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    I'm sorry, but the time for negotiating the Affordable Care Act is long in the past. Democrats put aside their interest in a single-payer system and based this off of a Republican system in a good-faith effort to get bi-partisan support, since getting health coverage for all Americans—even in a less-than-ideal

    It certainly is "quirky." I suppose it fulfills its purpose, but I'd imagine it's simpler and more versatile to put a swivel plug on the back. I can't really think of any decent reason that it needs to go out at 45 degrees.

    My favorite, too, but I also have the 0.3mm version, which is phenomenal.

    Pentel GraphGear 1000 0.3mm — Sturdy aluminum body, and super-fine lead which was always great in college for doing engineering homework. You can write incredibly tiny and still have it be legible.

    A more mundane subject matter than the neat plane above, but here are a few more such images: Flickr

    Neat, but when I saw the article, I was hoping for one of those slick new HTML5 websites, and I'd be able to scroll up/down to make the text jog forwards and backwards.

    Probably wouldn't be too difficult to accomplish with this already in place...

    I would imagine they'd want a more autonomous control system in place before they did any real flying, and that these short flights are just proof that it will function.

    And yes, the design is reminiscent of your ubiquitous quadrotor, though I haven't seen any of those with tilting fans or wings, which would enable

    Perhaps, but there's no accounting for people's lack of taste, and this still looks like raw chicken breast to me.

    I came across this issue in college. What I did, however, was design a stand in Solidworks, and then actually make it in my college's woodshop. Basically, just creating a (surprisingly) stable stand and attaching a basic wall-mount to it. There's even a channel running down the center for cables! It's a lot like

    Are you freaking kidding me?!

    For one thing, that's not pink. But more importantly, that is the most putrid, nauseating color of phone that has ever been produced. I literally would avoid even touching something like that, it's that offputting.

    On the other hand, if you're looking for a phone that has built-in theft

    Yep...looks like some of them can do that...

    It has nothing to do with anti-glare coatings. Your typical LCD screen employs two polarity filters to simply function. You place them in opposing orientations with the eponymous liquid crystal layer in between, which twists light's orientation from one to the other. Depending on whether electrical current is being

    Am I the only one who is incredibly curious about what this device looked like? (Preferrably one not currently in use.)

    I actually work for the Boeing facility that produces the CH-47, and even the engineers here are amazed at some of the stunts pilots manage to pull off with this beast of a helicopter.

    Would you PLEASE stop calling it the "new old Xbox 360"?!?!

    Yeah, I get what you mean, but it's really aggravating. Besides simply being stupid, you guys keep using it again and again and again.

    How is it any different to learn the time/power setting on your microwave to achieve the perfect temperature than it is to learn the time/power setting on your stove or electric kettle?

    Sure, it might take a little experimentation and a thermometer because it's not something you're accustomed to doing, but once you

    Absolutely horrendous. Besides looking like a trash can, this is the first Apple design in a LONG time that I haven't liked. It's tiny and looks it wouldn't have any expandability—hardly what any professional would want.

    Contrast with the previous design: beautiful, elegant, simple—everything Apple is known for, but

    How on earth is Thug Life one of the "Top 6"? What about WTF Picard? Or Overly Attached Girlfriend?

    This app is incompatible with your Verizon Motorola DROID X2.

    Okay, not technically something I'm currently using, but at my previous internship, I used a program called ANOPP for aeroacoustic noise prediction. While there have been more recent additions to the program, the core of it is essentially the same.

    So, how old is it? Well, let's just put it this way: the manual to