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But good luck getting people to think otherwise.

While the effects of nuclear radiation certainly weren’t a mystery, the effects of nuclear fallout were. Both Hiroshima and Nagasaki were airburst detonations, meaning that comparatively little fallout was created. Furthermore, when detonation heights were determined, it was erroneously believed that most people close

Maybe I’m just being cynical, but it’s hard not to suspect that the overbearing presence of Beats by Dre headphones during Microsoft’s Scalebound demo might have had a, let’s say, financially-driven origin.

No top-level Double Dragon references? How disappointing.

According to the developer via reddit translation, this was a tech demo meant to show what their stuff was capable of in a browser and on mobile. It’s not meant to be a released game. The video itself points out that this is a tech demo.

But according to Capcom, the final game will be more like classic Residents Evil (the correct plural; fight me)

Zaibatsu Corp.? What, was Multinational Conglomerate Inc. already taken?

Maybe they should have had one of those tall women star in the ad instead.

ITT: pretty much the exact same comments as every other post on this movie.

If you look at the other leg, you can see that the swimmer has a fin on the right foot. Look at the left foot again. Notice that the anomaly is shadowed orange color.

Yes, I read “opt out”, which is exactly why I copied that section. Please explain how they can “put their hands unconditionally on too much information” if you opt out of it.

They can put their hands unconditionally on too much information.

Shades of Konata and Himouto.

Tickets are contracts; they fall into the category of contracts of adhesion. Just because you don’t sign them at the bottom doesn’t make it not-a-contract.

It has no financial effect compared to the scenario in which you watch the movie in the theater once and then buy it on Blu-ray: you still will have only paid for a single ticket, and you still get to watch it as many times as you like at home.

You don’t need to make up multi-thousand dollar examples. You just need to go to the theater. If an usher catches you recording the movie, they have the right to kick you out. You didn’t get to finish watching the movie. Can you sue them for part or all of the cost of the ticket because they kicked you out? No,

The supercharging hardware you get for free. They never said you could use it to charge stuff for free. Wouldn’t be any different from the S 70 coming with a 75 kWh battery that has the last 5 kWh behind a paywall.

I’m not totally familiar with BART’s route, but why would that specific station for the system be the mandatory one?

If they physically cannot increase any form of rail travel (lets say the lines are just too clogged) then that would be a bigger problem.