Heres an example of a thing they changed without spoiling stuff. Book: murder weapon found in one of the cabins. Movie: Someone gets randomly stabbed with the murder weapon in the back for no reason.
Yes, definitely but I still can't beleive how much they changed. Usually movies try to at least be close to the source material, but in this case the movie could've passed as a completely different story.
Blade Runner and Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? are also 2 different things: Deckard's divorced, hunts down replicants to avenge his former partner and has a sidekick in the movie. He's married, runs after androids so he could afford an artificial animal and works alone in the novel. Bunch of characters were scrapped (Isidor, Buster Friendly) and their interactions modified (especially in regard to Rachael.)
Tbh, I prefer Blade Runner Final Cut to Dick's "Do Androids dream of Electric Sheep?". They're so different from each other that they become two completely different experiences. Still, most of the differences could be explained by being made on different years
I vaguely recall Sebastian. I got the purpose of Isidor in the book (being basically so dumb he was a big messy pile of feelings, which contrasted with the cold, remorseless androids - the spider scene was gut-wrenching,) but I really would have to watch Blade Runner again to remember if Sebastian had anything relevant happening to him, or if he bought anything to the story at all.
Nothing is perfect, except when you're using firefox apparently. lol : https://mace486.com/r_images/_verycool.PNG
i prefer microns but right now all i have on hand are these crappy cheapo pens from the dollar store
In all seriousness though, some browser have different coding. Mozilla Firefox use their own code while Chrome and Edge (new ver.) use Chromium. You can add a code that other browser support but other one don't. It rare but if you go to w3school, each tutorial show what browser version are usable. I sorry that you have to re-work your site for small bugs though.
Because giving one group a complete monopoly on web standards isn't exactly a good choice. Google has already tried gimping adblockers in Chrome before, if there was no competition against Blink then Google could do what they want with total impunity.
Is the quote thing on the front of the page overlapping into anything else? Like this: https://mace486.com/r_images/physicalreality.PNG
Well, the text is on top for me, but the quote is still overlapping for me. For detail info, I using Microsoft Edge Dev version
In Internet Explorer 11, there is a noticeable gap between the top of the page and the text. Also, the quote on your front page isn't overlapping onto anything else in IE11.
heh, neat