Admittedly, I realize that it probably was unnecessary. However, the "Marines" example has always bothered me, perhaps because many of my family have been, or are, U.S. Marines. Either way, there it is. Now off to holiday celebrations.
Admittedly, I realize that it probably was unnecessary. However, the "Marines" example has always bothered me, perhaps because many of my family have been, or are, U.S. Marines. Either way, there it is. Now off to holiday celebrations.
Well, Drew, he got you, there. That said, excellent (and highly entertaining) article.
Dude, chillax. Have a cold one. Kick back and enjoy a nice brat or burger. Pointing out proper grammar in a non-confrontational way does not warrant you jumping down my throat.
Very good article, but there is one mistake I must call out:
That, sir, is a high-altitude (30,000+ ft.) missile vapor trail. Perhaps something the military is testing, but doesn't want to officially acknowledge.
This is what I'd imagine the Millenium Falcon's hyperdrive looking like ...
Riiiiiiiiiiiiiiight.
What most people, accustomed to WYSIWYG word processors such as Word, don't understand is that WordStar is so much more efficient at doing the one thing it's designed to do: Put words onto paper.
Look, I get it. NFL head coaches aren't required to be "warm and fuzzy." But Jesus ... at least try and be a decent human being. If you hate press conferences that much, Bill, then just send some other lackey out there.
I offer this, without comment:
So ... Marvel Universe "vibranium" = Star Wars Universe "cortosis"?
Dude(ette?). That was ... beautiful. You get the Jaunty Hat Tip of the Day.
Oops, you forgot the end part:
Dammit! You beat me to it! :D
"Peace-keeping missiles go here."
You know, it was a close toss-up between Slayer and Meshuggah, ProgHead! So, yeah, here ya go! Start bangin'!
Them or Slayer ... yeah.
While "created the heaviest metal ever" sounds like a pretty badass accomplishment in itself, the real importance of this discovery is that it furthers our knowledge about an unexplored region of the periodic table.
So, I guess this is obligatory:
I was wondering the same thing: Why are you doing that on a full-frame? Huh ...