No.159880[Reply]
The Chief Scientist Skibidi Toilet was the secondary antagonist of the Skibidi Toilet series and among the smartest Toilets introduced before his death. He served as the right-hand man of G-Toilet and a considerably close friend who achieved many technological breakthroughs throughout his experience in the scientific field, creating notable and significant inventions such as the Parasitic Skibidi Toilets and the Skibidi Mutants, something which would temporarily shift the tide of the war in favor of the Skibidi Toilets. In addition, he had been entrusted with retrofitting G-Toilet with the necessary upgrades to help counter the Astro Toilets' invasion.
The Chief Scientist Skibidi Toilet had played a pivotal role in the series as the forefront conductor of inventing revolutionary parasitic weapons, capable of infecting and possessing the influence of both the Cameramen and Speakermen. His parasitic production had consequently resulted in the Large Parasitic Skibidi Toilet maintaining long-term occupation of the Infected Titan Speakerman before it subsequently received additional vital upgrades supported by the Skibidi Toilets until the Titan was later disinfected. In addition, he also seemed to have played a huge role in outfitting the Toilets with various equipment and upgrades that were stolen from Alliance members, not even excluding the desecration of the hardware-heads' corpses to create Mutants and the forceful conversion of captured humans into more Toilets. Eventually, he met his fateful end in Episode 70, where he was brutally killed off by the combined efforts of Plungerman, Knife Speakerman, Polycephaly, and several other prominent Alliance members in Alpha Hills. It also appears that he may have worked with the Administrator, who led the Infiltration squad to his hideout after deciding he was no longer useful to his secret plans.
134 posts and 143 image replies omitted. Click reply to view. No.160044
You know what sucks about dying? The crash. Everything up till now. The brain damage, you guys, everything—it has made my life so much more real. I started thinking about all the things I was going to do. I'd never been more excited to be alive! All that hope… wasted.
Simon Jarrett was a Canadian literature and film enthusiast. He is the protagonist of SOMA.
All those simplistic minds we've run into. Just reviving a dead person doesn't seem to work that well. A robot body seems to make people a bit… unreliable. You are the best of both worlds. A sound mind in a sound body.
Simon Jarrett is a white-skinned Canadian man with brown eyes and brown hair. His height and weight is 198 cm (6′ 6″) and 82 kg (180 lb), and his blood type is AB.[1] We see Simon's face at two points in the game—once in an introductory flashback, and once in a photograph found in Simon's Apartment depicting him and Ashley Hall.
Prior to his brain injury, Simon enjoyed watching television and playing video games. He worked at a bookshop called The Grimoire with his friends Ashley and Jesse. He may not have appeared particularly health-conscious, with his apartment being primarily stocked with fast food; from left-over takeout to frozen dinner meals, but this may be a result of the crash, and he makes a comment that he'll buy something healthier on the way home from his scan appointment. His apartment was somewhat cluttered but not outright messy, and the clutter could again be excused with the crash.
Simon used to be very easygoing at the beginning of the game. He was only slightly subdued and cautious due to his injury, which caused him headaches and pain, and could make him pass out if he got too stressed. If his stress was prolonged, he ran the risk of dying due to the swelling of his brain and the resulting bleeding, so he tried his best to limit the stimuli he was exposed to. He refused to turn his television on, and did not seem to keep a radio in his
No.160045
Timothy Donald Cook (born November 1, 1960)[1] is an American business executive who is the current chief executive officer of Apple Inc. Cook had previously been the company's chief operating officer under its co-founder Steve Jobs.[2] Cook joined Apple in March 1998 as a senior vice president for worldwide operations, and then as executive vice president for worldwide sales and operations.[3] He was appointed chief executive on August 24, 2011 after Jobs, who was ill and died that October, resigned.[4] During his tenure as the chief executive, he has advocated for the political reform of international and domestic surveillance, cybersecurity, American manufacturing, and environmental preservation.
Since 2011 when he took over Apple, to 2020, Cook doubled the company's revenue and profit, and the company's market value increased from $348 billion to $1.9 trillion.[5] Cook is also on the boards of directors of Nike, Inc.[4] and the National Football Foundation;[6] he is a trustee of Duke University, his alma mater.[7] Outside of Apple, Cook engages in philanthropy; in March 2015 he said he planned to donate his fortune to charity.[8] In 2014, Cook became the first chief executive of a Fortune 500 company to publicly come out as gay.[9]
No.160047
The game takes place from the perspective of Paul von Schmidt, a young German veteran who returned from the trenches in France after the end of The Great War. Paul and his brother Johannes were raised by their crippled father Karl (who was a wartime contributor) and their worrisome mother Madelein, with Karl's father Lother living with them for a time. Lother was a former military general, and forced his corrupt views on the glories of military life on Karl during his upbringing and upon Paul before his death; this caused friction in the family, as Madelein was opposed to this, causing tension between her and Karl, and she rarely even acknowledged Paul due to fearing that he would become like his grandfather. Johannes was later rejected by Karl after the discovery that he had an illicit affair, and both were pressured into joining the war effort by him.
On the battlefield, Paul became a Lieutenant after Karl had some strings pulled, and Paul proved an incompetent leader as his immature and unrealistic views worsened the conditions for his company, leading many to starve. Later on, Johannes, realizing the futility of the war, shoots Paul in the foot to take him out of duty to keep him from being killed. During an attack, Johannes is heavily injured, losing his left arm and eye, with barbed wire tearing his face open as well; Paul guiltily leaves him behind in the chaos, and both are separately taken by French forces as POWs. After the war's end, both are sent back home, with Karl horrified by what he forced his sons into and the hysterical Madelein continuing to ignore Paul while in denial of Johannes' survival, seeing him as "cuckoo" that is hidden away in the attic and neglected; the scarred, traumatized Johannes becomes increasingly alien to Paul, who begins to develop a warped view of his family overall.