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wotj The 10 Maddest of the Mad Science Projects Funded by DARPA
« le: Décembre 16, 2024, 01:39:47 pm »
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 A Chicago strip club plans to continue its provocative annual holiday charity drive offering lap dances in exchange for donated toys.The Admiral Theatre Gentlemen s Club has decorated its website with promotional material of a scantily-clad model in festive attire for its third-annual  Lap Dances for the Needy!  toy drive event.Starting Friday and running through the Saturday before Christmas, club patrons may receive a lap dance  from an Admiral entertainer  by donating an unused, unwrapped toy.The club limits the free dances to one per donor and warns that it has the final say on the quality of the donated toys, noting that the  disbursement of pleasure bills  is at the discretion of management.The club is open nearly  stanley cup year-round, closing only on Christmas Eve.                                       stanley cup                                 ponent--type-recirculation .item:nth-child 5          display:  stanley cup none;             inline-recirc-item--id-968a578e-8c88-11e2-b06b-024c619f5c3d,  right-rail-recirc-item--id-968a578e-8c88-11e2-b06b-024c619f5c3d         display: none;             inline-recirc-item--id-968a578e-8c88-11e2-b06b-024c619f5c3d ~ .item:nth-child 5          display: block;                Alex Sundby                                    Alex Sundby is an associate news editor for CBSNews Yyjn Four Hurt as Tornado Blows Through Texas Town
 Everybody   been freaking out in the past couple of weeks by news that South Korea is building a new broadband network that will be 50 times faster than the average connection in the United States. That   fas stanley mug t! Too bad South K stanley thermos oreans won ;t be able to use maps or access thousands of sites.     The Economist just published some less than flattering details of South Korea   recent internet policy. It   pretty discouraging. Did you know, for instance, that Korean censors deleted about 23,000 web pages last year and blocked an additional 63,000  Did you know you can ;t access any North Korean websites from South Korea  It gets worse: A law dating back to the Korean war forbids South Korean maps from being taken out of the country. Because North and South are technically still at war, the law has been expanded to include electronic mapping data鈥攚hich means that Google, for instance, cannot process South Korean mapping data on its servers and therefore cannot offer driving directions inside the country. In 2010 the UN  stanley bottles determined that the KCSC essentially operates as a censorship body. Welp, at least the uncensored sites will load pretty quickly. That means less time for South Koreans to sit around wondering where the rest of the internet is. [Economist]                                                        InternetNorth Korea