Comment Re:GW's new line of business (Score 1) 174
So you're complaining about GW's focus on non-tabletop areas when you... haven't spent any money on their tabletop division in probably about a decade?
This is not exactly surprising.
So you're complaining about GW's focus on non-tabletop areas when you... haven't spent any money on their tabletop division in probably about a decade?
This is not exactly surprising.
What do you call someone from the UK? I wanted to say British but that excludes Northern Ireland.
Only if you're a republican; plenty of northern irish identify themselves as "british".
Polygraphs perform better than random chance, certainly.
Interrorgations do not use random chance when there isn't a polygraph available; they use trained professionals.
The Gameboy was only released twenty years ago. If we arbitrarily set "old" gamers to be fifty, then that would only be people who used gameboys when they were thirty or over.
The vast majority of gameboys were played by children, who are now in their twenties or thirties, and still have perfectly fine eyesight.
The problem is that pulse propulsion needs a pusher plate or similar design to function in the vacuum of space, and it is almost impossible to put that much mass into space WITHOUT using nukes.
Nuclear pulse propulsion is illegal due to international treaties banning the atmospheric detonation of nuclear explosives.
Interesting question: I'm not american so I'm not sure exactly how it works, but would equipment like this fall under the right to bear arms, or would it get buried by some blanket "terrorist materials" law?
It's certainly a weapon after all, but is it more gun or bomb?
Sanderson's said it's going to be three volumes, because Tor didn't want to print it in one large volume, and there was already an agreement to publish by the end of this year, and he hadn't finished it all anyway.
That's really not the case here, he isn't Brian Herbert.
Sanderson's working entirely from very comprehensive notes, and entire portions of the book had already been written by Robert Jordan and just need to be glued together.
Congratulations on proving the GPs point.
It's great that you assume he has a 3Mb upstream pipe there..
There aren't even any ISPs in my whole goddamn country who offer 3Mb upstream. (Outside of new housing projects with fibre optic, but that's about a couple of thousand lines in a country with 60 million people)
You are allowed to work on a student visa, but there are certain restrictions such as the number of hours and overtime.
Obviously, yes.
Most countries have legislation dictating this, both to protect the minority who only speak the native language, and simply to protect the use of the language so it doesn't gradually get forced out by english.
Scientists will study your brain to learn more about your distant cousin, Man.