Q: I saw that on TV last night and I find it quite good. although it may look too good to be true but i just wanna know what you think or how do you find it. thank you very much for your help
A: looks like polarized sunglasses to me. nice gimmick adding melanin, but if you're going to spend that much on sunglasses you might as well go to a "sunglasses hut" at your local mall. make sure the lenses are polycarbonate and any coatings include
Does anyone know what the 70s CD is called that was showcased as one of those "this offer is not in stores" kind of pitch? There were songs like White Room, Spirit in the Sky, Turn Turn Turn, Signs, etc. It was kind of a flower power oriented

Forget everything you thought you knew about sight. A lion-hearted statement, yes, but one you’ll do well to remember should you choose to make the same life-changing decision I recently plunged eyeball-first into. HD (or high-definition to those of you who spent the last decade or so in a Siberian cave) is a term that gets tossed around a lot lately, what with your high-def TVs, laptops, camcorders, and flannel-lined long underwear. And while only one of those items can be found in the holiday edition of an L.L. Bean catalog, the rest often fall short when it comes to the visual quality you expect after plunking down $500-plus for the latest cutting-edge technology.
Enter the HD Vision Ultra Sunglasses . Brought to you by the good people we’ve all seen on TV, these slick shades claim to employ their patented “HD-400 Glare-Slab Technology—a selective light filtering technology that allows only the [sun]rays that focus clearly to get through.” What does this mean for you? The greatest damn sight you’ve ever seen, that’s what. And since these can be found for just $9.99 at any local Walgreens or CVS, you’re right to be initially skeptical. However, here at LAPTOP we take every type of definition quite seriously, so my editor in chief felt it necessary to send me into the field to put these so-called HD specs to the test.
...is it because there not as good as they say they are.........if your not good at bluffing then lol im beat then you. I dont need um
Examples:
I would love to see Horatio Cain(CSI: Miami) guest star on House M.D. as Horatio. So he is taken to the hospital ER and Cameron tells House she a case for him. Of course he is skeptical until Cameron tells him, the patient lacks
|
Computer-Enabled Eyewear: Vergence Labs Prototype Allows Wearers To Record ... The Ray-Ban-style glasses have the capacity to capture first-person audio and video and can also share what the wearer is seeing with his social networks through a website of Vergence Labs' own creation, YouGen.Tv. Check out how the spectacles work in |
|
Clouds don't cover eclipse enthusiasm 11, 1999' on them,” said Cook of the glasses presented to her, before she passed them along to Hagan, who had learned about Sunday's impending eclipse only a few hours earlier. “I've never seen a solar eclipse before,” said an excited Hagan. |
|
Kourtney Kardashian Flaunts Big Baby Bump During Family Lunch with Scott ... On Thursday, the 33-year-old reality TV star was seen flaunting her big mollycoddle belly as she stepped out for a family lunch. Joined by beau Scott Disick, 28, and their son Mason, 2, Kourt looked super stylish in a nude-colored summer dress as she |