Τα 15 sites που άλλαξαν το internet
There are millions of websites out there. Many of them are unique, either in small ways or in large ones. But the individual impact of any particular site on the overall Internet is generally negligible, if there’s any impact at all. Ολα τα κείμενα εδώ: 15 Noteworthy Websites That Changed the Internet Not so with the fifteen sites here. These sites changed the Internet , mostly for good, in substantial ways. Included here is everything from Geocities (which could probably be blamed entirely, either directly or indirectly, for every ugly web design “trend” that’s ever been) to Wikipedia (which has made information almost universally accessible) to Google (which has changed or influenced virtually everything online). 1. Wikipedia Changed the way we find information. 2. Amazon.com Changed the way we shop. 3. Hotmail Changed the way we use email. 4. Facebook Changed the way friends connected. 5. Project Gutenberg Changed the way we read. 6. Twitter Changed the way
Το είδα και συγκλονίστηκα...
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήΠοστάρω μία πρόχειρη μετάφραση του σημειώματος στα Αγγλικά, σε περίπτωση που σας ενδιαφέρει να το προωθήσετε και σε μη Ελληνόφωνους.
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήThe suicide note of the 77 years old guy that committed suicided today in the Syntagma Square:
The occupational Quisling government exterminated in the literal sense my chances for survival, which were based on a modest pension. A pension which for 35 years now, I alone (without the aid of the state) I was paying for.
Since I am of an age that does not allow me to react in a dynamic way (without of course excluding the possibility that if a Greek raised a kalashnikof, I would not be the second one following him), I cannot find any other solution from a dignified ending, before I start searching in the rubbish for my food.
I believe that the youth without a future will one day raise the arms and in the Syntagma Square hang upside down the national traitors, as the Italians did with Mussolini in 1945 (Piazza Loretto of Milan).
Αναρτώ μία πρόχειρη μετάφραση στα Αγγλικά, σε περίπτωση που θέλετε να προωθήσετε την είδηση και σε μη ελληνόφωνο κοινό.
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήThe suicide note of the 77 years old guy that committed suicided today in the Syntagma Square:
The occupational Quisling government exterminated in the literal sense my chances for survival, which were based on a modest pension. A pension which for 35 years now, I alone (without the aid of the state) I was paying for.
Since I am of an age that does not allow me to react in a dynamic way (without of course excluding the possibility that if a Greek raised a kalashnikof, I would not be the second one following him), I cannot find any other solution from a dignified ending, before I start searching in the rubbish for my food.
I believe that the youth without a future will one day raise the arms and in the Syntagma Square hang upside down the national traitors, as the Italians did with Mussolini in 1945 (Piazza Loretto of Milan).