MyTechnobabble
Mark Schaffner
MyTechnobabble

No, not really. I admitted this situation is overkill. But I can see not wanting to provide wifi for the entire neighborhood just because they all have your password, especially in a tighter-knit area where homes are only a few feet from each other and they could easily head back home and still be connected.

Which means it has to be something easy to remember/type in easily and it stays the same, both of which are security problems. Yes, you likely know everyone who comes to your home and you trust them enough with access to your network, but even something as simple as them telling a friend could cause you significant

This is exactly what I was thinking. TOS violations alone give them the right to see what is being stored on their servers. Web hosts are a much more common-place and well-understood example of this. You start hosting something illegal and they get a whiff of it, they’re going to investigate. They can become

I saw something akin to this years ago, but it was quite a bit different in how it was designed. I managed to re-design it to fit onto a business card and printed them up, branded for the print shop I worked at and people LOVED them. It was real handy for finding out just what the dates were for a given weekend, or

I like how they clearly cheated and totally redid the bag before cooking it, since there’s no way in hell all that stuff would fit into two eggs worth and come out anything like the bag they dropped into the pot. As she was listing off all that stuff I was thinking that was a LOT of crap for a two-egg omelette.

This was my first thought upon reading the description.

I just inspected the page and deleted the box requiring me to sign up for something, but here’s the link below the box, and it wouldn’t work until I copy/pasted it here, for some reason.

I’ve always wondered why one side has “low/med/high/sear” and the other has actual temps. Like, wouldn’t the actual temp give you a better gauge of just how hot the thing is? It seems like it’s overcomplicated, unless there’s a significant difference between using one or the other. I even owned one of these things

I’ve always wondered why one side has “low/med/high/sear” and the other has actual temps. Like, wouldn’t the actual

I had the exact same issue with one of these years ago. And while no one “got cancer and died” as LoodnRood asked (rather rudely, but hey, it’s in the name), it made it a bitch to clean and once it flaked a bit further food would stick to it and get ruined. I’ve never trusted Cuisinart since, save for their food

I had the exact same issue with one of these years ago. And while no one “got cancer and died” as LoodnRood asked


“There are three t(w)0(0)‘s”? Meh, I tried. lol. That is a fun stab in my brain, I’d never really thought about that before. You can definitely say it verbally and it’s completely acceptable, but however you type it you’re wrong. XD

As long as those apps are not connecting over the internet. If they do, and the traffic is unauthorized, a good IT department tasked to monitor communications will catch it.

They help SO much, especially if you can afford a good quality pair of over-the-ear ones. Mine are on-ear and can get uncomfortable after a couple hours. If you know you’re going to use them for many, long hours of listening, though, spring for some nicer, more comfortable ones. It’s worth it.

Mine are V-MODA brand

Thanks for that suggestion, I think that would be really cool. I love thunderstorms and I doubt I’d have thought of that!

My statement is pure opinion, but I think the issue with this study is one of TOO perfect of an environment. Giving someone silence would be amazing, but turning off your music doesn’t necessarily guarantee “silence”, it guarantees “whatever other noises are going on around you”. I don’t know about you, but if I can

I don’t remember the physical phone line locks! I bet my parents wish they’d been aware. Managed to run up a $700 long-distance phone bill one month. That’s in 1990's dollars, so something like $1,000 now? (even though long distance is essentially a thing of the past). Mine tried to put parental controls on our

Do note that the keyword, in my opinion, is “honest” review. If a store feels the customer is out-and-out lying their asses off and making things up I’m willing to bet this wouldn’t apply. The store would bear the burden of proof, however.

I’ve planned to do something similar. That or just simply take the phones away at night. There is literally no reason a kid needs a phone in the middle of the night while in the same house as you.

I was looking for the smug comment. Was tempted to make one myself, but then I remembered I discourage them on both sides. Why’s it always gotta be “us vs them” rather than simply “yo, glad you guys finally got something I’ve been using and enjoy”?