srmalloy-old
srmalloy
srmalloy-old

And the Amazon links for the same moving-light cable in a generic micro USB form factor for "smartphones", in white or black, both of which light up blue. I'm not convinced, though, that the 'convenience' of knowing that the device has reached 100% charge because the lights in the cable have gone out is worth either

Has to be.

Sounds nice as described, with the problem that you're stuck with getting in and out of it at places that have 'standard docking ports'; I would hate to see two people trying to put on space suits inside that thing if it sprang anything more than a slow leak. Even getting in or out of them with plenty of time, as you

I think that, in the long run, it would be more beneficial to have a law passed that required each sponsor of a bill presented in any legislature be required to undergo a rectal exam prior to its introduction (with additional sponsors to be examined before they can add themselves as co-sponsors).

Find a copy of Mutant 59: The Plastic Eaters and read it. The premise is that a bacterium that has been engineered to eat plastic gets loose and, in the sewers of London encounters the residue from another 'solution' to plastic waste — a plastic that degrades when exposed to oxygen (peel a film from the container when

I think that this is the link you're trying to post.

The global weather system is a massive, very complex thing. There are tons of variables that we don't even know about yet. There are so many variables, even our most complex simulations still have a hard time predicting what will happen.

Reminds me of the WWII photo of a gaggle of Russian paratroops on the wing of a TB-3-2 jumping off.

The fact that they're owned by an innocent third party would have made the forfeiture difficult.

I believe you actually own nothing except some pieces of plastic. The data on them is actually rented to you.

Unfortunately, there is a fundamental disconnect between the legal system and the Constitution. When the Constitution was written, it was a document that enumerated the powers that were granted to the federal government, plus a list of a number of individual rights that the drafters decided were not clearly enough

For me as well, particularly with last year's returns, when I finally started itemizing my deductions because I had mortgage interest to deduct and the first-time home-buyer's credit, and wanted that I was doing all the required paperwork correctly.

And you can get odd coincidences, too; a number of years ago, when I was at the local blood bank to donate blood, I was asked if I'd ever used another SSN. When I told them 'no', they said that there was another person with my name who worked at the hospital where I did. The next day, I looked them up in the medical

Give it time; if it's taken this long for publishers to start figuring out that e-books reduce the cost of keeping an author's work "in print" to pennies per year, instead of having to pay for the space taken up by a box of books on a warehouse shelf, it's going to be a while before we see them going back and

Try doing a search on 'stretch dress shirt'.

That, with Rendezvous with Rama a less-worthy second choice. Also David Brin's "Uplift" series.

Actually, a nuclear reactor can explode; what you can't get is a nuclear explosion. Reactor four at Chernobyl is an example of a nuclear reactor exploding, as is the accident at Three Mile Island. At Three Mile Island, the explosion was due to hydrogen collecting at the top of the reactor vessel, and at Chernobyl the

No, no — it started with Schumacher. Putting nipples in the batsuit is something completely different.

McNuggets along with a number of other 'food' products. Mechanically-separated chicken. Or 'soft-serve meat', if you prefer...