You mean you were making fun of her friends lack of technical knowledge :-p
Ah, no. She said that her friend failed out because of mIRC. mIRC is just an IRC client. That would be like if you said someone failed out because of Firefox, it's just a web browser. XChat and irssi are other IRC clients.
So now I'm making fun of your lack of technical knowledge as well.
You mean you were making fun of her friends lack of technical knowledge :-p
Ah, no. She said that her friend failed out because of mIRC. mIRC is just an IRC client. That would be like if you said someone failed out because of Firefox, it's just a web browser. XChat and irssi are other IRC clients.
So now I'm making fun of your lack of technical knowledge as well.
What if they were coding and creating Firefox add-ons in their spare time instead of going to class, huh Scott?
Now I'm making fun of your inability to think outside the box, or maybe it's your inability to create good examples. I'll let you decide, I'm sure you can at least figure that out. Bwahahahaha
a late 2006 survey that showed 59% of parents think the internet has been a totally positive influence in their children’s lives-- down from 67% in 2004.
Ah yes. Asking people what they think is true is certainly a scientifically valid way of determining objective reality.
I'd really like to see some numbers. I mean, WoW has, what, 10 million subscribers? Are all of those people college students? Do they all drop out? I'm pretty sure that "partying hard" and "being an idiot" are far greater causes of dropout rates.
Oh wait, I forgot; this is America, the land where video games and German techno music make you shoot people.
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So now I'm making fun of your lack of technical knowledge as well.
Now I'm making fun of your inability to think outside the box, or maybe it's your inability to create good examples. I'll let you decide, I'm sure you can at least figure that out.
Bwahahahaha
Actually, I'm bashing the FCC commissioner: Ah yes. Asking people what they think is true is certainly a scientifically valid way of determining objective reality.
I'd really like to see some numbers. I mean, WoW has, what, 10 million subscribers? Are all of those people college students? Do they all drop out? I'm pretty sure that "partying hard" and "being an idiot" are far greater causes of dropout rates.
Oh wait, I forgot; this is America, the land where video games and German techno music make you shoot people.