I can’t say I’m an expert at fork rake and geometry, but I was reading about the tweaks to Cannondale’s 29er, which has some of what you are concerned about.
I can’t say I’m an expert at fork rake and geometry, but I was reading about the tweaks to Cannondale’s 29er, which has some of what you are concerned about.
Great article!
Well, you have a point about playoff teams. All the Western Conference playoff teams scored more points than the Rockets.
The gem being a computer... well optical discs are just that.
btw, I do have to say there are usually a set of campsites which are still first-come, but they might not be the best spots, or the big 10 people site.
I actually hate online reservations.
About Sara Wedemeyer’s story.
Bu-bu-but = sarcasm
Never!
Bu-bu-but marijuana growing is illegal!
Thank you for your efforts to help Nepal and this article.
The book premise depends on the idea that the zombie hordes grow so exponentially, by the time military makes a stand, they are overwhelmed by the huge numbers. I suppose this idea is reinforced by that there are no strongholds that are infection-free. The military airbase is also overrun internally.
This is a very smart article, recognizing future limits being not computers but the power infrastructure.
But I don’t think apocalyptic stories are a cliche. I think people want society to be destroyed!
Damn, I love grooveshark.
This is why I responded to your comment that Brooks knows nothing about military weaponry works.
I should have elaborated more.
I disagree about your assessment about Max Brooks knowledge of military grade weaponry. He speculates how automatic weapons, which are used for suppression in our surgical military attacks, would be useless against zombies.
I agree.
I think the overall theme is how individuals are powerless to larger forces, i.e. the government.