That seems like a rather arbitrary measure. I could just as easily state “The state of the cereal aisle is the most reliable measure…”
I think it will be more like the Aztec, but less practical.
Or the 1880s.
The 93 Ranger had a bigger cargo bed than most large pickups today, too.
Musk has already said he welcomes a chance to work in the Trump administration, so…
actions crimes
I remember they were side by side, but I don’t remember which one I gravitated toward first: It was either Pong or Skeet (with the light gun) for me.
“FIGHT FIGHT FIGHT” really tones down the rhetoric, doesn’t it? I’m not one for conspiracy theories, but if ANYBODY could be base enough to nick their own ear and hire one pawn to kill another in sacrifice, it’s this piece of satan’s taint.
And now I’m reading a computer’s version of a story describing how a computer wrote a story that should have been discarded.
It was fun, indeed. People knew so little about the implications and possibilities of connecting two systems, that even if you didn’t hack anything worthwhile, it was easy to feel like a genius simply by war-dialing into another local nerd’s own Commodore 64.
Total land area, maybe?
To be honest… that doesn’t sound like a heavy lift at all.
States get smaller in alphabetical order. Alabama is huge, while West Virginia is tiny.
Because they meet right at the elbow, I mixed up whose forearm belongs to whom between them, and this comic had a MUCH different story in my head.
True, and this is why the system needs to provide mental health services for these caretakers too. Right now, you’ve got the overwhelmed and frustrated overseeing the overwhelmed and frustrated, which is a recipe for disasters like this. Add a profit motive, and now you’ve got yourself a stew going.
Doctor Who from Eccleston on. We missed much of it (including all of the Capaldi and Whitaker years) so it’s still new to us, and we’re catching up just in time for the new guy. I used to roll my eyes at folks who insisted Who was worth watching, but I was clearly wrong: It’s such a fun (and sometimes devastating) show. Loving it.
Yep. I think this is the standard path for parents today. Kids even get to keep some Angry Birds and PBS Kids cartoon from their formative iPad years.