From sea to Aurelian sea.
From sea to Aurelian sea.
Michele Bachmann - "When you take the 9-9-9 plan and you turn it upside down, the devil is in the details..."
There must be some legal recourse available to Origin PC. If EA can sue Mojang for the word "Scrolls" based on potential intellectual property confusion with "The Elder Scrolls," surely Origin PC can sue over a "Origin," a PC-only download service.
Chemotherapeutics.
Ignore the double post.
Sucrose doesn't have lipid linkages.
What are you working on? Researchers sticking together and all.
Another Nexus 2 video, thanks RPS!
In honor of a possible sequel, I'm replaying Nexus - The Jupiter Incident.
I was young enough when I read those books that her death was utterly devastating. They are among my favorite novels but my heart still grips when I read that ending.
Thanks for introducing Malifaux. After a cursory glance, it seems quite interesting. I'll check it out.
And here is a decidedly not HD video of similar bridges. Geoengineering is fascinating stuff.
There is actually a segment devoted to the actual creation of such bridges in the wonderfully HiDef "Forests" episode of Human Planet, BBC Earth's newest spectacular.
That Carradine comment was rather hilarious.
Guy Adams' "The World House" was quite an interesting book. I wasn't as fond of the sequel, "The World House: Restoration," but the first somehow felt like something Tim Powers might have written. I'll be looking forward to this book avidly.
Fair point. I'll admit that this was my first thought in reading through the article, no matter how interesting pumice rafts as a genesis point might be.
Not precisely kaiju, but I prefer this.
A lot of Miéville on this list. I've tried every book, and they should be right in my wheelhouse taste-wise, but I've been left cold in each instance. Good to see The Anubis Gate by Tim Powers as a choice, even if Declare was his masterwork for me. The Memory, Sorrow, and Thorn series got me through a rough period in…