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marksbirch:

Cancel all my meetings.  Someone on the Internet is wrong.

marksbirch:

Cancel all my meetings.  Someone on the Internet is wrong.

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Source: marksbirch

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harryfreakingblogger:

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pleatedjeans:

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ikenbot:

Always relevant.

ikenbot:

Always relevant.

Source: engineering-laughter

shortformblog:

Bueller … Bueller … So, question for you all — is it awesome that Matthew Broderick’s reliving his faux-childhood memories, or just sad? “Ferris Bueller’s Day Off” came out a solid 25 and a half years ago, and is arguably his crowning achievement (though “The Producers” on Broadway comes close). This early Super Bowl ad, which openly references “Bueller,” albeit with some modern touches, should remind you of two things: Matthew Broderick is going to be 50 in a little over a month, and a Honda CR-V is not a Ferrari. Is that a good thing or a bad thing? (By the way, when you’re done with this, Jerry Seinfeld also has a past-referencing car ad.) source

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smarterplanet:

South Korea’s Live Park uses RFID and Kinect to bring your Holodeck fantasies one step nearer | Engadget
. Located near Seoul, Live Park uses  3D video, holograms and augmented reality, interacting with RFID wrist  bands and Kinect sensors to stitch together a continuous immersive  story. You (and your avatar!) have 65 attractions, over seven themed  zones, and the world’s biggest interactive 360 degree stereoscopic theater to wave, jump and shout your way through. Two years and $13  million in the making, Live Park’s creator d’strict is now looking to  license the concept out internationally, with locations in China and  Singapore already earmarked.

smarterplanet:

South Korea’s Live Park uses RFID and Kinect to bring your Holodeck fantasies one step nearer | Engadget

. Located near Seoul, Live Park uses 3D video, holograms and augmented reality, interacting with RFID wrist bands and Kinect sensors to stitch together a continuous immersive story. You (and your avatar!) have 65 attractions, over seven themed zones, and the world’s biggest interactive 360 degree stereoscopic theater to wave, jump and shout your way through. Two years and $13 million in the making, Live Park’s creator d’strict is now looking to license the concept out internationally, with locations in China and Singapore already earmarked.

(via thenextweb)

Source: Engadget

doctorwho:

No Tresspassing

doctorwho:

No Tresspassing

Source: kafaraqgatri