huntergatherr
HunterGatherr
huntergatherr

I’m also in the fly constantly camp and printing a boarding pass is arguably more inconvenient and prone to slowing down boarding. If you’re anything like me and jumping on earlier flights, I’m now the proud owner of two BPs on receipt paper that have to be babied and carefully filed away so they’ll actually scan at

This article is like a warm but sensible embrace, with a thoughtful Turbo gauge indicating precise pressure.

Chevy will then sue for infringing on their “Like a Rock” licensing

Who cares? Everyone knows that even a modest fast food meal will torpedo your whole myfitnesspal’d day.

I’m with you.

This is a helpful departure from the typical Lifehacker “How to not get hit by a car and live’ articles.

^^^This.

^^^This.

Was your favorite part when she calls out Joanne Lentino and the Pinellas County School Board too?

Specialize, build out a plan with teammates. Coordinate attacks. Watching pros play appears to be a different game than the lower part of the ladder. Most people haven’t nailed macros and the basics and you will be rewarded for getting good with two or three well-practiced timing or ‘mass’ attacks.

This is bad advice.

Speak directly to the problem. Call HR, say your 401k lacks the diversity you believe is necessary to meet your goals. Invoke their fiduciary responsibility to provide adequate options at a reasonable cost. If it’s a small company, chances are the owner(s) accounts make up the majority of the plan assets. If you feel

@3:54 it almost seems like a commercial

Thank you for this. The occasional Saab article and comment section keeps hope alive that someday I’ll buy another 9-3.

Don’t forget Charlotte. Or, Shar-LOT.

My rationale exactly. Many luxury brands also cover maintenance for the majority of the lease. Very few people actually calculate the ‘all-in’ cost.

More of these!!!

Correct. Except public transit isn’t a business, it’s a utility. Seamless upgrades are not a utility concept.

Be very clear: TENS and EMS units serve very different purposes. TENS stimulate nerves to help reduce chronic pain. EMS stimulates the muscle, to speed recovery by ‘flushing’ muscles through contraction; effectively a passive cooldown cycle. That’s why professional practitioners of a certain popular functional fitness

Be very clear: TENS and EMS units serve very different purposes. TENS stimulate nerves to help reduce chronic pain.