I knew a kid in high school who's family had spent some time living in a van. I guess the kid had an ongoing joke that they ended up in the van because his dad refused to learn java. Kinda funny, kinda sad. Couldn't help but think of that when I saw this.
01:09:20 if you don't want to go through that awful site.
Horrifically embarrassed for the graduate.
This is pretty fucking terrifying. Especially when you start consider how it would propel itself.
Does this feel a little peanuts?
AM's lack of fidelity allows it to have increased range, so it's especially important for emergency situations.
Man, I'm so happy to see this kind of dialog. Appropriate debate and resolution. This is so fucking rare to see these days, especially on the interwebs. Jeeze. Thanks for being open.
Plus the need for there to be a physical match is also super crucial and hard to find. Leg/arm length, stride, etc. it's one of the most beautifully cooperative sports out of necessity.
A reminder to all, Summer Paralympics are coming up. They're gonna be awesome. The more folks that tune in and support, the better the games will be and the more security they'll have.
If you're unaware of the history, Netflix has a great doc called Rising Phoenix that gives a small glimpse into the complexity of obstacles the athletes face and the nature of competition in this world. Highly recommend.
Wouldn't "Putting the Pop in Popeyes" make more sense and less hassle?
Too on the nose? Low hanging fruit?
Yeah, it felt like the clown man was the company in the first two panels, then it shifts to hacker, then the final few are just confusing. Poor clown man, so many internal conflicts.
This dude games.
Back home we had a local station, felt like a way of tuning into "the city." Very few breaks outside of their pledge drives once/twice a year. Listening to the Jazz station here on short drives these days. Very few ads, and some pretty gnarly shit. College radio stations are also pretty easy to find and escape that ad insanity.
Don't let radio and broadcast TV die quite yet, it's still very viable, especially as we sort out net neutrality and failsafe systems in cases of emergency.
I've met him a couple of times. Shook my hand once. I've got some pretty big hands, but his completely overtook mine. Left a decent amount of sweat behind. Worth it.