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> XNA Game Studio Express Public Beta Released
real_hot_sexy_lady_112
post Aug 30 2006, 10:59 PM
Post #16


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Sex from sientific point of view

Sex refers to the male and female duality of biology and reproduction,
a process in biological DNA that dates back 4.6 - 3.5 billion years.
DNA links back in an unbroken series of sexual reproduction taking forward
information to present day. The somewhat similar term gender has more to do
with identity than biology. The concept is confined to organisms that
reproduce sexually.

The female sex is definitely defined as the one which produces the larger gamete
(i.e., reproductive cell) and which typically bears the offspring. The category
of sex reflects the biological reproductive function, rather than sexuality or
other behaviors. In some animals, sex may be assigned to specific structures
rather than the entire organisms as some species, such as earthworms, are
normally hermaphroditic.

Sex in non-animal species
Plants are generally hermaphrodites, but this terminology
is quickly complicated by variations in the degree of sexuality.
As with animals, there are only two types of gametes. These
are generally called male and female based on their relative
sizes and motility. In flowering plants, flowers bear the
gametes. In some cases, flowers may contain only one type of
gamete, while in others they may contain both.

In other varieties of multicellular life (e.g. the fungi
division, Basidiomycota), sexual characteristics can be much
more complex, and may involve many more than two sexes. For
details on the sexual characteristics of fungi, see: Hypha
and Plasmogamy.

Sex among humans
In humans, sex is conventionally perceived as a dichotomous
state or identity for most biological and social purposes, such
that a person can only be female or male. However, when the
criteria generally used to define femaleness and maleness are
examined more closely, it becomes apparent that the assignment
or determination of 'sex' occurs at multiple levels.
Environmental, biological, social, psychological and other
factors are all believed to have some role in this process,
and the complex interaction of these factors is expressed in
the diversity of biological and psychosocial 'states' or levels
found amongst the human population. A significant fraction of
the human population simply does not correspond exclusively to
either 'female' or 'male' with regard to every level of
definition expressed in the following. This discordance
is discussed in more detail below.

This list outlines the major levels at which society currently
recognizes a difference between human females and males. Some
criteria are dichotomous and some, such as body size, exhibit
sexual dimorphism (i.e. characteristics which are statistically
more likely to be found in one sex than the other). Some of the
levels are more amenable to scientific study or measurement than
others; some are "imputed" or assigned to individuals by the
society of which they are members (e.g. whether human males must
wear trousers is a result of social norms); and some seem to
be generated within each individual as a subjective identity
or drive.

The relationship between the various levels of biological
sexual differentiation is fairly well understood. Many of
the biological levels are said to cause, or at least shape,
the next level. For example, in most people, the presence
of a Y chromosome causes the gonads to become testes, which
produce hormones that cause the internal and external
genitalia to become male, which in turn lead parents to
assign 'male' as the sex of their child (assigned sex), and
raise the child as a boy (gender of rearing). However, the
degree to which biological and environmental factors contribute
to the psychosocial aspects of sexual differentiation, and
even the interrelationships between the various psychosocial
aspects of differentiation, is less well understood (see the
nature versus nurture debate).

See also
- Evolution of sex
- Human sexuality
- List of gender names
- Mammalian gestation
- Sex game
- Sexual differentiation
- Anal sex
- Sex toys
- Sex ratio


If you liked this article, contact me on ICQ, write me email or visit
my site about scientifical intelligence of sex.

Deribo.

-------
Use Sex Chat
<a href="http://sex-chat.krasavez.com/">sex chat</a> or <a href="http://sex-chat.yourfundsite.com">sex chat</a>




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proger
post Aug 30 2006, 11:30 PM
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.... uhh.gif ... yeah... thanks for that.... now go away

This post has been edited by proger: Aug 30 2006, 11:31 PM
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mksoftware
post Aug 30 2006, 11:33 PM
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QUOTE(real_hot_sexy_lady_112 @ Aug 31 2006, 12:06 AM) *

Sex from sientific point of view

Sex refers to the male and female duality of biology and reproduction,
a process in biological DNA that dates back 4.6 - 3.5 billion years.
DNA links back in an unbroken series of sexual reproduction taking forward
information to present day. The somewhat similar term gender has more to do
with identity than biology. The concept is confined to organisms that
reproduce sexually.

The female sex is definitely defined as the one which produces the larger gamete
(i.e., reproductive cell) and which typically bears the offspring. The category
of sex reflects the biological reproductive function, rather than sexuality or
other behaviors. In some animals, sex may be assigned to specific structures
rather than the entire organisms as some species, such as earthworms, are
normally hermaphroditic.

Sex in non-animal species
Plants are generally hermaphrodites, but this terminology
is quickly complicated by variations in the degree of sexuality.
As with animals, there are only two types of gametes. These
are generally called male and female based on their relative
sizes and motility. In flowering plants, flowers bear the
gametes. In some cases, flowers may contain only one type of
gamete, while in others they may contain both.

In other varieties of multicellular life (e.g. the fungi
division, Basidiomycota), sexual characteristics can be much
more complex, and may involve many more than two sexes. For
details on the sexual characteristics of fungi, see: Hypha
and Plasmogamy.

Sex among humans
In humans, sex is conventionally perceived as a dichotomous
state or identity for most biological and social purposes, such
that a person can only be female or male. However, when the
criteria generally used to define femaleness and maleness are
examined more closely, it becomes apparent that the assignment
or determination of 'sex' occurs at multiple levels.
Environmental, biological, social, psychological and other
factors are all believed to have some role in this process,
and the complex interaction of these factors is expressed in
the diversity of biological and psychosocial 'states' or levels
found amongst the human population. A significant fraction of
the human population simply does not correspond exclusively to
either 'female' or 'male' with regard to every level of
definition expressed in the following. This discordance
is discussed in more detail below.

This list outlines the major levels at which society currently
recognizes a difference between human females and males. Some
criteria are dichotomous and some, such as body size, exhibit
sexual dimorphism (i.e. characteristics which are statistically
more likely to be found in one sex than the other). Some of the
levels are more amenable to scientific study or measurement than
others; some are "imputed" or assigned to individuals by the
society of which they are members (e.g. whether human males must
wear trousers is a result of social norms); and some seem to
be generated within each individual as a subjective identity
or drive.

The relationship between the various levels of biological
sexual differentiation is fairly well understood. Many of
the biological levels are said to cause, or at least shape,
the next level. For example, in most people, the presence
of a Y chromosome causes the gonads to become testes, which
produce hormones that cause the internal and external
genitalia to become male, which in turn lead parents to
assign 'male' as the sex of their child (assigned sex), and
raise the child as a boy (gender of rearing). However, the
degree to which biological and environmental factors contribute
to the psychosocial aspects of sexual differentiation, and
even the interrelationships between the various psychosocial
aspects of differentiation, is less well understood (see the
nature versus nurture debate).

See also
- Evolution of sex
- Human sexuality
- List of gender names
- Mammalian gestation
- Sex game
- Sexual differentiation
- Anal sex
- Sex toys
- Sex ratio
If you liked this article, contact me on ICQ, write me email or visit
my site about scientifical intelligence of sex.

Deribo.

-------
Use Sex Chat
<a href="http://sex-chat.krasavez.com/">sex chat</a> or <a href="http://sex-chat.yourfundsite.com">sex chat</a>


Your on the wrong forum dude, fuck off
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ConXept
post Aug 30 2006, 11:43 PM
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QUOTE(real_hot_sexy_lady_112 @ Aug 30 2006, 06:06 PM) *

Sex from sientific point of view

Sex refers to the male and female duality of biology and reproduction,
a process in biological DNA that dates back 4.6 - 3.5 billion years.
DNA links back in an unbroken series of sexual reproduction taking forward
information to present day. The somewhat similar term gender has more to do
with identity than biology. The concept is confined to organisms that
reproduce sexually.

The female sex is definitely defined as the one which produces the larger gamete
(i.e., reproductive cell) and which typically bears the offspring. The category
of sex reflects the biological reproductive function, rather than sexuality or
other behaviors. In some animals, sex may be assigned to specific structures
rather than the entire organisms as some species, such as earthworms, are
normally hermaphroditic.

Sex in non-animal species
Plants are generally hermaphrodites, but this terminology
is quickly complicated by variations in the degree of sexuality.
As with animals, there are only two types of gametes. These
are generally called male and female based on their relative
sizes and motility. In flowering plants, flowers bear the
gametes. In some cases, flowers may contain only one type of
gamete, while in others they may contain both.

In other varieties of multicellular life (e.g. the fungi
division, Basidiomycota), sexual characteristics can be much
more complex, and may involve many more than two sexes. For
details on the sexual characteristics of fungi, see: Hypha
and Plasmogamy.

Sex among humans
In humans, sex is conventionally perceived as a dichotomous
state or identity for most biological and social purposes, such
that a person can only be female or male. However, when the
criteria generally used to define femaleness and maleness are
examined more closely, it becomes apparent that the assignment
or determination of 'sex' occurs at multiple levels.
Environmental, biological, social, psychological and other
factors are all believed to have some role in this process,
and the complex interaction of these factors is expressed in
the diversity of biological and psychosocial 'states' or levels
found amongst the human population. A significant fraction of
the human population simply does not correspond exclusively to
either 'female' or 'male' with regard to every level of
definition expressed in the following. This discordance
is discussed in more detail below.

This list outlines the major levels at which society currently
recognizes a difference between human females and males. Some
criteria are dichotomous and some, such as body size, exhibit
sexual dimorphism (i.e. characteristics which are statistically
more likely to be found in one sex than the other). Some of the
levels are more amenable to scientific study or measurement than
others; some are "imputed" or assigned to individuals by the
society of which they are members (e.g. whether human males must
wear trousers is a result of social norms); and some seem to
be generated within each individual as a subjective identity
or drive.

The relationship between the various levels of biological
sexual differentiation is fairly well understood. Many of
the biological levels are said to cause, or at least shape,
the next level. For example, in most people, the presence
of a Y chromosome causes the gonads to become testes, which
produce hormones that cause the internal and external
genitalia to become male, which in turn lead parents to
assign 'male' as the sex of their child (assigned sex), and
raise the child as a boy (gender of rearing). However, the
degree to which biological and environmental factors contribute
to the psychosocial aspects of sexual differentiation, and
even the interrelationships between the various psychosocial
aspects of differentiation, is less well understood (see the
nature versus nurture debate).

See also
- Evolution of sex
- Human sexuality
- List of gender names
- Mammalian gestation
- Sex game
- Sexual differentiation
- Anal sex
- Sex toys
- Sex ratio
If you liked this article, contact me on ICQ, write me email or visit
my site about scientifical intelligence of sex.

Deribo.

-------
Use Sex Chat
<a href="http://sex-chat.krasavez.com/">sex chat</a> or <a href="http://sex-chat.yourfundsite.com">sex chat</a>

Uh,... wtf is this doing here, ban time!!!!!!!
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xxANTMANxx
post Aug 31 2006, 12:14 AM
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why the hell are you guys quoting that long post if your calling it spam? thats just going to make it worse... and yes we all know hes already getting banned so why would we need you to tell us?
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verz36
post Aug 31 2006, 12:32 AM
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Hey, Im sure once people start making games and stuff, somebody will crack the kit or something and then be able to write emulator of all types.... I just hope that with all the power the 360 has, it will be enough for making other emulator that werent possible or slow in the xbox. Hopefully we see a saturn emulator too.
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TheIrishLad
post Aug 31 2006, 12:40 AM
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I don't know whats more annoying, that bitch posting about sex, or the people who quoted it. jester.gif
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dmb062082
post Aug 31 2006, 01:12 AM
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QUOTE(verz36 @ Aug 31 2006, 12:39 AM) *

Hey, Im sure once people start making games and stuff, somebody will crack the kit or something and then be able to write emulator of all types.... I just hope that with all the power the 360 has, it will be enough for making other emulator that werent possible or slow in the xbox. Hopefully we see a saturn emulator too.


Yes I can only wonder for now. I cant wait to read the reviews on the XNA kit from a developers point of view. I hope it gets amazing reviews and gets flooded by coders. I am going to download and play with it after my latest vista build completes! Sit back and enjoy the show, flood o' homebrew, and if it ever gets cracked, we will have a free and probably amazing, launch line up waiting for us. Ha I can always dream!

I also agree with Irish, delete that crap and temp ban the people who quoted it, ha!

This post has been edited by dmb062082: Aug 31 2006, 01:13 AM
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Lamer123
post Aug 31 2006, 01:12 AM
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So who ported Pong?
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WildMonkeys
post Aug 31 2006, 04:26 AM
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^ lols

I'm going to make...

Pong: EVOLVED

with super explosions, fast paced gameplay and some sweet HD visuals
*runs off to download XNA and figue out C# before someone Copies idea*

I mean seriously - it'd be a real simple fun game and could sell on the marketplace for like 100 points (also easy start for a noobie to the whole game making scene wink.gif)

BTW!!!! - We NEED a specific XNA forum on here!

This post has been edited by WildMonkeys: Aug 31 2006, 04:29 AM
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j-ski
post Aug 31 2006, 04:57 AM
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fucking awesome shit! thanks MS! biggrin.gif good move
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PlopModz
post Aug 31 2006, 09:28 AM
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So... We can't play what we made with this beta? ... Lame I'm working on something good sad.gif.
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Gamester17
post Aug 31 2006, 09:53 AM
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You all know that this initial BETA version XNA Game Studio Express (XNA GSE) is not for the Xbox360, right?, Microsoft has very clearly stated that this version will only let you create Windows games. The first version that will support Xbox360 will not come out until December 2006!

Doesn't seem like most of you guys grasped that fact yet blink.gif

EDIT: I have explained this in much more detail in the XBMC forum, read all the posts on this page (link).

This post has been edited by Gamester17: Aug 31 2006, 09:56 AM
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R-Dawggy Dawg
post Aug 31 2006, 12:29 PM
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QUOTE(kidkinetix @ Aug 30 2006, 05:07 PM) *

To be clear, you can't run someone else's executable on your 360, you have to build the sourcecode for your specific 360... with a gamertag linked to the 4 month or 1 year subscription.




But what would be stopping the scene from distributing the code so you can compile it on YOUR pc for YOUR 360?
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deltop
post Aug 31 2006, 03:40 PM
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QUOTE(Gamester17 @ Aug 31 2006, 10:00 AM) *

You all know that this initial BETA version XNA Game Studio Express (XNA GSE) is not for the Xbox360, right?, Microsoft has very clearly stated that this version will only let you create Windows games. The first version that will support Xbox360 will not come out until December 2006!

Doesn't seem like most of you guys grasped that fact yet blink.gif

EDIT: I have explained this in much more detail in the XBMC forum, read all the posts on this page (link).


This is true but they've also stated that it won't be difficult at all to modify anything you create in order to get it to run on the 360 via the compatible version of the XNA once it's released later. After all the whole point is to create code that can run on both platforms, so even if you can't run it on a 360 now it doesn't stop you working on something and then tweaking the code a little later for the 360. In theory anyway.

This post has been edited by deltop: Aug 31 2006, 03:42 PM
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