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Honestly all of the syncing and sharing features are why I stay away from Goodreads. For obvious reasons, I don't want to share the whole list of what I read to anybody except for a few closest people, but I still would like a recommendation service which bases on what I read.

There's no better way to start learning about electronics than tinkering with Arduino. Lifehacker has covered sample projects ad nauseam, but this kit will get you started with the basics. [The Arduino Starter Kit, $100]

While I know that the source article is there for a reason, and we should always click through to it, this Lifehacker post is one of the examples lately that personally I cannot get anything useful from.
For example, after detailing the instruction to find our 'mask' area, the post just left us there and never mention

I tried goodreads when I bought a Kindle, but the lack of option to hide books in my profile put me off.

I am a Gunners fan. But please, there's just been a way more awesome news come out from Camp Nou.

Maybe it takes some physical traits and/or training methods other than just buy barefoot shoes and let your body adapt.

But while pleasure is great, it's not the same as happiness. Pleasure is correlated with happiness, but does not cause it. Someone developing a drug habit, for example, was probably pursuing pleasure but may end up far from happiness. Someone having an affair might hurt their loved ones in pursuit of pleasure. The

Relevant question: Are those battery app for mobile phones any good?
I am trying the Android app Battery Doctor which boasts about 3-stage charging but find it hard to prove anything or if there is any science behind it.

How about those laptops nowadays that cannot remove the battery and I need to plug it in at my desk a lot?

Now I need the list of things that we cannot recycle. Seriously.

I want to expand on this and suggest just don't stick to sort by name or by date. For me, sorting by type or size (esp. when I want to do some cleanup) would be equally helpful in many cases.

I am not dog expert. So anyone please tell me which breed is this? Thanks.

That is vastly different. The programming/flow logic is human understandable and debug-able. The program itself might be not.

I read about this a while ago. But then I also discovered a method that sounds something like reverse-Kegel. It tells you to relax your butt muscles to release the tension when you are going to ejaculate. Have you tried Kegel Dachis? How has it been for you?

Very well said! And I would add that some developers (maybe old-school) do not like comments because there used to be a cult tradition to write programs in as little lines as possible. They think comments make their programs look longer!

This is why after some time insisting that writing code from scratch is the ultimate pure way to write apps, I have come to believe that generating code automatically should be and will be the way apps are developed. Humans should only concentrate on realizing the programming flow and logic.

May I know what this thing is?

So true for the advice to get a repeater not connecting to the access point via wireless connection. For me, they never work well.

And with this, I see the death of [actually learning] photography.

I completely disagree. Just think about it for a second. You need some special kind of microphones to do speech recognition. Consider changing your software.