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Ver la versión completa : Off-topic Las mejores posturas en la cama.



lusco
12/07/2010, 01:45
Me rio yo de los malpensados....jajaja, pero a lo mejor a alguno le valen para algo :

NicoAna
12/07/2010, 02:00
Pues la verdad es que leyendo el título del hilo creí que iba a ir de otra cosa ... :| ...
No pienses tu ahora mal, me refería a las posturas cómodas para dormir en la cv :D
Ahora solo un poco mas en serio, esta simpatico el archivo.

xacal
12/07/2010, 02:05
Que tiernoooo...

txaparros
12/07/2010, 03:36
Hace tiempo me enviaron otras posturas en la cama... de este estilo, pero eran otros los protagonistas. Pero como siempre, encantadores.

La nube negra
12/07/2010, 12:54
valla me quedo con las ganas de aprender algo nuevo.......
que me habeis pillado, que pensaba que era otra cosa....
esque tengo pensamientos sucios muy sucios....
vamos que estoy tol dia en celo.........no puedor, no puedor, no puedor..........soi un pecador de la praderarrrrrrrrrrr.........

Farben
12/07/2010, 13:00
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For half of the American population, an examination of the past, present and future of video

games might seem as relevant as a two-hour documentary about skate board wheels or a frank and

open discussion of the Slinky. Video games? That's what spotty teen males wearing black t-shirts

do in the basement, right?

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Wrong. What that half of America might not know is that the other half of America is regularly

playing video games. And it's not just kids any more. The average video game player — or "gamer"

— is 30 years old. That gamer isn't feeding quarters into an arcade machine, either. He (and

increasingly, she) is playing on a home computer, having adventures under a different name and

identity in an eternally existing cyberworld full of danger, romance, and thousands of other

people pretending to be somebody else.

And that home computer is ever more electronically sophisticated because it was designed in part

to play games. Gamers are also playing on home consoles — Playstations, Game Cubes, XBoxes.

They're just game machines now, but the powerful companies that make them expect their future

home consoles will control not just games, but the television, PC, DVD — all the electronic

information and entertainment we see.

Increasingly, that entertainment will be game-inspired. There used to be video games and movies.

Then there were video games based on movies. Now there are movies based on video games. The video

game industry has surpassed the movie industry in revenue, even though video games have been in

existence for only about 33 years.


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The Video Game Revolution examines first the history of games, beginning with a 1950s engineer

named Ralph Baer who suggested that televisions should have on-screen game playing. Ralph's boss

thought he was nuts. Then in 1972 an ex-circus barker named Nolan Bushnell produced "Pong", a

bouncing dot that became the biggest thing to hit taverns since the beer nut. The Video Game

Revolution features exclusive interviews with game-making pioneers, many of them still involved

in game-creation, including Shigeru "Donkey Kong" Miyamoto, Jason "Crash Bandicoot" Rubin, Will

"The Sims" Wright, Chris "Dungeon Siege" Taylor, Peter "BC" Molyneux and Megan "Nancy Drew"

Gaiser.


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Along with the people behind the games, Video Game Revolution profiles people in front of the

games, including a couple that met and married as on-line characters and then met and married as

themselves, and a classic game distributor and graduate of Cal's Coin College.

The Video Game Revolution is primarily an entertaining look at the world of games, but all is not

fun and frolic in that world, and the program touches on that as well. Many games are extremely

violent — and that violence is rewarded, which deeply concerns parents like program guest Pamela

Eakes of Mothers Against Violence in America and legislators like Senator Joe Lieberman. Games

can also be dangerously addictive, and are getting more so through continuous on-line playing.

The Video Game Revolution concludes with the future of gaming, including the possibility that

some day our homes will have game rooms like the holo-deck in Star Trek: Next Generation — a

completely exclusive game environment — or that a microchip inserted directly into the gamer

will allow play without any external apparatus. As one game maker says in The Video Game

Revolution, "The real model we're building is the one in your head, not on the computer."

The Video Game Revolution from KCTS/Seattle was produced by Greg Palmer and Marcie Finnila and

written and hosted by Greg Palmer. Executive Producer is Enrique Cerna.


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H420
12/07/2010, 14:05
Y esto que es?? no te has equivocado de Foro? Farben. joer y encima en pikingli,,,vaya ladrillo.

monica mondarina
12/07/2010, 14:48
jejeje habra alguien que habra pensado mal, pero son una monada todos