My wedding cost about $400. $60 of that was the dress I got off the clearance rack. We did JOP and had only family for the ceremony, and followed up with a reception at a favorite Italian that my father in law paid for. (My parents didn't live to see me get married... curse of the youngest child.)
Two of my older sisters had their fairy tail weddings with expensive dresses, catered receptions, and many more guests. Both of them ended in divorce two years later. Husband and I just hit year five.... I think we're the winners here.
I think it's the difference between a $20,000 wedding and a $200,0000 celebrity wedding. You can have 200 people for that 20K price if you are frugal. Whereas if you're blowing $200K on a wedding, there is no frugality involved, regardless of the number of people.
In another report I read on this topic, the lead research said he wanted opaque pills but they needed something that could survive the stomach and make it to the long intestines. Those thicker capsules only came in clear. The freezing process lightens the contents and also puts some frost on the outside to make it less obvious...
TFA says healthy volunteers. The big improvement of this method is that they can "donate" just once, have their donation frozen, and then have it.... used over the course of a few months. The previous method required a healthy donor the day of the transplant, usually a relative of the recipient.
As someone pointed out a couple weeks ago in a Win8 thread, today's PCs are now so powerful that even Windows can't slow them down. Now that's impressive!
Well, it was written at a time when the only organizations big enough to terrorize individuals were the governments. Big corporations are a relatively new bully - at the time the only ones that existed were the big trading companies, and 95% of the landowners who wrote the Constitution never had any dealings with them.
Nope, stayed well away from that. But I've done tech support for hospitals. The doctors were brilliant people who couldn't figure out how to send an email. But they had great bedside manner!
Yeah, med school is one of those places where they WILL reject you for being too much of a smarty pants. They accept based on attitude. They want someone who will have a good patient relationship and not come across as aloof and superior. They want someone who is NOT completely sure of themselves... who will harbor doubts and triple check everything as a result.
That's what I'm suspecting. I'm on a year old power rig using Windows 8.1, and I haven't noticed any slowdown at all yet. Usually about a year out is when I start debating whether I should reinstall Windows. Haven't felt the need yet at all.
I RTFA. They didn't go into specifics, but it seems to have been cheap WiFi point communications coupled with thermal sensors. So if a machine was running hotter than expected, they could stop that line and fix the problem before it broke completely and took that line down for a few days. So the "savings" could be what the cost of that line going down previously had been. Or something.
Haven't tried ArchAge myself. Heard mixed things about it from my friends who have. I may look into it, but I don't think it's going to scratch my particular itches.
As for sub fees, the MMO demographic is aging, and for myself and my friends, $12 a month to not have to deal with broke teenagers and buy to win whales is great.
The salt actually modulates the bitterness if you use enough. If roasted for a longer time, the outside becomes very dry (like a kale chip) and disintegrates quickly.
My mother's method of preparation involved boiling them for thirty minutes, and the resulting stench and bitter taste turned me off them for two decades.
Lightly coat in olive oil. Lightly toss in sea salt (or Jane's Mixed Up Salt, if you're in the south.) Roast at 350F for one hour. They come out salty and crispy on the outside, and tender and sweet on the inside. Consume that day as they don't keep very well. But they're so delicious it shouldn't be a problem!
Well, TESO is already turning into a ghost town so that clearly wasn't what the market wanted, but I have friends still enjoying Wildstar, and I myself am still finding stuff to do in XIV ARR. (Two million subscribers is a lot to say have poor taste.) Destiny is too new to know how much staying power it'll have just yet.
That's actually a good suggestion. Also if the PhD required a lot of quantitative analysis, that is something to emphasize. Financial companies LOVE quants with PhDs since they're the guys who dream up crazy things like derivatives and default swaps.
"I got married" is becoming and more and more acceptable response for guys, but that's what a lot of women have used over the years. "Got married, did the housewife/househusband thing, realized I missed working and it was a mistake/kids grew up/learned I could not have kids / etc. " Six years is a bit of a stretch for no kids, but if you have a child approaching school age it makes perfect sense.
I don't think any game they're making that killed it. I think the MMO environment and landscape killed it. We had three high profile MMO releases in the last year + change (XIV ARR, TESO, and Wildstar) as well as Destiny. There comes a point where you look at what you've been doing, and compare it with what other people are doing, and you have to ask yourself if it's really going to be worth it in the end. Blizzard recognized that their ideas weren't gelling compared to what the current markets want, and made the correct call to can it for now. Is there anything sadder than a dead MMO?
There's also a lot of old and outdated information that can be refreshed/verified. During my freshman year astronomy class in college, we got some telescope time and we were calculating out binary variable stars to confirm that what was measured 50 years ago was still accurate. Ours turned into a paper for our professor when our binary star turned out to have a third star in there, causing faint fluctuations that our modern CCD camera could catch, but the older technology had not been able to detect.
Thanks for that link. It is a bit better for sure.
My wedding cost about $400. $60 of that was the dress I got off the clearance rack. We did JOP and had only family for the ceremony, and followed up with a reception at a favorite Italian that my father in law paid for. (My parents didn't live to see me get married... curse of the youngest child.)
Two of my older sisters had their fairy tail weddings with expensive dresses, catered receptions, and many more guests. Both of them ended in divorce two years later. Husband and I just hit year five.... I think we're the winners here.
I think it's the difference between a $20,000 wedding and a $200,0000 celebrity wedding. You can have 200 people for that 20K price if you are frugal. Whereas if you're blowing $200K on a wedding, there is no frugality involved, regardless of the number of people.
In another report I read on this topic, the lead research said he wanted opaque pills but they needed something that could survive the stomach and make it to the long intestines. Those thicker capsules only came in clear. The freezing process lightens the contents and also puts some frost on the outside to make it less obvious...
TFA says healthy volunteers. The big improvement of this method is that they can "donate" just once, have their donation frozen, and then have it .... used over the course of a few months. The previous method required a healthy donor the day of the transplant, usually a relative of the recipient.
I'd say yes - yes it would. Fire insurance would cover it anyway.
As someone pointed out a couple weeks ago in a Win8 thread, today's PCs are now so powerful that even Windows can't slow them down. Now that's impressive!
Well, it was written at a time when the only organizations big enough to terrorize individuals were the governments. Big corporations are a relatively new bully - at the time the only ones that existed were the big trading companies, and 95% of the landowners who wrote the Constitution never had any dealings with them.
Nope, stayed well away from that. But I've done tech support for hospitals. The doctors were brilliant people who couldn't figure out how to send an email. But they had great bedside manner!
Yeah, med school is one of those places where they WILL reject you for being too much of a smarty pants. They accept based on attitude. They want someone who will have a good patient relationship and not come across as aloof and superior. They want someone who is NOT completely sure of themselves... who will harbor doubts and triple check everything as a result.
That's when you go and scored 1400+ on the SAT just to prove that a few Cs aren't your total sum worth as a student.
The string of successful Internet apps started by college dropouts says otherwise.
That's what I'm suspecting. I'm on a year old power rig using Windows 8.1, and I haven't noticed any slowdown at all yet. Usually about a year out is when I start debating whether I should reinstall Windows. Haven't felt the need yet at all.
I RTFA. They didn't go into specifics, but it seems to have been cheap WiFi point communications coupled with thermal sensors. So if a machine was running hotter than expected, they could stop that line and fix the problem before it broke completely and took that line down for a few days. So the "savings" could be what the cost of that line going down previously had been. Or something.
I have my most common applications pinned to task bar. I ended up pinning more after Win8 became a thing.
Haven't tried ArchAge myself. Heard mixed things about it from my friends who have. I may look into it, but I don't think it's going to scratch my particular itches.
As for sub fees, the MMO demographic is aging, and for myself and my friends, $12 a month to not have to deal with broke teenagers and buy to win whales is great.
No, I only cut off any chunks of stem. I may occasionally remove the outer leaves if they are ratty looking. But I roast mine whole.
The salt actually modulates the bitterness if you use enough. If roasted for a longer time, the outside becomes very dry (like a kale chip) and disintegrates quickly.
My mother's method of preparation involved boiling them for thirty minutes, and the resulting stench and bitter taste turned me off them for two decades.
One hour for me. I want the outside to be crunchy.
Lightly coat in olive oil. Lightly toss in sea salt (or Jane's Mixed Up Salt, if you're in the south.) Roast at 350F for one hour. They come out salty and crispy on the outside, and tender and sweet on the inside. Consume that day as they don't keep very well. But they're so delicious it shouldn't be a problem!
Well, TESO is already turning into a ghost town so that clearly wasn't what the market wanted, but I have friends still enjoying Wildstar, and I myself am still finding stuff to do in XIV ARR. (Two million subscribers is a lot to say have poor taste.) Destiny is too new to know how much staying power it'll have just yet.
That's actually a good suggestion. Also if the PhD required a lot of quantitative analysis, that is something to emphasize. Financial companies LOVE quants with PhDs since they're the guys who dream up crazy things like derivatives and default swaps.
"I got married" is becoming and more and more acceptable response for guys, but that's what a lot of women have used over the years. "Got married, did the housewife/househusband thing, realized I missed working and it was a mistake/kids grew up /learned I could not have kids / etc. " Six years is a bit of a stretch for no kids, but if you have a child approaching school age it makes perfect sense.
I don't think any game they're making that killed it. I think the MMO environment and landscape killed it. We had three high profile MMO releases in the last year + change (XIV ARR, TESO, and Wildstar) as well as Destiny. There comes a point where you look at what you've been doing, and compare it with what other people are doing, and you have to ask yourself if it's really going to be worth it in the end. Blizzard recognized that their ideas weren't gelling compared to what the current markets want, and made the correct call to can it for now. Is there anything sadder than a dead MMO?
There's also a lot of old and outdated information that can be refreshed/verified. During my freshman year astronomy class in college, we got some telescope time and we were calculating out binary variable stars to confirm that what was measured 50 years ago was still accurate. Ours turned into a paper for our professor when our binary star turned out to have a third star in there, causing faint fluctuations that our modern CCD camera could catch, but the older technology had not been able to detect.