Talk:MAIKA/@comment-66.87.112.83-20131130085943/@comment-66.87.68.223-20131130225219

The person at the top never meant that Bruno and Clara were on discs. I'm sorry to drop this on you, but it seems that you misinterpreted the question (time for a little grammar lesson!). See the comma between "discs" and "like"? It's there to separate them. If the person means that they were on physical discs, he/she would have not inserted the comma: "...rather than physical discs like Bruno and Clara?" Not: "...rather than physical discs, like Bruno and Clara?" Although it would have been better if he/she have had included a period instead; It's little things like this that can change the whole meaning of a sentence. I hope you all learned a little something today and I apologize for having to point out this little issue with a long and wordy explaination which is irrelevant to the topic (MAIKA and ONA).