- Protects touchscreens from scratches and smudges
- Anti-glare for improved visibility
- Low-tack adhesive, easy to apply and remove
- Made precisely to fit on the screen and back of your iPhone 4
- Does not fit on the 1st gen "original" iPhone or iPhone 3G/3GS
- Made precisely to fit on the screen and back of your iPhone 4 (Does not fit on the 1st gen "original" iPhone or iPhone 3G/3GS)
- To guarantee you receive new, authentic Speck merchandise, please select "ships from and sold by Amazon.com" product only
If you are a fan of Halloween then you know the euphoria of pretending to be Frankenstein or a prostitute or Spiderman or Wonder Woman or a tiger or Dorothy or any old somebody or something that you are not.
To be free of social constraints, to melt the wor! ld as you know it for an evening, to be tantalized by uniqueness, causes tens of millions of people to be filled with glee on the last day of October. Some people spend a week's pay and a year's plotting to come up with the perfect costume that will blow their friends' minds away.
For some reason, people experience untold amounts of elation when they get to pretend to be somebody who they are not.
Multiply that by 50,000 and you would come close to the level of euphoria you'd reach if you got to actually parade around in the skin of somebody else for a few days. Just imagine if, all of a sudden, with the mere injection of a needle, you became Asian or a midget or a man. A quick sting in the ribs and you're blonde or pretty or have an Afro. Just imagine becoming any of these combinations and infinitely more. Since you are no longer actually you, you are immediately freed up to talk to whomever you want to talk to without fear of them judging you. All of! a sudden, you can take revenge on enemies, commit crimes and ! be lasci vious without fear of repercussions. All of a sudden, you are free.
Imagine how much fun it would be to be anybody or anything you wanted to be!
And with absolutely no constraints, no restrictions, no limitations, no boundaries, no gravity!
Wouldn't that be great?!
The novel blurred explores this scenario and makes the following analogy:
Drop a frog into a pot of water and he'll swim about contentedly. Fatten him up with a few flies and he'll be the happiest frog in the world. He will swim around blissfully, unaware that a fire has been built beneath his pot, only that it has become warmer, until he is finally cooked alive.
blurred turns this figurative frog into Sam Senior who swims naively in a social milieu that has had a fire applied to it for generations. Brilliant in his use of the innernet (an internet connection in the brain), Sam can navigate dozens of websites simultaneously. A NetJeopardy champion ! on a full ride at a prestigious university, Sam's future looks bright. Perpetually checking social sites while surfing the net, even as he converses with people nearby, Sam doesn't initially realize that he is being held in the ubiquitous sway of a constant communication that paradoxically leads to a lack of real communication, a lack of deep communication.
However, Sam takes a class where he learns about a (possibly) mythological drug, DNA, which instantly alters a person's physical identity and is used primarily for either recreational sex, crime, or revenge. His professor teaches his class by having students read about "drops" he has taken where he engages in the above activities. Slowly, Sam begins to realize that the pot he is swimming in is getting too hot.
Mirrored by a future that suffers from a general dearth of love, Sam's loneliness is palpable. For, although the future is excessively promiscuous, love and sex are not always interchangeable. ! A hopeless romantic, Sam wants to wait for just the right woma! n before engaging in intercourse. Of course, with most people taking several sex partners a month, everyone mocks him as prude.
As the world begins to blur together, like water in a boiling pot, Sam quests after love. Buffeted about by reality, he finally finds the arms of a fascinating woman. Simpatico, they both realize that there is nothing in a transitory world but one another and the hope that their love can carry them through the darkness that is postmodernity.blurred is life when communications become utterly instantaneous and ubiquitous. When email is the new snail mail, texting is walking through sand with snow boots, and even Twitter is a bit too detailed.
blurred is what happens to the present as different cultures are absorbed into a monolithic, computer dominated culture that is attempting to rebuild the Tower of Babel.
blurred is the tale of a young man, Sam Senior, Jr., who can simultaneously blog, email and s! urf the net, even as he is having conversations with people who are standing directly in front of him. Using a program that is connected directly to his brain to accomplish all this, his ability to multitask makes him a celebrity at a very young age.
blurred then explores how a constant surge of communication leads paradoxically to a lack of real communication, a lack of deep communication. This steady flow of information leads to people being too "found" to ever become "lost." And lost people are the best at finding love. Therefore, the future suffers from a general dearth of love in a society that is mirrored in Sam's loneliness.
A hopeless romantic, Sam wants to wait for just the right woman before engaging in sexual intercourse. Of course, this being the promiscuous future with most people taking several different lovers a month, everyone mocks him as a prude. Nevertheless, as his friends engage in one sexual activity aft! er the other, Sam stands tall in his conviction ... for awhile! .
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There is a parable about a frog dropped into a pot of cool water who swims about contentedly even as a fire is built under him for cooking purposes. blurred substitutes out the frog with modern humanity and the fire with progress. The question is, do you jump out of the pot or continue to swim in the water while itâs still nice and warm?
There is a parable about a frog dropped into a pot of cool water who swims about contentedly even as a fire is built under him for cooking purposes. blurred substitutes out the frog with modern humanity and the fire with progress. The question is, do you jump out of the pot or continue to swim in the water while itâs still nice and warm?blurred is life when communications become utterly instantaneous and ubiquitous. When email is the new snail mail, texting is walking through sand with snow boots, and even Twitter is a bit too detailed.
blurred is what happens to the present as different cult! ures are absorbed into a monolithic, computer dominated culture that is attempting to rebuild the Tower of Babel.
blurred is the tale of a young man, Sam Senior, Jr., who can simultaneously blog, email and surf the net, even as he is having conversations with people who are standing directly in front of him. Using a program that is connected directly to his brain to accomplish all this, his ability to multitask makes him a celebrity at a very young age.
blurred then explores how a constant surge of communication leads paradoxically to a lack of real communication, a lack of deep communication. This steady flow of information leads to people being too "found" to ever become "lost." And lost people are the best at finding love. Therefore, the future suffers from a general dearth of love in a society that is mirrored in Sam's loneliness.
A hopeless romantic, Sam wants to wait for just the right woman before engaging in sexual in! tercourse. Of course, this being the promiscuous future with m! ost peop le taking several different lovers a month, everyone mocks him as a prude. Nevertheless, as his friends engage in one sexual activity after the other, Sam stands tall in his conviction ... for awhile.
There is a parable about a frog dropped into a pot of cool water who swims about contentedly even as a fire is built under him for cooking purposes. blurred substitutes out the frog with modern humanity and the fire with progress. The question is, do you jump out of the pot or continue to swim in the water while itâs still nice and warm?
There is a parable about a frog dropped into a pot of cool water who swims about contentedly even as a fire is built under him for cooking purposes. blurred substitutes out the frog with modern humanity and the fire with progress. The question is, do you jump out of the pot or continue to swim in the water while itâs still nice and warm?Australia released, PAL/Region 4 DVD: it WILL NOT play on standard US DVD player.! You need multi-region PAL/NTSC DVD player to view it in USA/Canada: LANGUAGES: English ( Dolby Digital 5.1 ), English ( Dolby DTS 5.1 ), ANAMORPHIC WIDESCREEN (1.78:1), SPECIAL FEATURES: Anamorphic Widescreen, Commentary, Deleted Scenes, Interactive Menu, Scene Access, Short Film, Teaser(s), Trailer(s), SYNOPSIS: After high school graduation, the tradition of 'Schoolies Week' has emerged at a Queensland's Gold Coast resort in which 70,000 kids from all over Australia congregate for a hedonistic week of drinking, drugs, and sex. Five couples travelling to this party of a life-time are in for the ride of their lives. ...BlurredSpeck Products ShieldView Anti-Glare Screen Protector for iPhone 4
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