On Mon, 7 Apr 2008 18:04:49 +0100, "StainlessSteelRat"
<usenet@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
>POD {Ò¿Ó} wrote:
>> Does my theory hold any water?
>
>I'm not sure it's so black and white. I'm arguably a doer, in that I get
on
>with things and get them done. Doesn't mean I don't like to theorise
though.
AOL again, I'm on a roll :)
Seriously though, in a working environment I'm a doer, that is the
nature of business in the UK...I identify an issue, collect data, and
propose a solution...you missed the follow on part of the project cycle
though...monitor the solution to ensure that it does actually solve the
issue, propose changes/further solutions...rinse, repeat.
Part of the reason big business in the UK is failing is that they leave
out the 'review' part of the project cycle...but that's an argument for
a different audience.
I guess in a more pyschological way I apply similar rules in my social
life, relation****ps are a 'biological' thing, i.e. we talk about grow,
and nurture, which implies responding to changing stimuli, and
anticipating or theorising on future changes to the relation****p.
Regulars here will know that I am often intrigued about how friends and
g/fs 'read' BR and 'ask' such to watch different versions (original and
DC) first to gauge how they react to them.
My previous g/f (fiancée now deceased) was not into SF and had
essentially been 'forced' to watch BR in the past. When we sat down and
watched them original then DC she 'got it' and preferred the DC.
My current g/f has only seen the original, which she didn't understand.
I plan to conduct the same 'test' but using the Final Cut as the next
viewing.
People react differently depending upon which version they saw first,
and various other factors such as their persona and how it was presented
to them. I wish I'd actually do***ented my experiments to date :)
--
Alfie [UK]
<http://www.delphia.co.uk/>
Time is what keeps everything from happening at once.


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