demrifter
Phyzzi
demrifter

Except the arms we are allowed to bear are so totally insufficient against even a very sad military, much less the best funded military in the world, that this just further proves how delusional you are. Civilians and beat cops can’t even stop the not-so-occasional terrorist (white or otherwise, I was in Boston when

Sprocket league style, eh? That said, I don’t totally hate that I can collect things that don’t take up shelf space. Despite the WAD’s though, I don’t think Daisy has wide enough appeal to be paid DLC on her own

I think this article highlights how flexibility is a characteristic we admire but don't all have. In some cases more literally than in others.

Dang man, I already watched one feature film length video on this based off your link, have mercy! (Seriously though, thanks for the awesome and incredibly well put together source.)

And you never know when all the bookstores and libraries, not to mention the internet, will shut down and leave you without access to one of those books you have already read.

Street art is some of the best art. The vast bulk of graffiti is not art even in a generous definition.

Your house sounds like a theme park in a good way.

Obviously, you need some fake books to hide the secret entrance to your themed room.

Funny signs belong in your work space. Anything else text belongs in a book.

What worked for me was ditching every (original condition or close) book that was available as an ebook. If I had marked it up, or it was personally signed, or even just worn enough that it was only ever going to be a reread/loaner, or if it would have to be repurchased as paper should the family ever actually decide

This is both true, and not in itself a sufficient reason to keep a book unless you an to revisit it very soon. I would also say that, with only a small handful of exceptions, I get more out of reading a new book than rereading even a wonderful book. Maybe that isn't true for you, but make sure it really is true and

I don’t think anyone is strongly against filled bookshelves as sensible decor, they just aren’t a requirement.

All my smarthome stuff besides my doorbell (which is redundant with the system of Use Your Dang Knuckle) works fine without internet. Even under good conditions things that don’t work without internet are not reasonable replacements for stupid devices.

I feel like blowing up the sun would lead to a, er, powerful coronal mass ejection (I know, that assumes blowing it up). Probably our best bet is to slingshot off into deep space. :)

Hm. No time has passed for that photon, but space has been traversed, so space-time has passed. We aren’t used to measuring things with space time as the basic units, but something has been traversed and so it also doesn’t make sense to refer to events as simultaneous in our reference frame, or else we have to give up

Or bread and eggs? (Why it's those things and not rice and beans I don't understand)

HTC has a headset that looks about that easy to use, but it's a terrible compromise to get there. Other than being ultra-light it's basically a 2015 Google Cardboard in terms of specs. I am glad to see them innovating but I think the lesson will be that there is a certain minimum below which a headset won't be

Initially the only information I could find were the tweets, but I was finally able to find a less abridged version just as I was about to get cross.

As a millennia (okay, cusp, but still) l I feel excellently qualified to say your advice is the opposite of “okay boomer”. I mean, I wash towels (all of them, because bath towels and kitchen towels are both gross by the time they need washed, thank you) on high heat separately, just because they didn’t make it to the

For a “lifehacker” article, it sure missed the boat on the knife-hacker (hrm, clever pun or terrible slasher movie?) part. 1) get a knife block with horizontal slits or just a wood box filled with wood skewers. 2) what, you think we have stuff on the counter because we just have an extra drawer sitting empty we could