NatR
NatR
NatR

This is my experience too. “Huh, this recipe calls for a teaspoon of Spice X, I have no idea if I’ll like it, what else I would ever use it in if I do, and what I’ll do with it if I don’t, and it’s $10 for a container that has 100 teaspoons in it at the store. Do I take the gamble?”

This is my experience too. “Huh, this recipe calls for a teaspoon of Spice X, I have no idea if I’ll like it, what

Blue Apron and the like are worth it if you’re looking to experiment with new ingredients you might not otherwise have used or know how to use. The buy in is high for an individual meal, but it makes more economical sense when you compare it to buying a bunch of spices or other ingredients you don’t keep on hand just

Blue Apron and the like are worth it if you’re looking to experiment with new ingredients you might not otherwise

“Technically it should be Peachowser”

I kind of wonder, with some of the more basic “celebrity” designs they have, if it’s a matter of them just not having the time/resources/etc to actually come up with something interesting, or more having to do with the logistical constraints of arranging for such a thing in the first place.

I don’t think anyone is asking for sympathy, I think it’s just an article highlighting that with the rising prominence of entrepreneurs setting up streaming based businesses, there’s a gap in experience and business acumen that people and services are now moving in to fulfill.

The white and black buttons are replicated as bumpers on the shoulders of the controller.  You can use the traditional face buttons, or the ones on the shoulders.

As someone who only took their first flight a few years back, I can attest that airports are naturally high stress environments for people who haven’t flown, or who don’t fly very often.

The issue is with the orientation. Traditional platter drives are designed to be run relatively flat. If you keep your drive in a different position it’s putting different stresses on the internal components which may cause faster wear (and failure) depending on the exact design and materials used.

The issue is with the orientation. Traditional platter drives are designed to be run relatively flat. If you keep

Dude had time to pee in his shoes, I dunno why he wasn’t using a similar effort to look everywhere for a release, assuming it occurred to him that such a feature existed in the first place.

I refuse to believe Nintendo’s inability to make product available for consumers without having to buy it from resellers is anything other than entirely intentional.

When you’re the only (licensed) game in town, you can pretty much do what you want.

It’s really just trading one set of problems for another.  That’s pretty much par for the course.

There’s a co-worker who bought it, and in conversation mentioned he didn’t buy the $60 base game, but the next one up, in part so that he “didn’t have to spend time leveling up”.

Yep. My laptop case happens to be “TSA Approved” so I theoretically don’t have to remove the laptop from the case, just flip it open flat. It was not a selling point since I don’t fly at all, but it was still an advertised feature.

Yep. My laptop case happens to be “TSA Approved” so I theoretically don’t have to remove the laptop from the case,

Just dumb luck, that. Anything can be a “weapon” it they decide it is one.

Just dumb luck, that. Anything can be a “weapon” it they decide it is one.

They’re performance art, so I guess it depends on what level you want to like them on.

Thank you. When I saw this post I knew for a fact there was a game I’d purchased on a whim that had introduced me to this particular bit of Japanese culture that I had otherwise been unaware of.

I’m sure there’s a way they could make it work.

Pedestrian collision regulations. It’s difficult and not worth the cost to make a car that both has pop up headlights and still meets the requirements for deformation when you hit a pedestrian.

CCP couldn’t pull it off, which is why the project ultimately amounted to nothing. The scope of what they were trying to do, by what reports are out there, was beyond the resources available to them.