@techguy78: Same here.
@techguy78: Same here.
re: "Professing Your Love and Lust"
@Mars478: You'd have to make it pressure sensitive, so that there's no circuit when it's not pressed, and pressing it closes the circuit, but that's really not that hard. At all. And would be hilarious.
@Navin R Johnson: I just remember hearing some years ago (like 10) that Alaska Airlines had installed fancy navigation equipment, well ahead of anyone else to help tackle all the nasty weather they had to deal with. Wouldn't surprise me if everyone else had caught up, though.
I wonder how skewed Alaska Airlines time is in that they are they only airline listed that flies to a lot of airports in Alaska. I would also imagine it's affected by the money Alaska Airlines has put into navigational capabilities, so they can fly in and out when other airlines can't.
@Pessimippopotamus: I've never even bothered trying, my computer would probably self destruct.
I know that when you get to modeling large assemblies in Solidworks, they get to be pretty memory intensive. I imagine if you wanted to open/edit something like, say, a car engine you'd need something like that.
@rrrebo: Heh, when I was in second grade I made it to the state science fair, and apparently did pretty well (with an experiment showing the conductivity of various items, including a plastic dinosaur), and ended up with a trophy as I was, and an HP calculator that did RPN. No one else could use it, and it made me…
@Drummertist: Because you can't use your iPhone/iPod Touch in class, especially on tests.
@Greatest-Rush: (I know nothing about MacBooks) Is the port on the Macbook for video in?
@chris0089: I'd guess something in one shorted and fried something in the other.
@ov3rblik: Get a metals shop to bend you up a frame that fits around it, and has the VESA mounting holes. It'll be ugly, but get the job done.
@notarockstar: I've seen a system that somebody did up to keep the cats off their counter.
@dboudwin: Congrats!
@SunriseSets: Keep an eye on www.woot.com, they have good monitors, sometimes refurbished, for great prices. Be patient. Also check the daily deals and shellshocker on www.newegg.com
@psychiccheese: If they're smooth, or nearly so, the most I'd trust them on is smooth packed dirt. Anything more and you'll damage the tire, or damage yourself when the tire slips on the gravel/loose dirt/etc. I'd maybe recommend a 'cross' bike, seen here:
@Unionhawk: Congrats on the Eagle Project going well. For mine I was painting a building for a nonprofit (which they moved out of less than 6 months later...), and the adjoining shed. It was old crappy plywood, and it sucked up buckets of paint. Very annoying.
@Skeetz: What bugs me more than the hybrids are the cruiser bikes around here - the handlebars are about a mile wide, and they handle like a box of bricks.
@zrag: *Shudder*
@Gotlactose: Same here. I ended up getting an iPod Touch earlier this summer, and kept my old dumphone for, well, phone stuff. Works pretty well for me.