

There is an option to default to the GRUB entry you chose last. I didn’t know that either until Manjaro used it.
“as you would have them do”, not “as they do”
It’s not my logic. It’s the logic presented in the Bible.
I’ve never heard of an open sandwich [Edit: until now], but then again English isn’t my mother tongue. To me, a sandwich has always been food between two slices of bread.
Shouldn’t a sandwich have two halves of bread? There’s only one here. Canapés and Hors d’œvres are usually small, aren’t they? A Mettbrötchen takes several bites to eat and is usually eaten as a meal, not as a starter.
Well, surprise. They’re expecting retaliatory attacks.
Science also says it takes no energy to hold a weight up. Have you ever cycled a hill?
An important question no-one has asked yet is, What do you need that info for?
Program sucks at something it was not designed to do.
surprisedpikachu.gif
Mein N64 ist gestorben gerade als ich Majora’s Mask spielen wollte :'(
The requirements have always been the same. Only now they’re reflected more accurately in your docs.
Don’t they get their taste back when they reach room temperature again?
I hadn’t considered bureaucratic obstacles… that sucks.
Well, I commented that before I learned that OP is in New Mexico.
That sounds like something that would be apparent from the get-go, no?
I thought French people hated it when you talked English to them without even saying Bon jour first.
I take it the most pressing issue right now is cooling. If that is right, you might have yet another avenue to explore: Ask facilities with cooling needs if you can store one or two pallets there. I’m thinking schools, (yet again) restaurants, ice cream parlors, ice skating rinks (not sure how they work exactly – is the whole building cooled or just the rink itself?), butchers. You could ask an outdoor gear shop (I mean a place where skis and winter jackets etc. are sold) if they know of a place where one can test jackets. They might know a cool place, too.
extra produce for free and they in turn have to prepare so many meals
Nitpick: If you’re demanding that they do something in return, it’s not free.
In this case your two options are: A) Someone gets the food and puts it to use; B) it spoils. In this scenario I believe giving it away, no strings attached, might be the better option.
Isaac Asimov, “Hostess” (1951):