Gaius619
Gaius619
Gaius619

Two years ago I bought a German made Merkur Long Handled Safety Razor on Amazon ($35 with Prime right now), a $14 Badger Hair shaving brush and 100 Japanese Feather brand blades for $10 that stay sharp for a ridiculously long time. This amounted to a $59 investment in June of 2012.

I propose that members of congress be dressed in the various options and put on the ground in Afghanistan to determine which camo is most effective. For science.

yeah. I get that it changes the economics of current publishing and marketing, but it doesn't change Sci-Fi Forever in the same terms as the other examples.

Hunger Games? Really? Really?

Good to know, but that still doesn't make it work.

How about No. Take pride in your cooking.

I was hoping for some kind of intelligent article, but no, it's just /r/AskReddit with more panache.

Self-explanatory

I want to go ahead and address this immediately because I see this kind of thing happen far, far, far too often in the root community. Not knowing what you're doing is a valid reason not to root.

Yes. Also, when the moon is closest to earth in its orbit it also appears to be larger (it's called perspective, look it up), this point in orbit is the perigee. So when the moon is on the horizon, where it appears to be larger than normal, plus it is at perigee, where it appears to be larger than normal, it looks

With a properly sharp knife I've found onions aren't a problem. Give me a dull knife and one onion and I'll have tears streaming down my face within seconds but with a razor sharp knife I can happily chop 5 onions with no problems. Something to do with not crushing the flesh with and releasing the vapours I think.

Vote: Google Keyboard

Wrong pronounciation: Kil-OM-eter

Vote: Chromecast

The fact that there were two differences between the two groups (distance traveled and location of booking), as opposed to one, makes me skeptical to believe that the researchers know which difference is responsible for the observed effect.

This study's conclusions seem seriously flawed. Just off the top of my head, the reasons those people who book at work might be less satisfied:

I don't hear anything bad about them at all - although I work in IT so maybe the audience is a bit skewed. But I have a Nook HD+ I absolutely love, and two less technically inclined family members bought Nook HD+s and love them too - they are aged 11 and 80.

As a long-time Mac user and on-and-off fan, I think Android

"Android tablets get a bad rap"

Do they really these days? I know in the Honeycomb era there were some major issues, but it seems that most of those have been addressed in the last year or two. Personally, we just sold our iPad and switched to a Nexus 7, and are very happy with it. Haven't had any problems with apps