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At last, I have found the true purpose of my GNote II. Things get a lot more complex when you realize you can drag gears around with chains attatched after you place them...


I kind of like how the entire 5 seasons of "The Wire" exist as counter to the oversimplifying many commenters are examining in cable shows.


The question now is, how to use this to mine Bitcoins?


As a still somewhat new Boulder resident, I agree with this. I lived here for a year as a freshman and only saw the city by bus. I came back recently owning a car, and saw more of the town, but it was a bit difficult to get around in all the traffic.

Then I got a bike, and the valley opened up to me. I practically had to relearn my way around using the extensive network of bike lanes and bike paths, but I feel a lot more freedom of movement. I was worried about safety at first, but now I am more comfortable riding than driving.

I know I'm spoiled by this city though. The ride from South Boulder to the shopping district can take you along a gorgeous paved path following a stream under a canopy of trees between suburb neighborhoods. I never feel a need for a helmet.

Downtown boulder has a bike sharing program, but I don't know how much use it gets since practically the whole town rides.


The Forbes site now holds the title of "Most Annoying to Read on a Mobile Browser. "

Thank goodness for Pocket.

But then I find out article wasn't even worth the hassle.


I believe utorrent has a remote feature that can be accessed from mobile. Point your torrents to dropbox on your desk/laptop and access on the go. Unless your only computer is your phone this would work just as well...


"would the plants respond to the centrifugal pull of gravity"

Sometimes I have to reread sentences like this to get what the author is trying to convey. I don't understand why the author didn't leave it at "centrifugal pull. " It's already an adequate layman's term. A sentence like this only serves to confuse and make physics sound harder than it is. If a good teacher can open kids eyes to the wonders of the world, a bad teacher can easily fog the world in obscurity and inconsistencies.


Exactly what I was thinking. People who love to read can get cheap, physical books everywhere in cities, and often from appealing local stores. I remember walking past quite a few cool bookstores in Seattle when I visited, and I know Denver has an awesome one. My college town had several.

The city I'm working in now doesnt even have a B&N so I am finding new love for my Kindle.


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