Internet Video Thread

I thin kthis is one of the best horror-comedy ever... It really moakes you laugh and terrifies you at the same time. I think in fact such a murer would be more horrible than a normal, since one gets tortured for years...
---------- Post added at 22:43 ---------- Previous post was at 22:19 ---------- nd a funny commercial:
---------- Post added at 23:02 ---------- Previous post was at 22:43 ---------- I know how to stop the Ginosagi: let some doctor bring you into artificial coma, so you are literally dead. the ginusagi stops when you are dead. than the doctor wakes you upo and you are rid of this :censored: Ginosagi that has to work since it's not rtryig to fight im (wich can't work cause to dark magic) you kill him by his own rules. He stops when you are dead, so die and be revived. This will SURRELY work.
 
I can see, soon, a virtual audience. Where you pick your seat and send your "holographic" version of yourself to the concert. Probably charge just as much..
I'd be more worried about what else they could charge you to do holographically. :shifty:

On a more practical note - if it would all be synthetic, why not just skip the hassle of inventing holograms and do it virtually? Plenty of people already shell out to play online games, why not online concerts? Plenty of money to be made off this crowd! :facepalm:
 
The Deathbed Vigil and other Tales of Digital Angst

Dave Haynie, a known developer of Commodore, takes you through the big and already empty Commodore headquarters and factory in West Chester, Pennsylvania, on its last day on April 27, 1994. Two days later Commodore applied for liquidation which marked the end of a great story.

[ame="http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-6995843800661768793"]The Deathbed Vigil - The last days of Commodore[/ame]

I'm surprised how relaxed those people are. Americans seem to take their fate in a different manner than most Germans I know of. What a bunch of nice characters. It doesn't surprise me now that the Commodore computers were just what they were and what no other computer on the marked ever became after. It's because of the people who made it. And I am very thankful for this gift. But it's also a good example of bad management. But after all, they formed the future of home computers.

May the thousands of machines still running all over the world continue to run for many years (including mine as well)...

Viva Amiga! :cheers:

PS: The former Commodore headquarters today houses the QVC studios by the way.
 
May the thousands of machines still running all over the world continue to run for many years (including mine as well)...
I have two.
A Commodore 64 and a C64C (The later model that looks more like the C128), and they both run fine. :cheers:
 
I have two.
A Commodore 64 and a C64C (The later model that looks more like the C128), and they both run fine. :cheers:

Those machines really are robust. I doubt that most of todays laptops and computers would still run in 20-25 years. But I am sure that most Amigas will still run 30-40 years after they were sold :cheers:

I have an A600 (and about 3.6 GB of software for it). I am going to get an A1200 this summer and some spare parts for my A600, although it exactly looks and works like it did in 1992 already. I love the machine, and I still work with it (workbench and music and graphics software etc.).

They actually produce the C64 again by the way. But it's only the brand and the look which reminds people of the Commodore C64. But they promise to offer Amiga OS 4.1 for it though...

 
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