Why would a suspect admit to committing murder when there’s a lack of evidence against them? Let’s check out the prisoner’s dilemma and find out. www.michaelanuzis.com
Apr
04
Why would a suspect admit to committing murder when there’s a lack of evidence against them? Let’s check out the prisoner’s dilemma and find out. www.michaelanuzis.com
Apr
03

A missing person case involving a female university student and the victim in a hit and run case appears to be related. Detectives look for a witness. Into the police office walks Min Soo-Ah (Kim Ha-Neul). She used to be a promising cadet at the police academy, but after a horrific car accident which killed her brother, Soo-Ah’s police career ended. Min Soo-Ah also lost her eyesight in the car accident. Min Soo-Ah reveals to Detective Jo (Jo Hie-Bong) at the police station that on the night of the hit and run case she was picked up by a taxi cab driver. Soo-Ah believes the taxi driver may be the perpetrator of the crimes. Initially, Detective Jo doesn’t take Soo-Ah’s claims seriously because she is blind, but when Soo-Ah displays her acute senses the detective starts to believe her. Detective Jo and Min Soo-Ah then work together to find the taxi cab driver, but all their leads turn up empty. Then another witness comes forward Kwon Ki-Sub (Yoo Seung-Ho). Kwon Ki-Sub is a motorcycle delivery boy who claims to have also witness the hit and run incident. Kwon Ki-Sub also emphatically states that the car in question was not a taxi cab, but rather an imported sedan. Meanwhile, Min Soo-Ah finds herself being stalked by a mysterious man …
Video Rating: 4 / 5
Apr
03
Death (PHIL 176) Professor Kagan explores the issue of how thinking about death may influence the way we live. Fear as an emotional response to death is discussed as well as whether it is appropriate and under what conditions. A distinction is made between fear of the process of dying, and fear of death itself and what may come when one is dead. Finally, a number of other negative emotions are considered as possible appropriate responses to death and dying, such as anger, sadness, and sorrow. 00:00 – Chapter 1. How Should Thinking about Death Influence Behavior? 02:14 – Chapter 2. Is Fear of Death a Rational Appropriate Response? 08:40 – Chapter 3. Required Conditions for Feeling Fear of Death 22:06 – Chapter 4. What Is Meant by Fear? How Much of This Fear Is Appropriate? 34:29 – Chapter 5. Anger as Another Emotional Reaction to Death 44:49 – Chapter 6. Sorrow and Preciousness: Other Emotions on Death and Conclusion Complete course materials are available at the Open Yale Courses website: open.yale.edu This course was recorded in Spring 2007.
Apr
03

How fast is USB 3.0 compare to other popular high speed connection? like eSATA, firwire and USB 2.0.. Watch this episode and find out!
Video Rating: 4 / 5
Apr
03
Watch more at www.theyoungturks.com Follow us on Twitter. http Check Out TYT Interviews www.youtube.com You can also read Ana Kasparian’s blog at www.examiner.com
Video Rating: 4 / 5
Apr
03
Tribal Teachings From the Musa (Meredith M. Quinn) Presented by: Lester Howse (Wapo Piesew) At Ragpickers Theatre Winnipeg, Manitoba April 13th 2006
Video Rating: 4 / 5
Apr
03
No more puffy wads!
Video Rating: 4 / 5
Apr
03
Apr
03
Thanks to DarkMalloc on Twitter (twitter.com I managed to get a beta copy of the new iPhone OS 4. In this video I take you through a basic walkthrough of the new features. If you have any questions, post them in the comments section. Thanks for watching! Social me: Twitter: twitter.com DailyBooth: dailybooth.com Facebook profile: facebook.com Facebook app: apps.facebook.com TekSetups: teksetups.com Social Blog thecreativeone.tv Forum Bytes forumbytes.com
Apr
02
The Fourteenth Amendment was added to the Constitution in 1868 to empower the federal government — including particularly federal courts — to stamp out a culture of lawless tyranny and oppression in the South by enforcing basic civil rights of newly freed blacks and their white supporters. This culture of oppression took many forms, including widespread censorship, the systematic disarmament of freedmen and white unionists, and the wholesale denial of economic liberty. At the heart of the Fourteenth Amendment was the Privileges or Immunities Clause, which the Supreme Court effectively deleted from the Constitution in the 1873 Slaughterhouse Cases. Today, that judicial error continues to take its toll on important freedoms like private property and the right to earn an honest living, which receive virtually no protection from courts despite their obvious importance to ensuring the economic autonomy of the freedmen following the Civil War and all Americans today. www.ij.org
Video Rating: 4 / 5