Let's get it straight.This isn't a cheerocracy..perdon no pude contenermee!!

Posted on 13:00 by C.Llamosas | 0 comments

Esta pelicula,es una cagada..pero esta escena me supero,nose si mi humor sera taan de mierda,
o realmente es buenisima,
como pioo THIS ISNT A CHEEROCRACY
ES LO MAS. Porfavor,tomense el tiempo de ver el clip,antes de leer el transcript.vale la pena 
 

-I'm Sandy Sue.It is simpIy sweII to meet aII of you.
 
-Peachy.You brought a routine?
 
-Oh, you bet.
- Give me an H.
  Give me a U.               
Give me a giant pussy-Iicking,
ass-fucker cock shit!
I'm sorry.
That was my Tourette's.
 
-I don't know about her.
 
-Let's get it straight.This isn't a cheerocracy.                  
I am the cheertator.I make the cheercisions,
I wiII deaI with the cheeronsequences.                   
If there are no more cheeruptions,
we can cheertinue.                   
Thank you.
 
-Grandpa stuck a finger in my ass!
Cum face!
 
-She'II cheer do.
Great.

un poco de geekness..recauchutada

Posted on 12:31 by C.Llamosas | 0 comments

Los cambios insertados por la resolucion de la CONATEL del mes de febrero,acarrean numerosas consecuencias tanto en el campo juridico,socio-economico y politico.

Aunque el cambio sea infimo,considerando el gran atraso que tenemos en el pais a nivel de telecomunicaciones y penetracion de internet,es un gran logro el cual se debe en gran parte a la labor de ONGS y que la ciudadania se ha ido concientizando de la situacion y las ventajas que acarrearia la mejora en los servicios de telecomunicaciones,para lo cual el primer paso es la desmonopolizacion estatal del servicio de Internet.

Lamentablemente,quedo en el tintero un tema de vital trascendencia,especialmente para la escena economica globalizada y competitiva que hoy nos toca vivir,en la que,contar con la legalizacion de la tecnologia VOIP (mal llamada tecnologia de telefonia basica) nos daria grandes ventajas y oportunidades y seria un factor indirecto para mejorar la economia nacional,ya que es bien sabido,el teletrabajo constituye hoy en dia un sector laboral muy atractivo,sobre todo para un pais como el nuestro,de privilegiada situacion geografica y vastos recursos hidroelectricos y,lo que es mas con un porcentaje elevadisimo de potenciales trabajadores,con una poblacion en condiciones de dar una mano de obra joven.

A mi criterio deberia revisar los argumentos en los que se basan los directivos de la CONATEL (en la ley de Telecomunicaciones),la cual alegan,en su Art. 21 no permite dar libre accesso a TECNOLOGIAS DE TELEFONIA BASICA,cuando a todas luces,este concepto esta errado desde el inicio,ya que la VOIP es una tecnologia que se transmite por medio de paquetes a traves de la red,y no tienen un canal unico de transmision,como por ejemplo la tiene la telefonia fija ("linea baja"). Y basarse en la Constitucion Nacional y en los fundamentos legales del libre mercado y el tajante repudio al MONOPOLIO.


Y EN CUANTO A LA TELE "DIGITAL..."

Por mas que la propuesta de migrar nuestra tecnologia se deñal analogica a una digital a nivel nacional,parezca emocionante y aparentemente apareje cambios radicales y aplicacion de tecnologia de punta en varios medios de difusion de informacion,sostengo la opinion de que con la pobre legislacion que tenemos y dados los problemas que ya tenemos con algo tan simple como la provision de internet y VoIP,los legisladores y el Ministerio de Obras Publicas y Comunicaciones,deberian abocarse a la tarea de perfeccionar esta area e ir trabajando por escalones.

algun dia comento,ahora se lee nomas

Posted on 10:21 by C.Llamosas | 0 comments

DE CADA 90 NIÑOS (varones),1 NACE CON AUTISMO


"I was mad because no one can beat up my brother except me."




Entrevista con Marissa Skillings,15 años,tiene un hermano de 11,con autismo..buenisima la entrevista



Coping With An Autistic Brother: A Teenager's Take

by Erin Davis

Each year, approximately one child in every 150 is diagnosed with autism. Eleven-year-old Andrew Skillings is one of those children. He has Asperger's syndrome, a mild form of autism.

For Andrew's older sister Marissa, her brother's diagnosis has affected every aspect of her life from the time he was born. She was almost 5 and shared a room with Andrew. Marissa says she remembers those first few weeks he was home.

"I decided he needed to go back where he came from, because as a baby he never, ever stopped screaming," she says.

Then the Skillings found out Andrew had a mental disability.

Recently, Marissa described what it's like to live with a little brother who has frequent meltdowns — and who she tries to protect.

"I'd kill for him. But I could kill him, too. He talks. Nonstop. Talking and talking," Marissa says. "He'll tell anybody information about an animal, whether they want to hear it or not. People can tell Andrew has a disability because of his hand gestures and the way he moves when he gets nervous.

"He moves his hands back and forth; and he'll walk with his hands down by his sides just shaking his hands; and he likes to crack his knuckles when he's nervous, and he'll keep doing the movement even if they don't crack."

As Marissa says, their sibling relationship is different from "two normal siblings" because of his autism.

"Because socially he needs help, so I have to protect him and be there for him more than a normal big sister would," she says. "He freaks out, like if I won't get out of the bathroom and I tell him to shut up, he'll grab a kitchen knife and come over to the door and open the door and chase me around the house with a knife. I know he'd never touch me with it, but when he's running with a knife pointed towards me and I'm running, if he tripped, then something bad could happen."

Marissa says she stays out with her friends until her curfew so she can avoid dealing with her brother's disability.

"I started staying away from home around 5 or 6," she says. "I'd stay outside or at a friend's as late as I could until my mom called me home. I can sit down and talk with my parents, but a lot of times, it's like Andrew's always trying to explain something about a cheetah or a jaguar or something in the jungle that has no importance on anyone's life. But if I interrupt him, he gets mad and then it turns into a tantrum and my mom gets mad, and I'm just like, 'I don't even want to talk to you guys anymore.' "

Marissa says she has seen kids tease Andrew, and it's not unusual at his age. One day, she says, a boy was throwing rocks at Andrew. Andrew tried to shield himself with cardboard, but a rock flew over the cardboard and hit him in the head. Andrew ran into the house crying, and when Marissa found out what happened, she chased the boy down the street and cornered him.

"I smacked him across the face and he was cornered, and my face I'm sure was beet-red, and I was like, 'Just do it again and I'll punch you right in your mouth,' " Marissa says. "I was mad because no one can beat up my brother except me."

"Sometimes, if I get really frustrated, I just wish I could change everything: Sell him to the zoo and buy new parents," Marissa says. "But then the times when I'm actually appreciating things and I'm not in the moment when I'm steaming mad, I do appreciate what I have."

"I don't think I'd change anything, 'cause this is my life and this is what I'm used to. Andrew wouldn't be like the Andrew I know and love if he was different, because autism is his whole personality."

FUENTE: http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=98012194

Qué blogudo!!!: Star Parawars

Posted on 10:41 by C.Llamosas | 0 comments

Qué blogudo!!!: Star Parawars