jonthegreat
jonthegreat
jonthegreat

my only qualm with what you've said is that i highly doubt an individual can make a more effective gun than a gunsmith can.

or, like i described, you have one scanner/scale near the pantry. after you use your item, you scan and weigh it then you can put it back where ever you want on the shelf. so you just scan it when you put it away. or if you use the whole thing, scan it and push the 'empty' button. let's make this happen. and screw

Fry: This snow is beautiful. I'm glad global warming never happened.

ok, i missed that. so you'd need 245 separate scales in your pantry? or i guess you could just have one scale that you place the item on before putting it back on the shelf yourself. still sounds like a pain in the ass way to solve a problem that isn't really a problem. oh no now i have almost 2 gallons of milk but

these would ruin a perfectly good system put in place at every costco i've been to where the proper etiquette is to place the divider upside down so you can prop your costco card up in it so the cashier doesn't have to waste valuable time asking you for your card and holding up the entire process for everyone in line

but that doesn't help you know how much of an item you have left. do i have a container full of flour or is there 1/3 cup left? all that keeps track of is if you have a container that may or may not have something in it.

i've said it before, but oh my god no do not build this. maybe you save 20-30 minutes on the drive but then you've got to hope that the terminals are anywhere near where you want to be. or add all that time back on to get to your actual destination. the united states is not the right place for high-speed rail.

erm, maybe the title should be 'The "Stubborn Nail" houses that refused to get demolished'. what's a "nail house"?

i wonder when we're going to stop distinguishing between 'monitors' and 'televisions' and just call them all 'displays' or something

i thought i heard somewhere that 99% of those gauges and switches are just for redundancy and that nearly everything the pilot really needs is on that one digital screen there

you beat me to it!

i agree also. rotating a many-ton rock OVER AND OVER again, and then up a ramp, seems way more strenuous than pulling it over round logs, or sliding it on sleds, or almost any other method. and how long would those logs have lasted while getting smashed by tons of rock every turn?

i remember fishing off a pier in NC when i was younger. some people were catching 6-7ft sand sharks. they caught their limit so they cut up some steaks and gave some to us. we put them in a cooler on ice till we went home. about 4-5 hours later we got them out and were trying to cut the skin off. i was holding the

who says someone needs their own personal stash of straws. just make all cocktail stirrers have this capability. yeah, it'll cost a little more, but think of all the extra business you'll get when every woman wants to go to your bar because they know they won't get drugged. except then maybe there would be a few less

i really think that insects came from outerspace, at least originally. skeletons on the outside??? come on now. gotta be aliens

check out Tardigrades, "water bears"

especially with people often getting paid for their smoke breaks during the day.

how's it hanging?

actually. it was never funny. yeah, there might have been a sketch here or there that you think you remember being funny, but it really wasn't. having 90 minutes of airtime kills the show before it even starts. the writers may come up with a funny premise, but they blow their joke load in 2 minutes. then you're left

so instead of signing up for google which is infinitely useful, you have to sign up for this rabbit thing. oh, there's no sign-up or accounts. ok then. maybe it's alright. now if only i had some friends.