unhandleable_exception
Nimelennar
unhandleable_exception

Mine was a 386 running Windows 3.11

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0103241/quotes?qt0419190

Anyone who sustains head injuries on a regular basis (e.g. atheletes) should be required to undergo regular mandatory psychiatric testing.

Hmm. I'm intrigued as to the structure of this challenge.

Where are the feathers? I thought the newest evidence says that the dinosaurs had feathers.

Huh.

Dammit, now I have to transcribe that, to see what was actually said.

It seems "true love" needs to be reciprocated. Remember last season, when Snow had amnesia, and Charming tried to kiss it out of her? Charming wasn't able to break the amnesia curse until Snow actually fell in love with him again.

I'm in Ontario, GTA area. I have it working on both my phone and my home computer.

You're right; I withdraw the point. My thought, based on my own relationship with my grandparents, wasn't that the kid or the grandparent would love each other any less, but that there generally wouldn't be enough contact to build a relationship strong enough to be what I would call "true love."

And it works in Canada too!

Heh. Story of my life.

I'm a guy who's a 28-year-old who still has his "V-card" (this is the first time I have ever heard that term), and not particularly embarrassed about it.

I hated that they cancelled Caprica. However, I think the finale really worked: watching it, you can really see the start of the path towards the First Cylon War.

Was anyone else frustrated by Henry's talisman? The one he used to magically turn off the flames before?

TLDR: I don't think so. The relationships are very different.

I found out about Santa because I was reading a book, and the kid narrating said something to the effect of, "It was like when I found out that Santa wasn't real." And I was like... "Huh. Wait, what?"

1) Actually, my assumption was that he had learned an improper idiom: "queue the [noun]" instead of "cue the [noun]" (similar to "should of" instead of "should have"). In certain scenarios, "queue the [noun]" would work, for example: "The movie star is arriving at his hotel; queue the fangirls looking for

Hmm. I don't see why that should be the case, but I'll keep it in mind in future. Thank you.

Yeah, I get that it technically works, which was why I included the line "Since people generally don't wait in line to speak their minds [...]."