yarrowb
yarrowb
yarrowb

I love me my public radio, but sometimes they miss the mark.

A separate fund has already handled that... but enjoy your... errr.... "sunny" disposition

Don't be a dick, you slime-mold.

I love cashews! If you like flavored nuts Trader Joes sells coconut cashews that are my personal crack. I could eat a pound bag of them in one sitting.

Almond croissants are my favorite thing in the universe. Almond desserts win every time.

Not you, too! Walnuts are worse. Burn all the walnuts!

... and they kept the daughter. I'm going to be busy vomiting up my soul for the next few hours.

My graze subscription and I respectfully disagree. A handful of almonds is the perfect size snack (for me, anyway) and delicious!

Oh crap!

This is my concern as well, as you are still putting all your eggs in one basket. I've found it easier and best to use a locally run password hasher, rather than one that links up with a server to save things. The only drawback is that it is a hassle when accessing stuff on my phone.

I was also put-off by this yesterday. Well, articulated, Torch.

I learned car repair from my mom, and my dad was the cook while both worked. I'm sure that if I told this to NPR, their fucking heads would explode from an neural stack-overflow stemming the inability to comprehend such a thing.

I'm sure I'm not alone when I say that some of the most terrifying moments of my life were spent working on cars with my father. I probably learned more about swearing than I did vehicular mechanics during those times. Until I was 16, I was pretty sure that Jesus Christ was the previous owner of my mother's Buick.

You should have heard me screaming at the radio last night while I was making dinner. My wife came running into the kitchen, she thought I had cut my finger off or something.

Nope honey, just yelling at the idiots on NPR like they can hear me.

This whole "American manhood" series has been patently stupid, and this was

You must be in debt. Because I have quite a few, two banks, two email accounts, online shopping websites, and my 401K. Others are just throw aways, but the ones listed are strong passwords.

To be honest lately I've been in the habit of leaving less and less of a digital foot print. And it has made my life so much simpler. If I have to create some kind of online account for something it has been a real deterrent or at the least made me re-evaluate whether or not I should have it. I guess what I am saying

seems legit when I test with other people's email addresses....

Wait a minute. you want me to pass on my email address to some website to see if my passwords have somehow been compromised?

Hera McLightningthrower?!

So, I have been searching but really don't understand how LassPass works if you sign into your accounts often through mobile device apps. How do the Android apps for GMail, Facebook, etc, work if you use LastPass? Seems like this requires a browser to work.