Only the people who weren't inside the plane.
Only the people who weren't inside the plane.
Looks like I missed the “supersaturated ice” part the first time around. Perhaps it’s a reference to sea ice reportedly being more dense than fresh water ice.
Uh, that’s exactly VonOhlnhausen’s point. The sea ice doesn’t have salt, but the sea water below the ice does, and so the non-salty ice floats on the supersaturated salty water.
The problem with that solution is that the word that was misspelled wasn’t “tether”, it was “AttachPawnToTether”. They’d have to write a custom spell checker to account for the complete absence of spaces, since the vast majority of function and variable names are created that way. And if the programmer in question…
Yeah, that surprised me too. The only thing I could think of would be that perhaps imprecise hits on the keys could have resulted in heat signatures on two different spots on the keys, but normal keys don’t seem to have large enough surfaces for that to work.
Why would that matter? People generally don’t bring weeks worth of food to a birthday party, and the human body can go at least three weeks with no food at all. As long as they had water, which obviously wasn’t in short supply given the circumstances, they likely would have all still been alive even if they had only…
The article mentioned that “12341234" could be detected up to 45 seconds after it was entered by a hunt-and-peck typist.
In-line card skimmers are also a thing, so with the right setup it’s possible for a thief to scan a mag-stripe card as it’s inserted into a machine. That’s why a lot of ATMs and gas pumps use protruding card readers that make it much harder to install a card skimmer in front of the slot.
You sure about that? The navigation software I use has the ability to calculate multiple potential or alternate routes. Also, with real-time traffic displayed, I can make judgment calls to divert off a route and either let GPS recalculate based on my new direction of travel, or simply use the navigation software to…
If they wear that same device home, you now have the ability to narrow that government worker down to just a few potential people--maybe even down to the actual worker if that person lives alone.
Oops! I forgot to mention that I was referring to the Atlanta Olympics bombing.
The swatting situation is a bit different, as the would-be victim deliberately provided a false address to the swatter. Otherwise, I agree with you completely. I still get angry about the security guard whose life was ruined by the news media. He literally saved lives by identifying a suspicious item and evacuating…
Put some Firestone tires on it and it will be fine.
If legislation could be passed requiring side cameras to meet up to certain dimensional and interface requirements, cameras failing wouldn’t have to be a big deal. Granted, I wouldn’t place high odds on that actually happening.
Yes, I remember reading that article pretty recently.
I’d gladly buy a car to avoid riding the bus, but if I literally could not afford a $100 bus ticket, I don’t think I could afford $100 in gasoline either.
Find me a bank that will give me a loan for a tank full of gasoline.
To be honest, if you didn’t like the ending of the base game, you probably won’t like the endings of the DLC either. I enjoyed the DLC episodes primarily for their depiction of Rapture, which I think was done better in the DLC than it was in the original Bioshock. But in terms of story, I didn’t like the DLC endings…
There's nothing confusing about the title. Just pick up the phone, give Hammond a call, and chat for a little while.
You speak the truth, but it’s oh so hard now that children currently hold the offices of President and FCC Chairman.