (Universal) / 2,057 She Hate Me (Sony Classics) / 11 Garden State (Fox Searchlight) / 9 Intimate Strangers (Paramount Classics) / 5 EXPANDING The Bourne Supremacy (Universal) / 3,180 (+15) / 2 Napoleon Dynamite (Fox Searchlight) / 422 (+33) / 8 De-Lovely (United Artists) / 385 (+52) / 5 Before Sunset (Warner Independent Pictures) / 203 (+63) / 5 Metallica: Some Kind of Monster (IFC) / 147 (+105) / 4 The Door in the Floor (Focus) / 128 (+9) / 3 Maria Full of Grace (Fine Line) / 65 (+58) / 3 NASCAR 3D: The IMAX Experience (IMAX) (Warner Bros.) / 53 (+1) / 21 A Home at the End of the World (Warner Independent Pictures) / 26 (+21) / 2 Love Me If You Dare (Paramount Classics) / 11 (+8) / 11 Saddest Music in the World (IFC) / 11 (+4) / 14 Zatoichi (Miramax) / 8 (+4) / 2 Shaolin Soccer (Miramax) / 7 (+3) / 18 NO CHANGE Catwoman (Warner Bros.) / 3,117 / 2
  15. Apple Attacks RealNetworks Plan to Sell Songs for iPod By LAURIE J. FLYNN Published: July 30, 2004 SAN FRANCISCO, July 29 - Apple Computer sharply criticized RealNetworks, the maker of media-playing software, on Thursday, saying it was investigating the legal implications of RealNetworks's decision to sell songs in Apple's music format. It accused RealNetworks of adopting "the tactics and ethics of a hacker to break into the iPod." Apple issued its angry statement just four days after RealNetworks started giving away software called Harmony that lets people download songs from its online music store and play them on Apple's popular iPod portable music players, as well as players using Windows Media Player and the Helix format from RealNetworks. RealNetworks quickly shot back with its own strongly worded response, vowing to continue letting consumers play songs bought on its music service on any of the 70 music players on the market, including Apple's iPod. "Consumers, and not Apple, should be the ones choosing what music goes on their iPod," executives of Real Networks said in a statement. "Harmony follows in a well-established tradition of fully legal, independently developed paths to achieve compatibility." The statement added, "There is ample and clear precedent for this activity, for instance, the first I.B.M.-compatible PC's from Compaq.'' While RealNetworks is the first company besides Apple to sell songs in the protected iPod format, other companies sell them in the MP3 format, which the player can also use. http://www.nytimes.com/2004/07/30/technology/30real.html
  16. He should be depressed...but I dont think he is
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