To: benwood who wrote (51151 ) 1/24/2006 1:23:40 PM From: shades Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 110194 Bad science is everywhere - I read this guys site to clear up the textbooks sometimes - amasci.com My physicist friends have other sites they like to visit too for exchanging ides and knowledge.Or as you fade away under anethesia, listen to your surgeon bellow, "Damn, my wi-fi won't connect! Now what am I supposed to do?" Hehe thats pretty funny.SI? Today I learned that charts never lie. However, with so many charts out there telling the truth, how is it that so many chartists get it wrong. Guess they need cochlear implants. Chartists didn't count on professionally schooled crooks doing what they do best - hehe.Anyway, your statement holds no water. My point was that the internet is revolutionizing education - my old CS professor was attempting to get satellite education all over the state of GA - they would send the feed over a satellite and classes all over could watch - today in Tampa they pump USF courses over the local PBS channel over the air and through the cable - channel 16 I believe. You take the class watching TV and turn in your homework over email. No need to congregate a bunch of molecules in one place. Encyclopedia's were great repositories of *accurate* information, you somehow, just having them in the library didn't seem to do the trick to allow you to become a doctor, engineer, lawyer. Or plumber or car assembly worker or other such stuff. There were actually good lawyers who emerged from a professorless prison, but in real life, do you know a professional who is/was self taught? I can download richard feynmans classes on physics - I can watch them - learn from them - rewatch them as often as I like - and be just as educated as most physicists out there. Do you think it is essential to go to a building somewhere and watch richard feynman to learn from him?