MrFluffyThing
MrFluffyThing
MrFluffyThing

There are basement apartments but they tend to follow different rules of realty than houses do. If you have a "bedroom" in a basement you cannot claim it as a bedroom unless it has a window large enough to fit through.

you most likely will want to remove the existing flooring and put down 3/4" plywood to level out and start your subfloor. You'll then need to look at padding and vapor barriers if you intend to use laminate flooring, unless the flooring you plan on using doesn't require padding or cork. Most likely you can also just

But you'll also know that putting solid wood or veneer in a level below the surface is a bad idea, and that laminate, vinyl and tile are pretty much your only non-carpet surface options.

This is why you see 18 wheelers in the air...

Middle image on the bottom reminds me of this.

Right, but that goes back to the "I'm not creating another google account just for commenting here" part.

I have a generic aol account for signing into sites like this and commenting, which I created years ago as a garbage collection email address. my gmail account and facebook are rather personal (mostly because I try to avoid creating an online profile that can be searched). I hate to say it, but I don't want to create

I kind of like my anonymity, thank you very much. I'm not using my social networking accounts, and I'm not creating another Google account just for commenting here.

But there's a large enough adoption of multiple monitors where this is relevant. In the many places I visit as part of my work, I see multi-monitor offices. Our own company offers a second screen to employees if they request one, and many take up that offer. I also know that among gamers, 2-3 screen setups have been

I would like to promote you and star you again. I think a high five will do.

I'd say you do as well, if you think that 99% of desktop users are on only a single monitor...

Aside from the part where multi monitor was becoming popular... (Even gizmodo posted an article that the best number of screens is 3).

No I just found the experience inconsistent between the screens. It would be okay if you could launch multiple metro apps on different screens, but they stick to the primary metro screen. It's nice that by default any non-metro app will launch in the classic desktop monitor, but it's such a separation that it's not a

I love the part where they ignore multi-monitor resolutions. I set up both the developer preview and the consumer preview on my 3 by 1920x1080 screens. Yeah, pulled out that OS install after 20 minutes. I was hoping for some improvement from Developer to Consumer preview, but ultimately they taught me what I needed to

I see several ways in which this is costing so much: The first is that each server/array most likely is running using multiple 320-500GB SAS drives in RAID Arrays, maybe even less depending on the age of the equipment. The power and cooling requirements on these systems to continue running them in a datacenter

The issue is not over whether or not Apple is introducing Nano SIMs, it's how they intend to do it. Apple plans on patenting the nano SIM and requiring licensing fees to use it. Nokia and Motorola also had plans on creating a smaller SIM card and don't want to pay apple the licensing fees to use their design (a

Apple is only required to offer an adapter for the Micro USB charger standards, they don't HAVE to have the port on the device.

Don't worry. I'm on it.

I want one so bad, but my wallet sees that price tag and cries.

The best option you'll have is to use at least 1 GPU for every 2 screens. Mine is a bit overkill, but you can run two screens with a single card.