kschang
kschang
kschang

At least it’d have to be glow-in-dark...

But who’s going to notice a tree... vs. a note you attach to the edge of the trail at chest level? :) Better contrast and all that. Hypothetically speaking, of course. Heck, you can probably make an SOS sign on open ground with 50 sheets of notebook paper. :D Hypothetically speaking, of course.

Not a full notebook, more like a... small notepad. In case you have to leave a note somewhere, or had to write stuff in the rain and such.

I was more thinking of emergencies, but I guess that depends on your hiking range and phone’s coverage area.

Interesting. I don’t recall anything that *can* explode inside the bus that can pop the glass like that. The only thing that even makes sense would be the AC lines. A bus holds quite a bit of R134, and this one seems to have pretty darn good seals that you can only see the smoke from the back and some sort of a smoke

The only thing I see that really really should be here is one of those waterproof notebooks from JASE.

They do have one small advantage... They have narrower ambulances. :)

There is a very technical nerdy exception to this “rule”...

I guess it’s cheaper than a head-up display... :D

I’m still waiting for the Tilted Kilt to arrive in the SF Bay Area. ;)

Would be really funny if this game popped up somewhere inside Star Citizen in the rec area. :D

I must be a glutton for punishment as I bought multiple pairs of similar readers.

How this is done? Simple: the writer got handed a bunch of filler material by the game maker and rather than analyzing maps, chokepoints, tactics, and character comparos, and so on, they filled their page count with this sort of filler.

I make a reasonable guess as most of us don’t work at environments warranting hazard pay. :)

Regular beat cops, sure. But not SWAT or high-risk fugitive retrievals and such.

>If you have examples of where citizen taping of police caused the firebombing, drive-bys, or car bombs you’re alleging, feel free to post them.

Did you check the border states? Or did you rely on your memory of the “big news items” in your local area?

And how do you know if the marshals are making a “normal arrest” instead of a high-risk fugitive apprehension? How would any regular Joe Citizen know? And if we don’t know, do we take first and hope we don’t get our cameras smashed / confiscated... or what *do* we do?

I was making an observation, which I guess could be “stressing the point”.

So the question is... where does a policeman’s privacy ends and public need to know begins? And are you sure you’re in the right when you take that into your own hands?