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About Linkfilter
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linkfilter.net is just what the name implies, a link filter. All links are posted and moderated by
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chatter 3am
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beaglebot> does this make the iPhone look like a commnicator to anyone else? They should have made it like taht
pneum0nic> hell that's tight
FoolProof> Hmm... any others?
FoolProof> Is World of goo a flash game?
beaglebot> I play mainly board games and whatnot so I'm kinda a bad source
beaglebot> I don't think so, I remeber runing it on my dell
beaglebot> *without being connected etc
beaglebot> Zillions of games is worth the money if you like bopard games
FoolProof> Any of you play Little Big Planet?
!! tuvaorbust is around.
FoolProof> is there a PC version?
FoolProof> I'm not seeing one.
beaglebot> For which?
FoolProof> LBP
beaglebot> Ah, never plkayed it
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Online Dating Services Are Taking a Scientific Approach
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blinded by science
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Link #150095
submitted by johnny2000
on Mar 11, 2010 08:13am.
(+100XP)
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/02/07/business/07stream.html
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If finding true love were an exact science, we wouldn’t need matchmakers, singles bars or, of course, online dating services.
Like job seekers who take the Myers-Briggs personality test to help steer them to suitable professions, we’d simply take a relationship test, whose results would identify our most compatible types of mates and rule out the frogs. Problem solved.
Now, a handful of dating Web sites are competing to impose some science, or at least some structure, on the quest for love by using different kinds of tests to winnow the selection process. In short, each of these sites is aiming to be the Netflix of love.
His 50 First Dates (or in Her Case, 3)
Comments: 0
Hits: 32
Points: 207901
Vote Now!
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Inside the twisted world of couples therapy
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some dude/some chick
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Link #150091
submitted by johnny2000
on Mar 11, 2010 05:03am.
(+100XP)
http://www.salon.com/books/nonfiction/index.html?story=/books/featu...
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Marie and Clem, one of several couples in Laurie Abraham's "The Husbands and Wives Club," met sweetly in college; he arrived late for class, she admired his muscular physique. Before long it was parties, flowers and kisses.
But 20 years into their marriage, their relationship isn't going very well: Marie won't respond to Clem's sexual advances; Clem can't seem to tell her how he feels about anything; and when the two have a massage-focused couples therapy session, it ends with Marie rubbing Clem's shoulders with "tears streaming down her face and dripping onto his forehead." In the hopes of salvaging their marriage, the couple have signed up for an unconventional year-long group therapy program with psychotherapist Judith Coché, in which five couples talk openly about their marital problems in a group atmosphere.
Abraham's noteworthy book chronicles a year in the life of Coché's group, and follows the five couples as they undergo financial crises, struggles with impotence, accusations over porn use, and, in one case, a bisexual past. The result is a fascinating -- and at times infuriating -- book that captures the ways marriage, monogamy and psychotherapy can be both affirming and destructive.
Comments: 0
Hits: 47
Points: 205902
Vote Now!
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