Hola, mí Español es muy mierda. Englais es facile. Es no "maintain his butt clean." En Englais es "keep his butt clean." Es no mucho problemo y tambien yo Englais is muy bueno.
I decided to poke around and they *may* have a legitimate argument if they wanted to make it though they would have to rely on, and you accept, a really piss-poor wiki page. Here is the link:
It would require deciding what lashing out meant - is that a physical or a non-physical thing as would be expected by a rational language user in that environment. I do not know, personally, so I leave that up to you two to hash out if you opt to do so. I would have said 'attacking the messenger' but that wiki page goes on to give that an unusual definition too.
Does that have the W126 in it? It is an excellent engine. I'd love to get an EV but it is going to take a while before they are ready for my unusual circumstances. I, too, am in the middle of nowhere (by choice, of course) and it would require a higher range than it does. It is about 180 miles for me to get to a real urban area and that is only a town of maybe 12,000 people. In comparison, I am in an unincorporated township with a total of eight residencies. There is a small town that is a bit under 60 miles, round trip, but it is a tourist town and, really, I should take the paved road to get there which makes it a bit longer.
Not only will I need heat but I will need heat in an emergency. That could be a matter of survival. Additionally, in the warmer months, I will want AC. I also like to keep things charged, listen to the radio, and am in a very hilly area. I am in the mountains and go down through what is known as the Western Mountain Foothills (Maine, USA) just to get to Farmington. Rangeley is much closer but, as I mentioned, it is a tourist town that has very little in the way of things that I actually need or at prices I am willing to pay. They are closer and more convenient but I can actually drive a pickup truck to Farmington and spend a lot less and my pickup is an F-350 which is not very nice on gas at all.
I have no idea why they would need it but it seems likely that they have a reason. The current version is fairly light (compared to other browsers today) and does a pretty decent job methinks. It seems faster than the rest when I add in the extensions that I like. It has a rather nice extension repository and can use any of the Chrome extensions as well. I am not a fanboy, I have Firefox, SeaMonkey, Chrome, IE, and OffByOne on this one computer. I just happen to like Opera but I used them as a secondary browser for a while as they got pretty bloated prior to redoing the whole thing using Chromium.
Well yes, they are leaking it out like puss from an infected abrasion. I, sort of, understand their ire but think they need to keep it in-house and, more importantly, I think they should start their own communities for any number of different reasons. Centralized control means you do not have control. There is, obviously, some centralized control no matter what (you pretty much need an ISP to access the WWW) but this is something that they can do something about and probably should do something about.
Definitely close enough. However, immediately setting it ablaze in the workplace would have made a much more interesting story. I suppose you have more of a point on this planet than doing things for my amusement though. It would have made a hell of a funny story. Burying it is pretty good as well.
It is all good. I can not blame you for not commenting. You may well still work there or still be covered by some sort of contract such as an NDA. I wouldn't recommend violating any such things - a job is not worth losing for idle banter with random pixels nor are said random pixels worth a court case.
I have not. However, I now want to go to an art fest and carry a giant net. I do think it is a bit unreasonable to need to carry one around because people will not behave civilly with their RCs. It is a shame, really. A lot of innocent people are going to have their hobby trashed by people who do not care. It is not my hobby but I would hate to see draconian restrictions in place because people can not obey the current regulations or be civil.
Go slow. You can always put more in you but you can never take it back out. The Mylar patches are easier to get a more standardized dose. Out of a 100mmg patch I would typically get 16 shots by cutting them down prior to extraction. With Duragesic that is a bit over 16mg/patch so each would be in the 1mg range with some lost due to extraction. The high bioavailablity was was really tweaked me so I was always just careful and, well, I spent a lot of money building up a tolerance over many many years.
Re:I lost interest when I saw brisket
on
When Nerds Do BBQ
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· Score: 1
LOL Someone is going to tell the beef capital of the world about beef? Beef, it is like the one thing Americans can do right on a regular basis. Well, assuming you stay out of chain restaurants. I suspect you have never tried it. People are often afraid of what they do not understand and tend to be critical of it as a defense mechanism. So, I understand. You should try some sometime.
I spent some time, a lot of it, in the South and Midwest. Kansas and Illinois had some of the best BBQs but I have to give the Pulled Pork Award to either Georgia, Alabama, or Florida. I also lived in North Carolina. Somewhere between GA and NC the secret to BBQ has been lost. Somewhere it became something you could do in your oven or, almost worse in some ways, something you did on top of a disposable open-top grill. Also, it is done in a half hour... *sighs* Louisiana does a good BBQ but they seem inclined to put anything edible on the table. I love me a good BBQ.
Over a summer a few friends and I built two pits plus a shed to house the BBQ equipment and a second Kegerator. It gets pulled out every year on the last weekend of July (our balanced month of Summer's Maniac Middle). We put buried power down to it so the two puts have rotating variable spits. The standard fare is a large smoked turkey, a pig, and a half of a cow. I got a turkey fryer but I have only fried two of them so far, it was not as well liked as I was hoping. I am thinking of smoking a goose and frying another turkey this year. Then again, maybe getting a second (or even a third) smoker is a good idea and I can smoke a turkey and, if the second is large enough, I can smoke two birds and a couple of smaller birds as well. I am thinking a turkey, goose, and a couple of partridge would be nice. I found a recipe for 'honey brined smoked turkey' online and I would like to try it. It reads like it would be very tasty.
I do not drink anymore but I am not the jackass ex-drunk. I have a keg in the Kegerator on the deck, some in my fridge even, and will be picking up another few kegs for the festivities at the end of the month. I do not make beer or wine any more which is, honestly, no real loss as I have never made anything exceptional. Anyhow, I mentioned that so that I could also mention that we are thinking about making a fold-out "bar" to be manned from inside the shed itself. The shed was built with this future in mind so it was built with quite a bit of extra space.
What we are trying to figure out, some sketches have been done, is how to take the "bar" and fold it up for transportation to and from the house. I do not want to leave the alcohol down there as it would be tempting some folks. I generally trust all the people that come here and would know about the bar but I do not trust the people that they may tell about it. There is likely to be a decent investment in booze going on and, frankly, I also do not want to be encouraging anyone who may have control issues. The current, most universal, idea is to make a cover that has 8" deep foam attached to it and is cut to the reverse lines of the shelving. This can then just be put on the front, latched down, and carried back to the house. The expected total number of bottles varies between 25 and 40 count estimates so this would be easily carried by two people. I am, of course, open to suggestions but I am a bit late to the thread to expect much in the way of responses.
Anyhow, this year is the first year that it is going to be a multi-day event. I have encouraged people to come and stay the weekend. Normally a lot of them tent and the house that was here when I built my house is still completely functional so there is no problem there. I have already set up with a company to provide two additional outside toilets and rented sound equipment. We have done a live band before and then left the equipment up for open mic performances. It was not as good as we had hoped. So if anyone has any ideas, specifically about a collapsible bar or any geeky things (I am putting a wireless AP/repeater in when it arrives), then I am all ears/eyeballs.
Hell, it is from July 31st to August 2nd and anyone willing to go north and east of Rangeley is more than welcome. It would be kind of awesome to have a/.er or 100 show up. Emails go to uninvolved (at) outlook (dot) com. It is an open invitation though I do not anticipate any/.ers coming. There is plenty of
That was beautiful. I chuckled in the real world. Lessons learned and, really, no harm done. It was also well written. Even though I suspected the ending it was still enjoyable to read all the way through it. It read like an original BOFH type of story only you did not cause anyone any harm and, well, he would have been making fun of you.
I spent about 32,000 USD upgrading to CD-Rs in ca. 1995. The worst part is that only covered eight of the computers in the office. At the end of the year there was an offering from HP that was under 1,000 USD. By the following summer they were half that. At the end of that year they were half again. Then, not more than a year and a half after that I could find SCSI CD-Rs for near 125 USD. Blank CDs were something like eight bucks when you bought in bulk... My mistake was adopting the tech that early. We were using large data sets (for the time) and the idea was portability. It worked, it *sort of* paid for itself. It would have paid much nicer to wait. I can not say that it lost us money but I can say it sure as hell did not make us any.
I only know of two such instances where this happened or something similar happened. One was only about five years ago and the other was longer - it made the news. Assuming it was the latter then that grocery store chain either begins with an S or a K? I can not recall which one it is but I do recall hearing about a computer mishap that took out warehouse access for a major grocery chain. The more recent one was due to a malware infection that spread across their network (as I recall) and its primary goal had been collecting credit card data but it had spread much further. That one was covered in eWeek and noted, by me, simply due to its proximity to me.
Somewhere on this planet there needs to be a "Greybeard Bar & Grill." Unfortunately, that place would probably end up being somewhere in Silicon Valley.
I was still pretty poor in the 80s. I owned, for a while, a Dodge Aries K... Yes, the K car. I am not proud. I will admit it. It actually held up okay but, damn, it was nutless and even though it ran it still had so many other things wrong with it that meant the actual fact of the car running was more a detriment than a success story. It was not old either though I was the second owner.
Is that $33k the MSRP price or the price AFTER financing? Also, sorry. I ordered a 640Li. I screwed up your averages. (I did want the i3 but it lacks enough range and the i8 is beautiful but impractical.)
If you can do a whole week's worth of driving on a single tank of gasoline then you can almost certainly do just fine with an EV unless, of course, you are doing all those miles in a single day which may be the case. I do not own an EV. I can not own one realistically. I would if I could. I can afford one. I can not afford the limited range due to my physical proximity to a real town - never mind a true urban center. (It is about 180 miles for me to get to Farmington, ME and back again. In the winter I need heat and in the summer I want AC. I will want other features as well which make an even 200 mile range EV unrealistic for me.)
To be fair people do get a second opinion from a different doctor and they do often have things vetted by an impartial engineer. On the other hand, I have personally seen the climate change and do not doubt that it is changing. I will let you speculate on the reasons and the solutions.
I checked out the i3. I could not make it work for me and my unique needs. So, I went the opposite direction and I will just have to wait longer. I am replacing my 740Li with a 640Li. I will consume many dead dinosaurs. The more dinosaurs I burn the fewer dinosaurs remain. The fewer that remain the higher the price. The higher the price the greater the adoption of EVs. The greater the adoption of EVs the lower the price. So, I am helping everybody (and the planet) out by burning three dinosaurs to every one you do not. Eventually I will get an EV with enough range for those who live in my area.
Hola, mí Español es muy mierda. Englais es facile. Es no "maintain his butt clean." En Englais es "keep his butt clean." Es no mucho problemo y tambien yo Englais is muy bueno.
My English is better than my rusty Spanish.
I decided to poke around and they *may* have a legitimate argument if they wanted to make it though they would have to rely on, and you accept, a really piss-poor wiki page. Here is the link:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
It would require deciding what lashing out meant - is that a physical or a non-physical thing as would be expected by a rational language user in that environment. I do not know, personally, so I leave that up to you two to hash out if you opt to do so. I would have said 'attacking the messenger' but that wiki page goes on to give that an unusual definition too.
Does that have the W126 in it? It is an excellent engine. I'd love to get an EV but it is going to take a while before they are ready for my unusual circumstances. I, too, am in the middle of nowhere (by choice, of course) and it would require a higher range than it does. It is about 180 miles for me to get to a real urban area and that is only a town of maybe 12,000 people. In comparison, I am in an unincorporated township with a total of eight residencies. There is a small town that is a bit under 60 miles, round trip, but it is a tourist town and, really, I should take the paved road to get there which makes it a bit longer.
Not only will I need heat but I will need heat in an emergency. That could be a matter of survival. Additionally, in the warmer months, I will want AC. I also like to keep things charged, listen to the radio, and am in a very hilly area. I am in the mountains and go down through what is known as the Western Mountain Foothills (Maine, USA) just to get to Farmington. Rangeley is much closer but, as I mentioned, it is a tourist town that has very little in the way of things that I actually need or at prices I am willing to pay. They are closer and more convenient but I can actually drive a pickup truck to Farmington and spend a lot less and my pickup is an F-350 which is not very nice on gas at all.
I have no idea why they would need it but it seems likely that they have a reason. The current version is fairly light (compared to other browsers today) and does a pretty decent job methinks. It seems faster than the rest when I add in the extensions that I like. It has a rather nice extension repository and can use any of the Chrome extensions as well. I am not a fanboy, I have Firefox, SeaMonkey, Chrome, IE, and OffByOne on this one computer. I just happen to like Opera but I used them as a secondary browser for a while as they got pretty bloated prior to redoing the whole thing using Chromium.
Well yes, they are leaking it out like puss from an infected abrasion. I, sort of, understand their ire but think they need to keep it in-house and, more importantly, I think they should start their own communities for any number of different reasons. Centralized control means you do not have control. There is, obviously, some centralized control no matter what (you pretty much need an ISP to access the WWW) but this is something that they can do something about and probably should do something about.
Thank you! The post that I made was awful as I could not actually remember a damned one of the details while also being too damned lazy to look it up.
Definitely close enough. However, immediately setting it ablaze in the workplace would have made a much more interesting story. I suppose you have more of a point on this planet than doing things for my amusement though. It would have made a hell of a funny story. Burying it is pretty good as well.
It is all good. I can not blame you for not commenting. You may well still work there or still be covered by some sort of contract such as an NDA. I wouldn't recommend violating any such things - a job is not worth losing for idle banter with random pixels nor are said random pixels worth a court case.
I have not. However, I now want to go to an art fest and carry a giant net. I do think it is a bit unreasonable to need to carry one around because people will not behave civilly with their RCs. It is a shame, really. A lot of innocent people are going to have their hobby trashed by people who do not care. It is not my hobby but I would hate to see draconian restrictions in place because people can not obey the current regulations or be civil.
Go slow. You can always put more in you but you can never take it back out. The Mylar patches are easier to get a more standardized dose. Out of a 100mmg patch I would typically get 16 shots by cutting them down prior to extraction. With Duragesic that is a bit over 16mg/patch so each would be in the 1mg range with some lost due to extraction. The high bioavailablity was was really tweaked me so I was always just careful and, well, I spent a lot of money building up a tolerance over many many years.
LOL Someone is going to tell the beef capital of the world about beef? Beef, it is like the one thing Americans can do right on a regular basis. Well, assuming you stay out of chain restaurants. I suspect you have never tried it. People are often afraid of what they do not understand and tend to be critical of it as a defense mechanism. So, I understand. You should try some sometime.
In insensitive clod Russia, Fourth of July Tofurkey eats you?
What has MIT got to do with this?
I spent some time, a lot of it, in the South and Midwest. Kansas and Illinois had some of the best BBQs but I have to give the Pulled Pork Award to either Georgia, Alabama, or Florida. I also lived in North Carolina. Somewhere between GA and NC the secret to BBQ has been lost. Somewhere it became something you could do in your oven or, almost worse in some ways, something you did on top of a disposable open-top grill. Also, it is done in a half hour... *sighs* Louisiana does a good BBQ but they seem inclined to put anything edible on the table. I love me a good BBQ.
Over a summer a few friends and I built two pits plus a shed to house the BBQ equipment and a second Kegerator. It gets pulled out every year on the last weekend of July (our balanced month of Summer's Maniac Middle). We put buried power down to it so the two puts have rotating variable spits. The standard fare is a large smoked turkey, a pig, and a half of a cow. I got a turkey fryer but I have only fried two of them so far, it was not as well liked as I was hoping. I am thinking of smoking a goose and frying another turkey this year. Then again, maybe getting a second (or even a third) smoker is a good idea and I can smoke a turkey and, if the second is large enough, I can smoke two birds and a couple of smaller birds as well. I am thinking a turkey, goose, and a couple of partridge would be nice. I found a recipe for 'honey brined smoked turkey' online and I would like to try it. It reads like it would be very tasty.
I do not drink anymore but I am not the jackass ex-drunk. I have a keg in the Kegerator on the deck, some in my fridge even, and will be picking up another few kegs for the festivities at the end of the month. I do not make beer or wine any more which is, honestly, no real loss as I have never made anything exceptional. Anyhow, I mentioned that so that I could also mention that we are thinking about making a fold-out "bar" to be manned from inside the shed itself. The shed was built with this future in mind so it was built with quite a bit of extra space.
What we are trying to figure out, some sketches have been done, is how to take the "bar" and fold it up for transportation to and from the house. I do not want to leave the alcohol down there as it would be tempting some folks. I generally trust all the people that come here and would know about the bar but I do not trust the people that they may tell about it. There is likely to be a decent investment in booze going on and, frankly, I also do not want to be encouraging anyone who may have control issues. The current, most universal, idea is to make a cover that has 8" deep foam attached to it and is cut to the reverse lines of the shelving. This can then just be put on the front, latched down, and carried back to the house. The expected total number of bottles varies between 25 and 40 count estimates so this would be easily carried by two people. I am, of course, open to suggestions but I am a bit late to the thread to expect much in the way of responses.
Anyhow, this year is the first year that it is going to be a multi-day event. I have encouraged people to come and stay the weekend. Normally a lot of them tent and the house that was here when I built my house is still completely functional so there is no problem there. I have already set up with a company to provide two additional outside toilets and rented sound equipment. We have done a live band before and then left the equipment up for open mic performances. It was not as good as we had hoped. So if anyone has any ideas, specifically about a collapsible bar or any geeky things (I am putting a wireless AP/repeater in when it arrives), then I am all ears/eyeballs.
Hell, it is from July 31st to August 2nd and anyone willing to go north and east of Rangeley is more than welcome. It would be kind of awesome to have a /.er or 100 show up. Emails go to uninvolved (at) outlook (dot) com. It is an open invitation though I do not anticipate any /.ers coming. There is plenty of
That was beautiful. I chuckled in the real world. Lessons learned and, really, no harm done. It was also well written. Even though I suspected the ending it was still enjoyable to read all the way through it. It read like an original BOFH type of story only you did not cause anyone any harm and, well, he would have been making fun of you.
I spent about 32,000 USD upgrading to CD-Rs in ca. 1995. The worst part is that only covered eight of the computers in the office. At the end of the year there was an offering from HP that was under 1,000 USD. By the following summer they were half that. At the end of that year they were half again. Then, not more than a year and a half after that I could find SCSI CD-Rs for near 125 USD. Blank CDs were something like eight bucks when you bought in bulk... My mistake was adopting the tech that early. We were using large data sets (for the time) and the idea was portability. It worked, it *sort of* paid for itself. It would have paid much nicer to wait. I can not say that it lost us money but I can say it sure as hell did not make us any.
I only know of two such instances where this happened or something similar happened. One was only about five years ago and the other was longer - it made the news. Assuming it was the latter then that grocery store chain either begins with an S or a K? I can not recall which one it is but I do recall hearing about a computer mishap that took out warehouse access for a major grocery chain. The more recent one was due to a malware infection that spread across their network (as I recall) and its primary goal had been collecting credit card data but it had spread much further. That one was covered in eWeek and noted, by me, simply due to its proximity to me.
Somewhere on this planet there needs to be a "Greybeard Bar & Grill." Unfortunately, that place would probably end up being somewhere in Silicon Valley.
I hope you capitalized on it by setting it alight and dancing naked around the blaze. It is the only correct thing to do at that point.
I was still pretty poor in the 80s. I owned, for a while, a Dodge Aries K... Yes, the K car. I am not proud. I will admit it. It actually held up okay but, damn, it was nutless and even though it ran it still had so many other things wrong with it that meant the actual fact of the car running was more a detriment than a success story. It was not old either though I was the second owner.
Is that $33k the MSRP price or the price AFTER financing? Also, sorry. I ordered a 640Li. I screwed up your averages. (I did want the i3 but it lacks enough range and the i8 is beautiful but impractical.)
If you can do a whole week's worth of driving on a single tank of gasoline then you can almost certainly do just fine with an EV unless, of course, you are doing all those miles in a single day which may be the case. I do not own an EV. I can not own one realistically. I would if I could. I can afford one. I can not afford the limited range due to my physical proximity to a real town - never mind a true urban center. (It is about 180 miles for me to get to Farmington, ME and back again. In the winter I need heat and in the summer I want AC. I will want other features as well which make an even 200 mile range EV unrealistic for me.)
You do not make the battery owned - make it leased.
To be fair people do get a second opinion from a different doctor and they do often have things vetted by an impartial engineer. On the other hand, I have personally seen the climate change and do not doubt that it is changing. I will let you speculate on the reasons and the solutions.
I checked out the i3. I could not make it work for me and my unique needs. So, I went the opposite direction and I will just have to wait longer. I am replacing my 740Li with a 640Li. I will consume many dead dinosaurs. The more dinosaurs I burn the fewer dinosaurs remain. The fewer that remain the higher the price. The higher the price the greater the adoption of EVs. The greater the adoption of EVs the lower the price. So, I am helping everybody (and the planet) out by burning three dinosaurs to every one you do not. Eventually I will get an EV with enough range for those who live in my area.