the-p-p-p-power-of-love-old
The p-p-p-power of love
the-p-p-p-power-of-love-old

Aw damn. I have a final on Wednesday. While I probably would be fine if I went out for a bit, it seems highly unlikely that I'd actually go out for just "a bit".

@TheLAG: The swarms of the Tribal/bone tribal people in Diablo 2. Those little bastards were instant death in later games of D2

@Kryters: The last person to purchase from this guy (the one who previously set the world record) made his money back in very little time. I remember reading that he sold a hunting ground with unique and rare creatures that can drop very rare and valuable (meaning real-world valuable) items and components for making

@iJoe: Most states the age of consent is 17.

@grimjack28: But there would be airflow because the plane would eventually be moving speed y, and thus would have requisite airflow to provide lift, the treadmill would be moving speed x and the wheels would be moving speed x+y.

@dlinkwit27: I am pretty sure that the issue is that with a plane, the power source is "off the treadmill" anyway. It is above the treadmill.

@gthing: Only if the treadmill was underneath the car :P

@dlinkwit27: As I said, I'm no physicist or even a mechanic, but the way that it seems to me is that the key difference between the car and the plane is that the thrust provided by the plane is above the ground as opposed to on it.

@grimjack28: Now I'm not well versed in physics...its been about a decade since I last took physics. I was actually seeing your point until I did the thought experiment myself. Assuming even a "perfect" treadmill, which moves at x speed, if you have "perfect" frictionless wheels, and it take a speed of y to have a

@KryptonZero: I understand that, and you are right. I really was not trying to attack you specifically or anyone really in general.

@KryptonZero: I can't speak specifically to MN, but the vast majority of states actually get more money back then they put into the federal gov't through taxation. The states that tend to pay more than they get back: NJ, NY and CA.

@KamWrex: As a student at a law school in Newark who has dealt extensively with the school system as an advocate...it needs it...badly. The school system is horribly inefficient as it is, and on average, the amount of domestic and financial issues these kids face is absurd.

@daytripper1: Dr. Ian Malcom agrees...Nature always finds a way.

@Aipaloovik: Except that this was not the way things worked until this case. The First Sale Doctrine applied in almost all cases regarding software, and the blocking of one's ability to resell the actual copy through the licensing agreement was a way to circumvent a legal doctrine that had been in place for 100 years.

@Faxmonkey: I don't agree with it, but either way, the forthcoming cases will be interesting. I can totally see some furniture designer have someone sign a licensing agreement regarding their copyrighted design on a chez lounge.

@DingoJunior: Well most people DO have the right to resell their license in most cases unless it was specifically stated in the agreement. In this case, he did not.

@Aipaloovik: Most people who have bothered to read even a portion of the EULA have realized this. Even those who haven't almost certainly heard this online somewhere, sometime.

@atlas: Hey, In the Army Now with Pauly Shore is a great movie. Andy Dick actually does some decent acting where he doesn't terrify me.