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7月30日 HeulHeul
maaaaaaaaannnnnnnoooooooooo habs so I sort of guessed .. and I had sort of schiss >.<... before and now it is really happening .... ohaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaahh !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! shit shit shit! Well ... I try the "good" things is to see is better now than when it just before the 10.4 happened .. hätt because then I can not ride ... at least I can not play .. and that would have been quite depressing, because I am so looking forward to ^ ^ and again .... I have no sport to join aba ... but then deteriorated meien sportnote ... aaaaaaarh !!!!! but everything is stupid ... Well .. I go to the doctor tomorrow first ... dis is determined not so bad !!!!!!!! About ne only small .... I also do not hurt like last time !!!!!! So joa .. ... I've still excited überdolleeeeee .. so is the stop at sport -.- must halt reckon oha .. ... which incidentally is my 1st entry for a long time xD've already forever nothing more reingeschrieben .. simply had no bock ... aba is now my grad bissel be boring .. Well ... I wish you still be beautiful day! beautiful that it once again here reingeschaut have ^ ^ 7月16日 4 Game Testing Myths Revealed4 Game Testing Myths Revealed
For avid video and computer game lovers out there, the thought of getting
paid to office
desk play and test out new games makes you drool. You always hear about
some guy on the Internet who makes over $100,000 a year, just testing video
games at home, hanging out in his sweat pants and eating pizza all the time. You
want that job, right? Well, the truth is, most of the stuff on the Internet
about video and computer game testing just is not true. So, here are 4 of the
main game testing myths revealed to help you get a better grasp on the realities
of becoming a video or computer game tester.
1. They do not get to simply play the newest video games and then tell the
company or developers what they think. It is actually the game developers who
decide what a good game consists of, and then hires testers to find the glitches
and bugs in the game.
2. They do not get to work 10-20 hours a week and pull in over one-hundred
grand a year. This metal
computer desk simply does not happen. In fact, right before games are
released, you will find yourself working 70-80 hours a week to complete all the
tests you are assigned and the average income of most game testers is around
$35,000 a year.
3. They do not get to just hang out at home and work whenever they want to.
Most of the basis behind being a game tester is to work as a team, and you can
not do that if you are not sitting there with other testers and the developers.
Game testers actually have to be at work at a specific time and have a set
schedule.
4. They are not just lazy, high school drop outs who only want to play
video or computer games. Actually, game testers have to have a lot of education
in gaming, graphics, and other areas plus experience to even land a good paying
game testing job.
Now that these top four game testing job myths are out of the way, are you
still L
& U shape computer desk ready to learn how to become a video or
computer game tester? There are good jobs out there in this field, and you can
make a decent living at it, as some of the top game testers actually make
upwards of $60 an hour.
, , 7月14日 Teenager purchases Airline ticket one way to nightmareTeenager purchases Airline ticket one way to nightmare
Loophole allows youth to fly without parents' permission
Early Wednesday morning E. Pringle awoke to find her daughter missing. Her
nightmare had only just begun.
Pringle's daughter, 15, had purchased a $733 one-way ticket with cash at the Juneau International Airport without parental consent. Nearly a week later, the girl was able to board a plane to Seattle without identification in an attempt to begin a new life in North Carolina with a boyfriend she met on the Internet. "I thought, unbeknownst, that my child would not only have to have
permission, but I thought she would have to have identification at the very
least," Pringle said.
Turns out, that's not the case. The daughter, who is not being identified
because she is a minor, was able to use a loophole in the system, which allows
those between 13 and 17 to board a plane without identification or parental
permission.
"It's been a nightmare," Pringle said. "This has been an absolute nightmare
and I didn't believe in my wildest dreams that this could happen."
Alaska Airlines has an Unaccompanied Minor Service that is required for
passengers 5 to 12 years old who travel without a guardian, spokesperson Amanda
Tobin Bielawski said. The program requires an escort to the departure gate as
well as guardian contact information, she said. Children younger than 5 are not
allowed to travel unaccompanied.
The airline offers the same service for children between the ages of 13 and
17 if the ticket purchaser requests it, Bielawski said.
"It's not required for them to participate in that," she said. "So the
person traveling and-or the parent are able to choose whether or not they
participate in that program. If they choose not to, they would travel just like
any adult."
Bielawski also said it is at the discretion of the ticket agent to
determine if a child appears to be in the age group required to participate in
the unaccompanied minor service.
"We don't have any age restriction for purchasing a ticket," she
said.
Transportation Security Administration spokesperson Jennifer Peppin said
airline passengers 18 and older are required to present photo identification
prior to boarding. Travelers 17 and younger need only a boarding pass, she
said.
"They don't have to have photo identification, because what type of photo
identification does a 15-year-old have?" Peppin said.
TSA agents thoroughly screen all passengers prior to boarding an airplane,
regardless of age, she said.
"Our responsibility is through the screening process," Peppin said, adding
that individual airlines determine their own unaccompanied minor polices. "It
sounds like the child had a boarding pass, so that would not raise a red flag
for us."
A minor without photo identification purchasing a ticket with cash and
without parental consent should have raised a red flag somewhere along the line,
Pringle, the mother, said.
"How are we supposed to protect our children when Alaska Airlines can just
fly them out of here?" she said. "There is a precedent that needs to be
set."
Pringle's ordeal was still only beginning after she learned her daughter
had purchased a ticket and was trying to leave town. Family members arrived at
the airport trying to stop her from leaving only to be told they were not
authorized to access any of the girl's flight information, she said.
"They knew my daughter was on that plane but they would not remove my
daughter from that plane," she said. "I did not authorize my daughter to leave
Juneau."
"Under our policy, we do not release information of our passengers to
members of the public who might call us," Bielawski said.
There have been instances in the industry where people have attempted to
acquire passenger information under false pretenses in a variety of
disconcerting ways, she said.
"It's difficult to differentiate the intentions of the people calling
without being able to validate who the person is that is calling," Bielawski
said.
Alaska Airlines wants to make sure the person calling is doing so with good
intentions, and the best way to do that is through collaboration with law
enforcement, she said.
"It really is to protect the safety and security of the passenger,"
Bielawski said.
Pringle says the policies are what ultimately jeopardized her daughter's
safety. She said an airline representative went so far to uphold the policy that
the employee terminated the conversation.
"I was an absolute panic-stricken mom," she said. "They should not have
hung up on me. They should have moved mountains."
Bielawski said the airline is continuing to work closely with the family to
resolve the incident.
Pringle's nightmare was still far from over.
After her daughter's flight left Juneau, Pringle contacted the Port of
Seattle police to track her daughter down. The police told Pringle her daughter
was trying to fly to North Carolina.
"I got really angry. I was frustrated. I was crying," she said. "You name
the emotion, I've been through it."
Pringle was able to provide the Port of Seattle police with her daughter's
social networking Web site log-in information and password, which provided a
recent photograph and more information about the girl's online boyfriend. She
had made it a rule that if the girl was to use Myspace.com, the site where she
met the boyfriend the family knows little about, the daughter had to provide the
log-in and password information.
"Had I not had her password, it would have been a lot more difficult," she
said.
Sea-Tac Airport spokesman Perry Cooper said the Port of Seattle police were
able to find the girl at the gate of her connecting flight.
"Based on the information they got, they were able to identify her and
connect with her," he said. "They spoke with her and convinced her to get on the
phone and talk with her mother."
Yet Pringle's difficulties continued.
"They found her, and here's your catch: Not only was my daughter
transported across state lines without my authorization and without
identification ... they said she has to volunteer to come home," Pringle
said.
Because the teenager was considered an unreported runaway, the police were
unable to detain her, Cooper said.
Pringle said the officers went above and beyond their duty and helped
convince her daughter to return to Juneau that evening.
Pringle said she had to pay roughly $400 for an Alaska Airlines ticket to
return her child Wednesday night. Because the daughter allegedly stole the money
from her parents for the initial ticket, Pringle said they are out nearly
$1,200.
Pringle said she wants to save her daughter from a life of destructive
behavior so she has filed theft charges against her. The girl was in juvenile
court on Friday and remanded to the Johnson Youth Center, she said.
Pringle said she is determined to let parents know that their children can
get on a plane without permission or identification and there is little they can
do about it due to the policies in place. She said she is determined to find
answers and wants the airlines and TSA to reconsider their policies.
Pringle has contacted the offices of Alaska's highest officials and says
she is not going away until she gets some answers as to why such policies are
allowed. A law needs to be put in place to protect the children from
unnecessarily putting themselves in harm's way, she said.
"I'm beside myself," Pringle said. "We have a risk to our children in this
town and nationwide."
7月11日 Finally 18!Finally 18!
Today it finally arrived - I'm 18, my first act as 18 - year-old will
probably my navel piercing, tattoo for the spare I still ...
Oh, is the toll at midnight were 3 friends here and we have initiated with
champagne and cake eaten, my treasure was on the phone, but I see him even in 9
days ...
Freu my congratulations to all at the moment there are 6, 3 personally 1 on
the telephone and via the Internet 2: D
Bin curious what else comes ... If yes until 2:40 ...
Yeah,I am hardly forget this,my firend want me to post his new laptop batteries shop news here. If any of you want the laptop batteries,you can visit his shop. 7月2日 i hate thursdaysi hate thursdays
algebra i did slope stuff. its easy. i ahte that class. the people are
funny tho.
english-did like nothing lunch-drama-filled swimming-watched other people do the biathlon. trofa did it in 17:10...mike brown did the mile in 6:20 but he didnt finish til 27 something b/c he cant swim haha spanish-i 4 get...but it was fun we lost our game by 2. i kinda sucked. it was boring. im mad at blizzard for telling me to move around int he outfiled when it was totally wrong....yea i was pissed and wen im mad i suck. salinas mom took me home. poor salina..her family makde fun of her b/c shes short. aw its ok salinaaaa i stil loveee u |
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