I have almost no unscheduled analog emissions after eating there.
Chipotle is great, and I too especially appreciate how they have integrated their systems with most open source online calendars, allowing one to schedule analog emissions at the time of burrito purchase.
Looks like it's just a bunch of non-modified keyboards (except for adding stickers) taking up X times a usual workspace. From the description it sounded like there was more to it. Maybe there's more info in the slashdotted and unreadable link, but overall seems like it's =[.
He's in Texas. He should have said it was an improved game clock for the next high school football game, they would have carried him out on their shoulders while cheering.
Hopefully they didn't use the code from their tech dispatch system- I don't want my car to give me a two hour window for a drive to the corner store, and then miss it anyway.
Second this. I bought a Note 4 three weeks ago for $77 (Sam's Club) after rebates/etc. I didn't wait for the Note 5 because of the lack of expandable memory and the non-removable battery, also why I didn't go with any of the other 'high end' phones.
In a worst case scenario, this would make all politicians of all parties at least minimally competent and decent human beings (again, at least minimally), would solve the national debt and at least one major societal issue...
However, one of those scenes is a very dramatic shot of the escalators stopping.
Go back and watch that scene again. I think it got cut out of the 4:3 version of the DVD, but you can briefly see that at the bottom of the escalators the terrorists had placed signs that read "NO WALKING UP ESCALATORS".
Seems to me that Google is calling the creationists themselves dinosaurs. In that sense the answer is correct, although a bit abstract for most people who would be doing this search.
It's used in fracking fluids - and also in a LOT of other places, like paints, sealants, cleaning products, et bloody cetera. The shocker would be if they didn't find the stuff.
It's used in many Simple Green products, a LOT of Rustoleum paints, and a lot of others. Minwax, Goo-Gone, Zep, Windex... the list is pretty long. And all it would take would be a home mechanic spilling a bottle of one of those products to get to that same parts-per-trillion levels in their own well water.
The paper suggests that the chemical may have come from a surface-level leak at a nearby well - and that they can't actually tie the chemical to the actual fracking chemicals used at that well.
You raise some good points, but also some further questions that would help validate or invalidate this study. Since this chemical is apparently ubiquitous, is it also found at similar levels in wells not located near fracking sites? Does the concentration vary with distance from fracking sites? Since fracking is relatively recent, is there any historical data on chemical concentrations in wells?
Note that (from TFA) "an unresolved complex mixture of organic compounds was identified" which included 2-Butoxyethanol, and that "Similar signatures were also observed in flowback from Marcellus Shale gas wells" which seems like a bit of a smoking gun. It is also implied that the reason they can't actually tie the chemical mixture to the specific well is that the operator is not making samples available.
Also from TFA is that the wells that were tested were chosen because they were 'foaming' from the chemicals. I doubt that the well foamed from the date of construction.
At the time of publishing, the chimps were unavailable for comment, though they could be observed engaging in their habitual poo-flinging and screeching.
Please review TFA. It was not the chimps flinging and screeching, it was their lawyers.
I have almost no unscheduled analog emissions after eating there.
Chipotle is great, and I too especially appreciate how they have integrated their systems with most open source online calendars, allowing one to schedule analog emissions at the time of burrito purchase.
Challenge accepted!
Looks like it's just a bunch of non-modified keyboards (except for adding stickers) taking up X times a usual workspace. From the description it sounded like there was more to it. Maybe there's more info in the slashdotted and unreadable link, but overall seems like it's =[.
He's in Texas. He should have said it was an improved game clock for the next high school football game, they would have carried him out on their shoulders while cheering.
Just like your college, Miami Beach is helping you (and/or your friends) avoid a burning sensation.
If your college were the first to offer free condoms it probably would have made the news.
the folks who believe Sunscreen actually causes cancer (chemicals in the lotion vs the sun's rays).
That only happens if you eat too much of it.
Hopefully they didn't use the code from their tech dispatch system- I don't want my car to give me a two hour window for a drive to the corner store, and then miss it anyway.
It was probably re-purposed from their "Solitairy-confinement" monitoring system.
Yes, that was only meant to indicate the upfront cost. For many similar phones that cost can be $200 - $300, in addition to paying the monthly fee.
Second this. I bought a Note 4 three weeks ago for $77 (Sam's Club) after rebates/etc. I didn't wait for the Note 5 because of the lack of expandable memory and the non-removable battery, also why I didn't go with any of the other 'high end' phones.
In a worst case scenario, this would make all politicians of all parties at least minimally competent and decent human beings (again, at least minimally), would solve the national debt and at least one major societal issue...
(waiting)....
(waiting).......
(waiting)...........
Oh well, it was worth a shot.
Hmm. Nothing for VS 2008 or 2012. The attitude must by cyclic.
Actually oranges are the first method listed for treatment of scurvy.
Based on what I've seen in this article, they would have to add this after or as a part of a course on Proctology.
However, one of those scenes is a very dramatic shot of the escalators stopping.
Go back and watch that scene again. I think it got cut out of the 4:3 version of the DVD, but you can briefly see that at the bottom of the escalators the terrorists had placed signs that read "NO WALKING UP ESCALATORS".
Not so funny anymore, is it?
If pushed hard enough, they'll create some foreign crisis to re-rally the people to cover the fact the government has no clothes.
Like claiming the South China Sea?
Near Earth Oligarchy?
Seems to me that Google is calling the creationists themselves dinosaurs. In that sense the answer is correct, although a bit abstract for most people who would be doing this search.
Is it an insult if it's true? And I doubt that you're the first to say that.
It's used in fracking fluids - and also in a LOT of other places, like paints, sealants, cleaning products, et bloody cetera. The shocker would be if they didn't find the stuff.
It's used in many Simple Green products, a LOT of Rustoleum paints, and a lot of others. Minwax, Goo-Gone, Zep, Windex... the list is pretty long. And all it would take would be a home mechanic spilling a bottle of one of those products to get to that same parts-per-trillion levels in their own well water.
The paper suggests that the chemical may have come from a surface-level leak at a nearby well - and that they can't actually tie the chemical to the actual fracking chemicals used at that well.
You raise some good points, but also some further questions that would help validate or invalidate this study. Since this chemical is apparently ubiquitous, is it also found at similar levels in wells not located near fracking sites? Does the concentration vary with distance from fracking sites? Since fracking is relatively recent, is there any historical data on chemical concentrations in wells?
Note that (from TFA) "an unresolved complex mixture of organic compounds was identified" which included 2-Butoxyethanol, and that "Similar signatures were also observed in flowback from Marcellus Shale gas wells" which seems like a bit of a smoking gun. It is also implied that the reason they can't actually tie the chemical mixture to the specific well is that the operator is not making samples available.
Also from TFA is that the wells that were tested were chosen because they were 'foaming' from the chemicals. I doubt that the well foamed from the date of construction.
How about "Does not exceed FDA Recommended Dietary Allowance for Radioactive Nuclear Waste"?
At the time of publishing, the chimps were unavailable for comment, though they could be observed engaging in their habitual poo-flinging and screeching.
Please review TFA. It was not the chimps flinging and screeching, it was their lawyers.
I have met several Dutch people in the US, and while all of them were very nice people, most of them were around average height.
Maybe they're just exporting the ones who don't meet their unstated height requirements?
That was somebody from Apple. They screwed up. They were going for your pancreas.
They were probably holding him wrong. I hear that can cause problems.
It's so bad today that people are actually asking for reposts...