Improbable
Improbable
Improbable

So Lobster is the new Papyrus?

I'm intrigued by how she "sounds like a dream." Sounds like? Clearly there's another shoe waiting to drop somewhere.

Like others, I use Untappd to keep track of what I've had in the past, but I don't really like to trust web apps to give me recommendations.

In a similar vein, look at some professional pictures of analog watches. The vast majority of them are shot with the time set to either about 10:10 or 1:50. This makes it look slightly happy.

For general use, I stick with a Pilot G2 (because it's easier to stash one or two in every bag and drawer I have), but I've also got a Lamy Al-Star, and it's my absolute favorite pen. I've used all kinds of fountain pens, from Waterman to Mont Blac, and the Lamy writes as well as anything ten times its price.

There's a huge difference between the microgravity of orbit and the gravity of Mars. It's a little over a third of Earth's, but that's still enough to overcome most of the issues that astronauts experience in space right now. The fact is we just don't know what effect Martian gravity has on humans. It certainly won't

It looks to me like a ventifact, but the rover will be able to determine more when it studies it. Ventifacts are rocks that are carved by wind. If the wind in a particular area is often strong, tends to come from the same direction, and carries enough dust and sand, it can erode rock with the sort of horizontal

I'm right-handed and I use my left thumb to space almost exclusively. All of my keyboards have that same shiny spot.

I think you get more attention from the articles about someone being paid to tattoo your logo on your body than from the tattoo itself.

I haven't tried that stove, but I've got a folding solar panel for the same purpose. It's primarily a camping thing (although I tend to go without any tech but a flashlight when I camp), but during the multi-day blackout a few months back it kept my phone charged just fine the whole time.

Unfortunately, the burden of proof is on the accused in these cases. Automated takedown systems have gotten things like NASA's Mars landing videos and the livestream of the recent Hugo Awards taken offline. Nobody bothers to check if the bots were accurate until after somebody complains.

Not only were Jackson's videos incredibly well done, but they were huge events. They'd premier in prime time on network TV. We even had a VHS we made from the original premier of Thriller.

California's definitely the largest market that does this. I think North Carolina may, but I'm not certain if that's a state rule or just the one brewery I'd gotten a growler fill at.

Is it still going to be limited to the Amazon app store? I expect this will be the case, but it's annoying that many Android apps take a long time to show up there, if they show up at all. Not to mention that I've bought apps for my phone from Google's store, and I don't want to buy them again for a Kindle.

No. The favorable/unfavorable thing is an evolutionary difference. Our bodies want to try and take it easy and ignore some illnesses, regardless of our current environment. The placebo effect may kick in once we're taking action to fix ourselves, so our immune system says, "Oh, I guess we actually have to go to work

That is the creepiest thing I have seen in a very long time. I'm blaming you if I can't sleep tonight.

The problem is that most of the people (not all, but definitely most) writing those emails aren't thinking of you as a person. To them you're just some internet abstraction that they're free to treat far worse than they'd ever do if they had to deal with you in person.

One of those articles claims Greenpeace can't complain about the move from freely available and renewable seeds to patented and often sterile GMO stock because Greenpeace sells bumper stickers.

I'm almost certain it's a horse. In the last shot, when he's looking down through the skylight, I think his hand even turned into a hoof.

From the article.