* looks at speed runs of Mario and Zelda...
There's a shit ton of bugs. Most games do not go bug free. OOT is probably by far the most broken Zelda game especially with wrong warping, bottle adventure, duping, ISG, bomb hovering, swordless, etc etc. If you want to do it, chances are you can in OOT.
Asus is Taiwan, Lenovo is China. As dumb as this may or may not sound, it's a huge difference.
This is funnier
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IsB_DQv8rYU
Can only assume this is satire.
Backwards compatibility only really stops when MS deliberately forces it to. Hardly anything in the base OS has really changed in the last 14 years. Each new version of Windows is really just a slick new non-modular UI and a fuckton of bloat.
If I were Obama, i'd get really snarky of this statement.
Just to make a point, I'd cite the Monroe Doctrine and tell China to GTFO of Latin Americia.
That means I want all the factors that have led some latin american nations to be economically interdependent of China need to be abolished by the Chinese government and they need to stay out of murcia.
Because under their line of reasoning, it's the right thing to do.
Yeah well why would Americans want to go anywhere else anyway? There's pandas at the zoo and ramen noodles at the store.
25 years ago it was "made in Japan".
17 years ago it was "made in Taiwan".
Manufacturing is moving to Vietnam en masse as labor costs rise and work force shrinks in China. A fair bit of manufacturing is also returning to the US and Mexico thanks to shale gas demolishing energy prices.
The point is, manufacturing is one of the easier things to move.
And besides, your point is mostly "internet knowledge", which is to say utter, complete and non-factual bullshit.
81.9% of America's personal consumption expenditures (what they spend money on) goes into things made in America from American parts. This will be the case in any advanced SERVICE BASED economy with a large internal market. If you look at this for Germany, the UK or Japan, it would look very similar.
The sum total of China's contribution is less than 4% for the entire economy.
If you're looking for "durable goods", which would include televisions, computers, furniture... that sort of thing, "Made in the USA" constitutes 59.6% and "Made in China" constitutes 20%.
The one place China does outsell American made products in the US, is in clothes/shoes, 24.9% to 35.6%.
Another lesson in the fact that service economies are immense and their share in the economy dwarfs import / exports.
Here is the full report from the San Francisco Federal Reserve.
http://www.frbsf.org/economic-resear...made-in-china/
Last edited by Skroe; 2014-05-27 at 07:34 PM.