Dextromethorphan works quite well on me, although I have to exceed the dosage suggestion by a considerable margin. It is safe to take quite a bit of it, I find the side effects distracting from having a cold.
OK you are correct. Allow me to be more specific. I'm not supporting all the stupid advertising that has been invented within the last 100 years such as radio, television, internets, bus benches, skywriting, ad infinitum. I sort of like costco for various reasons, but when I shop there I'm often forced to buy a name brand that advertises and it gives me an icky feeling.
I use the fearless flyer to start fires as well btw.
One of my favorite stores has been doing this since before I was born. TJ's doesn't have many choices, but they tend to have stuff I like. They only have a single choice for many many items. It is generally a good price, good quality, and not a major brand.
I really like it because I am not supporting all the stupid advertising, it saves me money, and I get to eat good stuff without wasting brain power on picking out which goddamn brand of peanut butter is least idiotic.
Nashville is OK, I like the history, architecture, how lush and green it is. The people can be fairly awful, and the climate is hellish. There aren't any good mountains or ocean nearby. I am OK visiting nashville on occasion but living there would be a dealbreaker for me. I'd rather spend 10x to live somewhere nice. Apparently lots of other people feel the same way which is great for you, keeps your housing prices low.
I live in Silicon Valley currently. I moved here for work, expecting to hate it but goddamn if I didn't fall in love with the place. It's just so frickin awesome here. The only problem is that because it is so great there are too many people. Assholes like me keep moving here!
I rent a room for $600/mo, bike to work year round along a creek, and go sailing all the time. I only work 40 hours a week and make a decent living. Low pay for the area I suppose but I need to enjoy my life.
Micro apartments are a great idea, but nearly all zoning regimes explicitly ban them. There was a wave of anti-hobo legislation in the 30s that is still largely on the books. Lots of people were running boarding houses in converted homes - say 5 bedrooms and 1 shared bath, 2 people per room. It affordably housed people but established interests didn't want poor unskilled people living in their cities so zoning banned this type of housing.
You'll see various approaches in zoning laws, but check your local town regulations and be amazed. Typical is requiring a certain amount of square feet, bathroom/kitchen requirements, and minimum length lease terms.
Just about every town zoning makes things like airbnb, or doing a vacation rental, explicitly against zoning laws. I'd sure like to see these things done away with, but you'll never be able to overcome the inertia.
I'm so confused. I like to barbecue on my grill, or a hibachi at my girlfriends house. I use hardwood briquets exclusively because they make my food taste magical. It takes about 30 mins to cook corn or these nice sausages from the butcher, less than that for fish or asparagus. I cover things so they come out tasting quite smoky.
What am I allowed to call this? I'm scared to think about it too much, what I do now is fun, comes naturally, and tastes super amazing.
Strangely I can't find much recently about his politics. According to this he is a libertarian who supports gay marriage, gives primarily to Democrats but not exclusively, and his PAC supports both parties.
What do you eat? I have started getting gout and it is maddening. Just about everything I like is high in purines, and I can't find any good alternatives. Fish, Beans, Mushrooms, everything I can think of.
I started donating blood which has eliminated flareups...for now!
I've no idea, even the internets aren't sure. My east coast friend says the term goes back to the 80s if not earlier. White Castle made these little nasty addictive burgers that were cooked on a grill without flipping, just put the onions and meat on the grill, top with the bun to seal in the damp grease, and slide them along until they are done. The world's saddest assembly line. They sold "sliders" 5 for a dollar or something like that.
You couldn't be wronger. Things will be so different when you are staring at your mugger, saying "John Lastname, please think this over again. It's been nearly a year since your last violent crime. Do you really want to go back to jail? You have been out for only a week! Lets talk it over calmly, maybe I can help you figure out a way to make ends meet without harming anyone else."
It has a lot of potential! I think "difficult" patrons would act differently if their poor behavior were visible to others. A server could know at a glance that this table won't tip and will send things back repeatedly. Bad enough patrons could be denied service entirely, or required to pay and tip in advance.
Sliders are little round sandwiches, typically hamburger. Deli sliders have something such as lunchmeat, chicken salad, etc. Sliders were trendy in the 90s and 00s in the US, apparently they have trickled down into school cafeterias now.
I wonder if polenta and goat cheese have made the transition as well?
You're being stupid. Most people in France have jobs and do chores. Nobody pays thousands of Euros and uses up their vacation time to travel to France to do regular life stuff. They want to do vacation stuff that is only available in France.
Visit the Louvre, see the Eiffel Tower, eat at a secretly corporate cafe, all that stupid tourist stuff. Once back home you can go to work, do chores, and eat at Mickey Dee's. No matter where on this planet you are unlucky enough to live!
I think you're right. We're on the verge of some big changes. There is a lot of whining and griping about this, but there is no stopping it.
I think within 10 years there will be ubiquitous information and facial recognition that will utterly transform our society.
For good or bad, probably both, we are all going to lose our anonymity. Imagine how different things will be if everyone can glance at you and their phone will tell them who you are, give a few metrics about what you are like, etc. Now when some guy comes up to you in public you'll instantly know if he's a criminal or a realtor or something and can cross the street before he is close enough to mug you or hand you a business card.
I've spent a lot of time thinking about it and don't have any easy answers about how to make it work, but it is definitely coming soon.
Google doesn't have trouble finding candidates. Have you tried their approach of higher than average pay and benefits? You may need to beat their salary and/or benefits since your company probably isn't famous for being a good workplace.
The problem is deceptively simple. This is a drug with a small market. No pharma company, large or small, is willing to invest many tens of millions to get approval when it will take decades to make the investment back.
Also, if some company took this route Turing would simply match or beat their price until they stopped. Since Turing didn't need to spend money on approval they can beat anyone else's price indefinitely.
Honda Civics and similar small cars hold their value best. My favorite small car actually has gone up in value some years. Big trucks or SUVs and high end cars seem to have the worst depreciation, 50% in 3 years is common.
Print it using MIME on paper, OCR and convert back to digital at your convenience. With the right storage conditions, paper and toner it should be readable in 100 years. Extra luddite points for using a daisy-wheel printer.
I had a similar bike maintenance issue and found a very helpful site which is like a trip back in time to the 90s. It doubles as a way to show youngsters how websites used to be before the modern interpretive dance web design movement.
Sad to see it go, but I applaud them giving notice. A month is plenty of time to set up another provider. I hope none of their customers miss the announcements.
I've been cycling in Silicon Valley 12 miles each way to work for over a year now. It's pretty nice. There are a lot of bike paths and trails, I enjoy riding along a creek watching wildlife instead of sitting in traffic surrounded by a strange mixture of oblivious and belligerent drivers. The places I need to ride on congested streets seem pretty safe, the cars tend to not be moving much and I feel pretty visible. The biggest problem for me is drivers turning right. I have a rear-view mirror on my helmet and I watch for cars trying to hook into me, happens quite a lot.
I haven't had any accidents on my bike. I pay good attention, wear a bright vest, blinky lights at night.
I think in many cases ignoring is a very healthy response. For example, we are subjected to insults throughout our lives. Maybe someone cuts us off in traffic, or some paperwork gets fouled up and needs to be done again. Nothing is gained by angrily honking your horn or waving a finger or a gun. Nothing is gained by screaming at your insurance provider.
If your favorite sports team, political regime, tribal affiliation or operating system is badmouthed I think the most healthy response is to simply ignore it.
Dextromethorphan works quite well on me, although I have to exceed the dosage suggestion by a considerable margin. It is safe to take quite a bit of it, I find the side effects distracting from having a cold.
OK you are correct. Allow me to be more specific. I'm not supporting all the stupid advertising that has been invented within the last 100 years such as radio, television, internets, bus benches, skywriting, ad infinitum. I sort of like costco for various reasons, but when I shop there I'm often forced to buy a name brand that advertises and it gives me an icky feeling.
I use the fearless flyer to start fires as well btw.
One of my favorite stores has been doing this since before I was born. TJ's doesn't have many choices, but they tend to have stuff I like. They only have a single choice for many many items. It is generally a good price, good quality, and not a major brand.
I really like it because I am not supporting all the stupid advertising, it saves me money, and I get to eat good stuff without wasting brain power on picking out which goddamn brand of peanut butter is least idiotic.
Nashville is OK, I like the history, architecture, how lush and green it is. The people can be fairly awful, and the climate is hellish. There aren't any good mountains or ocean nearby. I am OK visiting nashville on occasion but living there would be a dealbreaker for me. I'd rather spend 10x to live somewhere nice. Apparently lots of other people feel the same way which is great for you, keeps your housing prices low.
I live in Silicon Valley currently. I moved here for work, expecting to hate it but goddamn if I didn't fall in love with the place. It's just so frickin awesome here. The only problem is that because it is so great there are too many people. Assholes like me keep moving here!
I rent a room for $600/mo, bike to work year round along a creek, and go sailing all the time. I only work 40 hours a week and make a decent living. Low pay for the area I suppose but I need to enjoy my life.
Micro apartments are a great idea, but nearly all zoning regimes explicitly ban them. There was a wave of anti-hobo legislation in the 30s that is still largely on the books. Lots of people were running boarding houses in converted homes - say 5 bedrooms and 1 shared bath, 2 people per room. It affordably housed people but established interests didn't want poor unskilled people living in their cities so zoning banned this type of housing.
You'll see various approaches in zoning laws, but check your local town regulations and be amazed. Typical is requiring a certain amount of square feet, bathroom/kitchen requirements, and minimum length lease terms.
Just about every town zoning makes things like airbnb, or doing a vacation rental, explicitly against zoning laws. I'd sure like to see these things done away with, but you'll never be able to overcome the inertia.
I'm so confused. I like to barbecue on my grill, or a hibachi at my girlfriends house. I use hardwood briquets exclusively because they make my food taste magical. It takes about 30 mins to cook corn or these nice sausages from the butcher, less than that for fish or asparagus. I cover things so they come out tasting quite smoky.
What am I allowed to call this? I'm scared to think about it too much, what I do now is fun, comes naturally, and tastes super amazing.
Strangely I can't find much recently about his politics. According to this he is a libertarian who supports gay marriage, gives primarily to Democrats but not exclusively, and his PAC supports both parties.
What do you eat? I have started getting gout and it is maddening. Just about everything I like is high in purines, and I can't find any good alternatives. Fish, Beans, Mushrooms, everything I can think of.
I started donating blood which has eliminated flareups...for now!
I've no idea, even the internets aren't sure. My east coast friend says the term goes back to the 80s if not earlier. White Castle made these little nasty addictive burgers that were cooked on a grill without flipping, just put the onions and meat on the grill, top with the bun to seal in the damp grease, and slide them along until they are done. The world's saddest assembly line. They sold "sliders" 5 for a dollar or something like that.
You couldn't be wronger. Things will be so different when you are staring at your mugger, saying "John Lastname, please think this over again. It's been nearly a year since your last violent crime. Do you really want to go back to jail? You have been out for only a week! Lets talk it over calmly, maybe I can help you figure out a way to make ends meet without harming anyone else."
It has a lot of potential! I think "difficult" patrons would act differently if their poor behavior were visible to others. A server could know at a glance that this table won't tip and will send things back repeatedly. Bad enough patrons could be denied service entirely, or required to pay and tip in advance.
Sliders are little round sandwiches, typically hamburger. Deli sliders have something such as lunchmeat, chicken salad, etc. Sliders were trendy in the 90s and 00s in the US, apparently they have trickled down into school cafeterias now.
I wonder if polenta and goat cheese have made the transition as well?
You're being stupid. Most people in France have jobs and do chores. Nobody pays thousands of Euros and uses up their vacation time to travel to France to do regular life stuff. They want to do vacation stuff that is only available in France.
Visit the Louvre, see the Eiffel Tower, eat at a secretly corporate cafe, all that stupid tourist stuff. Once back home you can go to work, do chores, and eat at Mickey Dee's. No matter where on this planet you are unlucky enough to live!
I think you're right. We're on the verge of some big changes. There is a lot of whining and griping about this, but there is no stopping it.
I think within 10 years there will be ubiquitous information and facial recognition that will utterly transform our society.
For good or bad, probably both, we are all going to lose our anonymity. Imagine how different things will be if everyone can glance at you and their phone will tell them who you are, give a few metrics about what you are like, etc. Now when some guy comes up to you in public you'll instantly know if he's a criminal or a realtor or something and can cross the street before he is close enough to mug you or hand you a business card.
I've spent a lot of time thinking about it and don't have any easy answers about how to make it work, but it is definitely coming soon.
Google doesn't have trouble finding candidates. Have you tried their approach of higher than average pay and benefits? You may need to beat their salary and/or benefits since your company probably isn't famous for being a good workplace.
The problem is deceptively simple. This is a drug with a small market. No pharma company, large or small, is willing to invest many tens of millions to get approval when it will take decades to make the investment back.
Also, if some company took this route Turing would simply match or beat their price until they stopped. Since Turing didn't need to spend money on approval they can beat anyone else's price indefinitely.
This is a case where the markets don't work.
Honda Civics and similar small cars hold their value best. My favorite small car actually has gone up in value some years. Big trucks or SUVs and high end cars seem to have the worst depreciation, 50% in 3 years is common.
Print it using MIME on paper, OCR and convert back to digital at your convenience. With the right storage conditions, paper and toner it should be readable in 100 years. Extra luddite points for using a daisy-wheel printer.
I had a similar bike maintenance issue and found a very helpful site which is like a trip back in time to the 90s. It doubles as a way to show youngsters how websites used to be before the modern interpretive dance web design movement.
Here is a news article about some children with third degree sunburn. Nasty stuff, one can die from sunburn.
I really loved the film, cautiously optimistic for a real tv show based on the movie based on a fake tv show.
I really enjoyed Joe Frank's voice for the ships computer. If they can get him back it will all be worthwhile IMHO no matter how else it turns out.
Sad to see it go, but I applaud them giving notice. A month is plenty of time to set up another provider. I hope none of their customers miss the announcements.
I've been cycling in Silicon Valley 12 miles each way to work for over a year now. It's pretty nice. There are a lot of bike paths and trails, I enjoy riding along a creek watching wildlife instead of sitting in traffic surrounded by a strange mixture of oblivious and belligerent drivers. The places I need to ride on congested streets seem pretty safe, the cars tend to not be moving much and I feel pretty visible. The biggest problem for me is drivers turning right. I have a rear-view mirror on my helmet and I watch for cars trying to hook into me, happens quite a lot.
I haven't had any accidents on my bike. I pay good attention, wear a bright vest, blinky lights at night.
I make fun of your accent. [mom from minnesota]
I think in many cases ignoring is a very healthy response. For example, we are subjected to insults throughout our lives. Maybe someone cuts us off in traffic, or some paperwork gets fouled up and needs to be done again. Nothing is gained by angrily honking your horn or waving a finger or a gun. Nothing is gained by screaming at your insurance provider.
If your favorite sports team, political regime, tribal affiliation or operating system is badmouthed I think the most healthy response is to simply ignore it.