Click me
Transcribed

The Evolution of Like

The Evolution of Like How mankind has shown appreciation brought to you by for things since the dawn of time. O cheers +2 te +2 +2 +2 +2 +2 10 3 8 ace pok 1 VERILY, 5 I like thee. (7 1 Birth of the like Darwin's Selective Likes 10 Future Likes Before language, Neanderthals expressed admiration through gesture. For example: Man builds fire. Man enjoys fire. Man tries to show appreciation for fire by touching it. Man burns his arm. Like "buttons"? With the latest technology in virtual cerebral plug-ins, humanoids can show appreciation for something with a mere thought. Once they've liked an object or person, it is permanently emblazoned with a virtual glow through their augmented reality vision. Darwin has a deep appreciation for Science. We have this man to thank for all those funny pictures of the evolution of man starting as an ape, walking, and then hunching over a computer. First record for most likes 6 Mass-Produced Likes According to the Book of Genesis and the Quran, Noah heard the voice of God telling him a huge storm was going to destroy everything. Noah showed the animals that he liked them taking two of each animal on a pleasure cruise that saved them from extinction. Ford liked carriages, and engines. After slapping the two together, he took over the world by selling automobiles and inventing the assembly line factory model. Elementary Likes Only a few years ago, kids expressed who they liked by picking them first for kickball. o cheers to... 3 Ancient Greece Likes Like a possessive boyfriend, Persians tried to show fondness for Greece in 480bc by invading it and claiming the land as their own. Their interest was thwarted by 300 Spartans, who had liked Greece first, and the Spartans brutally mutilated the Persian army. 8 Mark's Like Tin inapurung tel Mark Zuckerberg liked liking so much, he invented the Facebook "like" button, and became one of the richest nerds in the universe. Farhad Mohit 83,760 4 Shakespearian likes 9 Revolutionary Like Shakespeare appreciated the fine nuances of Elizabethan ladies. By this time mankind had evolved to use words to express feelings of admiration. Shakespeare expressed this admiration in 154 sonnets that people still like today. Just as the evolution of the amoeba is a continuous process, so does our expression of admiration change. So welcome to Cheers, the new mobile app for iPhone. Now you're not limited to liking things on Facebook. Liking things is so 2011 The Evolution of Like How mankind has shown appreciation brought to you by for things since the dawn of time. O cheers +2 te +2 +2 +2 +2 +2 10 3 8 ace pok 1 VERILY, 5 I like thee. (7 1 Birth of the like Darwin's Selective Likes 10 Future Likes Before language, Neanderthals expressed admiration through gesture. For example: Man builds fire. Man enjoys fire. Man tries to show appreciation for fire by touching it. Man burns his arm. Like "buttons"? With the latest technology in virtual cerebral plug-ins, humanoids can show appreciation for something with a mere thought. Once they've liked an object or person, it is permanently emblazoned with a virtual glow through their augmented reality vision. Darwin has a deep appreciation for Science. We have this man to thank for all those funny pictures of the evolution of man starting as an ape, walking, and then hunching over a computer. First record for most likes 6 Mass-Produced Likes According to the Book of Genesis and the Quran, Noah heard the voice of God telling him a huge storm was going to destroy everything. Noah showed the animals that he liked them taking two of each animal on a pleasure cruise that saved them from extinction. Ford liked carriages, and engines. After slapping the two together, he took over the world by selling automobiles and inventing the assembly line factory model. Elementary Likes Only a few years ago, kids expressed who they liked by picking them first for kickball. o cheers to... 3 Ancient Greece Likes Like a possessive boyfriend, Persians tried to show fondness for Greece in 480bc by invading it and claiming the land as their own. Their interest was thwarted by 300 Spartans, who had liked Greece first, and the Spartans brutally mutilated the Persian army. 8 Mark's Like Tin inapurung tel Mark Zuckerberg liked liking so much, he invented the Facebook "like" button, and became one of the richest nerds in the universe. Farhad Mohit 83,760 4 Shakespearian likes 9 Revolutionary Like Shakespeare appreciated the fine nuances of Elizabethan ladies. By this time mankind had evolved to use words to express feelings of admiration. Shakespeare expressed this admiration in 154 sonnets that people still like today. Just as the evolution of the amoeba is a continuous process, so does our expression of admiration change. So welcome to Cheers, the new mobile app for iPhone. Now you're not limited to liking things on Facebook. Liking things is so 2011 The Evolution of Like How mankind has shown appreciation brought to you by for things since the dawn of time. O cheers +2 te +2 +2 +2 +2 +2 10 3 8 ace pok 1 VERILY, 5 I like thee. (7 1 Birth of the like Darwin's Selective Likes 10 Future Likes Before language, Neanderthals expressed admiration through gesture. For example: Man builds fire. Man enjoys fire. Man tries to show appreciation for fire by touching it. Man burns his arm. Like "buttons"? With the latest technology in virtual cerebral plug-ins, humanoids can show appreciation for something with a mere thought. Once they've liked an object or person, it is permanently emblazoned with a virtual glow through their augmented reality vision. Darwin has a deep appreciation for Science. We have this man to thank for all those funny pictures of the evolution of man starting as an ape, walking, and then hunching over a computer. First record for most likes 6 Mass-Produced Likes According to the Book of Genesis and the Quran, Noah heard the voice of God telling him a huge storm was going to destroy everything. Noah showed the animals that he liked them taking two of each animal on a pleasure cruise that saved them from extinction. Ford liked carriages, and engines. After slapping the two together, he took over the world by selling automobiles and inventing the assembly line factory model. Elementary Likes Only a few years ago, kids expressed who they liked by picking them first for kickball. o cheers to... 3 Ancient Greece Likes Like a possessive boyfriend, Persians tried to show fondness for Greece in 480bc by invading it and claiming the land as their own. Their interest was thwarted by 300 Spartans, who had liked Greece first, and the Spartans brutally mutilated the Persian army. 8 Mark's Like Tin inapurung tel Mark Zuckerberg liked liking so much, he invented the Facebook "like" button, and became one of the richest nerds in the universe. Farhad Mohit 83,760 4 Shakespearian likes 9 Revolutionary Like Shakespeare appreciated the fine nuances of Elizabethan ladies. By this time mankind had evolved to use words to express feelings of admiration. Shakespeare expressed this admiration in 154 sonnets that people still like today. Just as the evolution of the amoeba is a continuous process, so does our expression of admiration change. So welcome to Cheers, the new mobile app for iPhone. Now you're not limited to liking things on Facebook. Liking things is so 2011

The Evolution of Like

shared by spacechimpmedia on Jul 10
575 views
1 shares
0 comments
How mankind has shown appreciation for things since the dawn of time. Just as the evolution of the amoeba is a continuous process, so does our expression of admiration change. So welcome to Cheers, th...

Source

Unknown. Add a source

Category

Social Media
Did you work on this visual? Claim credit!

Get a Quote

Embed Code

For hosted site:

Click the code to copy

For wordpress.com:

Click the code to copy
Customize size