Occultists and Twitter
The next part of My Twitter Experiment (the grand title I've just bestowed on noodling about with the micro-blogging site) led me to an interesting quote from a less than savoury character:
Browse our community of bloggers
The next part of My Twitter Experiment (the grand title I've just bestowed on noodling about with the micro-blogging site) led me to an interesting quote from a less than savoury character:
What are the Home Office to do?
Having just enjoyed the 1980s reminiscence with Ashes to Ashes I'm actually missing one very 80s bit of technology - the turbo. 
Digital technology is enabling us to store, retrieve and link our memories - photographs, diaries, reflections - in increasing quantities. Memory is an important part of our identity, both personally and with respect to the groups with which we identify, so these developments will have profound effects on our perceptions of ourselves and the communities in which we live. But, interactions between technology and society being inherently unpredictable, we can't be entirely sure what benefits (and costs) this will bring.
As gaming is as much an adult pursuit as watching films and TV or going to the theatre, it has crossed my mind more than once as to why there is so little nudity in games.