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"we've done a lot of research into brain science"
Christ alive, the stupidity of that statement. Story games aren't as addictive because they're trying to tell a story. It doesn't mean the game is any less good because of it, just that the narrative is more of a focus.
Christ alive, the stupidity of that statement. Story games aren't as addictive because they're trying to tell a story. It doesn't mean the game is any less good because of it, just that the narrative is more of a focus.
BRAIN SCIENCE!
I'm almost sorry that nothing will ever come of this. I'd really like to see what sad reality is behind her talk of "breakthroughs" and "revolutions".
BRAIN SCIENCE!
I'm almost sorry that nothing will ever come of this. I'd really like to see what sad reality is behind her talk of "breakthroughs" and "revolutions".
"Brain science."
I don't know why that specific term amuses me as much as it does. Shouldn't it be neuroscience? I just feel like calling it brain science is the same thing as calling geology "Rock science."
That sounds weirdly suspicious for some reason.I think you mean #stenography.
[MEDIA=twitter]684856191953059840[/MEDIA][MEDIA=twitter]684860187522498560[/MEDIA]https://tweetsave.com/transethics/status/684856191953059840
https://tweetsave.com/transethics/status/684860187522498560
That looks like an autistic version of Scorched Earth/Tank Wars...
Scorched Earth:
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Tank Wars:
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Fucking shit, that seems a little overkill.requires a PC with GTX 970 / AMD R9 290, i5-4590, 8 GB RAM., MINIMUM.
"Brain Research" Meaning, "I read the Wikipedia article on the Brain twice."
I'm going to laugh until I choke if the game is named "Breakthrough 60".BRAIN SCIENCE!
I'm almost sorry that nothing will ever come of this. I'd really like to see what sad reality is behind her talk of "breakthroughs" and "revolutions".
She has brain science it's new you haven't heard of it yet.... how does she have brain research like that?
Off topic,but vr will only be popular on the amd polaris and nvdia pascal that have built in vr support,making lower priced gpus compatible with vr.Fucking shit, that seems a little overkill.
Oh look, the extremely small, cramped cages where Wu keeps her puppies when she can't bother caring for them because of Twitter. So much better than that puppy mill huh?
I think you mean #stenography.
[MEDIA=twitter]684856191953059840[/MEDIA][MEDIA=twitter]684860187522498560[/MEDIA]https://tweetsave.com/transethics/status/684856191953059840
https://tweetsave.com/transethics/status/684860187522498560
I think you mean #stenography.
[MEDIA=twitter]684856191953059840[/MEDIA][MEDIA=twitter]684860187522498560[/MEDIA]https://tweetsave.com/transethics/status/684856191953059840
https://tweetsave.com/transethics/status/684860187522498560
That sounds weirdly suspicious for some reason.
A classic example of this reporter-source dynamic is when you've interviewed a source for a story you're writing. Then the source asks to see a copy of the story it before it's published. He figures he's helped you out by doing the interview, so why shouldn't you return the favor by giving him a sneak peek of the story?
What should you do?
As a rule, journalists generally don't show their stories to sources before they are published. Why? Because if there's something in the story the source doesn't like - the way they are portrayed, for instance - they may try to convince you to change the story so that it's more to their liking.
And if a reporter allows himself to be coerced into altering a story to suit a source, then he's surrendered his editorial independence, and the story starts to resemble a public relations press release, not a hard-hitting news story.
Remember, it's the reporter's job to write about people and events objectively, without fear or favor, as the saying goes. If a reporter lets a source dictate what goes into a story, then the reporter loses that objectivity and becomes little more than a mouthpiece for whatever message the source wants to convey.