I'll be honest, I totally
yelled at my computer screen at some point during that article.
And today I considered writing a post about racism in the South... which undoubtedly would have prompted
some yelling at the computer screen.
OMG I am so
yelling at the computer right now as I read this!
Old records playing, bamboo wind chimes, electro swing music, me singing (badly), Eddie
yelling at his computer games, lots of laughter.
They are virtually
yelling at their computer screens — «Just give me what I want!»
Yell at the computer screen as you pull up gmail — something disarming like, «I had pickles for breakfast, I will eat your form rejections for lunch!»
I can hear
you all yelling at your computer monitors right now, «You're living in the past!».
This is a cute gimmick that perfectly plays up the game's silly tone, though tapping a button ultimately proves to be far easier and more reliable than constantly
yelling at your computer screen like a rambunctious kid hopped up on cola.
Now I'm not trying to say that
yelling at your computer screen is an ineffective way to get your message heard; but sometimes it helps to be more proactive.
When I do work on a laptop, I'm usually on a train or busy office, so don't want to
yell at my computer to create a reminder to pick up more toilet roll on the way home.
Not exact matches
It would either involve two people in chairs
yelling at each other for a half - hour (something we haven't seen on TV yet), or it might be a camera trained on a guy looking up stats on a
computer for an hour.
Ah, «
yells at me and doesn't know how to use
computers.»
Beyond the poor editorial choices by the Wall Street Journal team who published this article, I wanted to reach through the
computer and
yell at this lady:
Nobody can
yell at you via the
computer screen.
For example, a mother may wish to call the child's therapist to testify that the child told the therapist that during visitation dad
yells, drinks, swears, watches pornography, has his paramour over past the child's bedtime, or any of the foregoing, and that therefore it is in the child's best interests that mom's request for supervised visitation, or request for terms of visitation (such as attendance
at AA, no cohabitation, or no inappropriate
computer viewing) be granted.