gizseason
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gizseason

I got my logitech M500 because I couldn't stand the hassle of wireless mouse anymore (batteries dying, losing connection, computer won't wake up, etc), and I realized that there was no instance in which I would need to use my mouse but was outside of the corded area.

So he played the game wrong, but he was the greatest at playing it wrong?

Oh, yeah, no, I meant more that there's no greater proportion of stupid people online versus in real life, except in real life people are generally more polite, speak better than they type, and you probably don't go around to random people asking them their thoughts on politics and the latest iPhone rumor.

As douchey as this is I highly doubt they could successfully sue for copyright infringement... it's easy enough to claim that the image is meant to be a parody or homage to the original. I would certainly rather let this abomination through if it means satirists on both ends can use copyrighted works as parody without

Perhaps the internet has just put you into more contact with peoples' opinions that may not be perfectly executed but otherwise valid. Maybe you should just stop using the internet.

Yeah, okay, the other guy's right, in retrospect your misuse of the semicolon is giving me a headache.

I agree with you in principle but your definition of the necessity of grammar doesn't account for it being dictated by a snooty minority when the general populace seems to be doing well enough understanding each other without perfect grammar. In fact the real main social barriers in your case would arise between the

I usually ask what they do for work, and then follow up with "so what does that entail on a day to day basis, like what did you do earlier today/yesterday)

I blinked! (the proper way is to just have a light turn on, not just flash)

They don't use a gun anymore, since (according to the article) if the gun was still fired in the vicinity people would ignore the gun from the speakers and instead wait for the real gun sound (at the very least the guy at the end could end up hearing two shots, which could throw his rhythm off). They now just use a

They could put lights on the ground. It could be strips even (though the runners might prefer to have their eyes closed at first). Lights would potentially make it easier to see false starts, since in super slow motion you can see exactly when the light turns on and when the runner starts moving.

Reaction time will be the same regardless of when you hear the sound and what sound you hear is. if there's .3 seconds to account for reaction time here's how it would work out per runner:

Yeah, exactly. As the seller you are in control of the initial communication, and it's up to you to decide what you want to disclose about the item. In the end how much you paid for the item means nothing compared to how much you want to get it off your hands.

That's completely your choice. I also don't think anybody would actually bother sending you 8 texts only to lowball you, but more importantly that guy lowballing you isn't preventing other people from offering you your asking price, nor you accepting their terms. And I assure you, the amount of time and resources

I agree with others' comments here... as a seller I am always aware of what the price under which I would never consider selling, and I'm under no obligation to not ignore that lowball offer or not just wait for the next offer. And if nothing comes up I know there's some guy that'll give me SOME money. If Idecided to

In the comics Magneto was able to manipulate his outfit since it turns out it was metal "fabric." He could literally break it down into iron filings and then reconstitute it on his body. He would probably be able to sculpt the metal to make the helmet and use metal that already had that color.

Maybe you need to start toning down your underestimation of homeless people, cause clearly you've already made incorrect generalizations about their tech abilities. One does not need to have an RSS subscription to Lifehacker be able to stumble onto the article through social media (which I guarantee you homeless

I was gonna say snarkily "what, no, you got my comment completely backwards, retard" but then I realized I should've put the parenthesized comment after "rock star or attention hog" and not after "innovators or geniuses." I hope that makes my original comment more comprehensible.

The technology field is no different from any other field or genre in which the rock star or attention hog of the group will always be more famous than the real innovators or geniuses (your Jobses or Gateses or Zuckerbergs). Nerds and tech geeks are no exceptions to this rule, even if by their definition they're

I am a sci-fi fan and I have seen all the Mr. Bean episodes and I have collectively seen no more than 2 episodes of Doctor Who (I am from the Philippines and the United States). Everyone in my viewing party (of which I was a begrudging member) loved the Bean sequence. It was in fact the only sequence I liked.