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Post by kevinharrell on Aug 24, 2015 4:55:34 GMT -5
Which spy is more macho? White Spy or Black Spy?
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Post by spandi on Aug 24, 2015 5:59:38 GMT -5
That's classified Top Secret.
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Post by geh3333 on Aug 24, 2015 21:38:53 GMT -5
That's racist !! If I answer I may be labeled !!
That was a joke .
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Post by SylvreKat on Aug 24, 2015 22:07:31 GMT -5
Hm. Seems to my fuzzy memory that WS was often depicted as having a meal while BS--oops, bad abbreviating, let's call his BSpy was plotting to bomb him.
But then, I always preferred BSpy's outfit to WSpy's.
Guess it's a draw for me. Again.
>'Kat
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Post by wheelbender6 on Aug 25, 2015 19:28:41 GMT -5
Supposedly, the black spy represents the KGB.
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Post by oldchopperguy on Aug 25, 2015 22:56:16 GMT -5
I'll go with the Black Spy...
I like his classic, round "anarchist's bomb" better than the White Spy's stick of Dynamite... LOL!
Just me... And, whew, those guys come from WAY back. I remember laughing at them in "MAD Magazine" when I was in grade-school in the sixties! Hey, remember "Alfred E. Newman"?
These guys were also ahead of their time in technique... They managed to blow up other guys (hopefully) without blowing themselves up in the process! Smart! HeHeHe...
Leo (What, ME worry?) in Texas
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Post by onewheeldrive on Aug 25, 2015 23:22:31 GMT -5
In the 80's we had a computer game on the Commodore 64 called Spy Vs Spy. I never could figure that game out since we had no instructions.
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Post by oldchopperguy on Aug 26, 2015 23:52:03 GMT -5
In the 80's we had a computer game on the Commodore 64 called Spy Vs Spy. I never could figure that game out since we had no instructions. With 64 Kilobytes of total memory, and no mouse, instructions would have used up the whole hard-drive... LOL! I guess you were expected to "wing it" sans instructions. Hey, THAT handicap never seems to bother our leaders in Washington...
I remember Lee Iacocca advertising for Commodore, saying he "ran the entire Chrysler company including the manufacturing of the vehicles from just one Commodore 64". Oh, YEAH... I'll BET... Nice trick... Wonder just how he did THAT...
I remember the old Commodore. On a good day, you MIGHT be able to print a few labels on your state-of-the-art tractor-feed printer. I still have a roll of that perforated paper left from my Commodore days... HeHeHe.
How times DO change!
Ride safe,
Leo
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Post by onewheeldrive on Sept 9, 2015 17:24:08 GMT -5
I was born in 1980 so it was a great computer to grow up on. We had a couple shoeboxes full of games-- and about half of them were copied from the original floppy disk to a blank. I'm guessing everyone and their brother was copying each others games back then. We (my dad) bought at least one shoebox full off someone-- lot's of copied disks in it. That's also the reason many games had no instructions, since the floppy disks were "loose" copies. Pre-internet days, lol, when everyone had to figure out things on their own or someone they knew. Most games today don't have instruction booklets in the case. It's all in-game or online.
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