That was really fucking well done.
That was really fucking well done.
Yeah, bad situation to be in.
Whew, thank goodness for the clarification, else I'd be up in arms for thinking you were referring to the building as a homosexual!
He blocked MIA 29 (or 28, looks very similar). Had he not, MIA 29 and MIA 79 would've double-teamed NYJ 50, and one of them could have sprung loose and done the same thing MIA 27 did.
With regards to Tebow's blocking, it actually appears he was doomed in that coverage anyways, because had he peeled off to take the runner, the guy he was helping out would've been double teamed and the inside guy (the one Tebow did block) would probably have run in and done the same thing. Thoughts?
So, FOX is basically saying "Fuck you, Kansas City?"
Good lord, I did not realize the gravity of the alcohol. Carry on, then.
What, last night's booze isn't enough reason?
Ah, so you're suggesting breaking canon because you don't like it.
Would you guys be up to expanding this to the defensive side of the ball, either as a whole defense or individual players?
Ah, I do love me some Cliver Barker. Does the aforementioned series have his trademark artwork as part of the story, a la Abarat?
I got my phone in late August, and it notified me of an update by the 8th of September, I believe, though I had rooted and flashed a custom ROM, so I had to undo that in order to get the update. So within the 2nd week of September, I had it.
Can you clarify what you mean by "CDMA Nexus phone[s won't] be updated by Google?"
That's what these are for!
Point conceded, you are correct. Well argued, and thanks for the clarifications.
In reply, I submit the following IRC conversation, for your consideration and general enjoyment.
Ah I see. OK, so upon further review, Wikipedia tells me that there are two common definitions of bandwidth: the one I provided in my other reply (rate of data transfer, bitrate, or throughput) [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bandwidth_(computing)], and the one you've described here, which is also referred to as…
Bandwidth - A term in computer science/networking that is used to refer to various bit-rate measures, representing the available or consumed data communication resources expressed in bits per second or multiples of it (bit/s, kbit/s, Mbit/s, Gbit/s, etc.).
Even so, I don't think they'd be able to get away with this one.
Again, its not WHAT, its WHO. This is not that hard, guys.