The I Have A Code in my Node Complaint Thread
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fresh lemonade?
tea has a lil caffeine in it.
managed the willpower to not get the mocha frappacino. i'll need to find the willpower tomorrow too.
fresh lemonade?
tea has a lil caffeine in it.
I made ooolaid.
Cool! Is that one they're planning to land on the comet? I read about one they're planning to do that with, just can't remember if that's the one.
Dana
Yes that's the one, AKA Comet Churyumov–Gerasimenko http://www.esa.int/Our_Activities/Operations/Rosetta_timeline_countdown_to_comet_arrival
except turns out it is two comets for double the trouble so a landing under those circumstances would be more than awesome :)
ah crap ! Hopes your day has improved a little by now :) And your room mate :) I was in a traffic jam in a tunnel this afternoon. Hates going down tunnels, imaginary disasters just seem to crawl out of all those little tunnel vent things every time I do :lol:
...during the recent heat wave we had (finally back in the low 80s again which i normal for this time of year) our LRT tam has to run as slow speeds so as not to damage the tacks or overhead catenary (I think the transit system needs to get it's money back for such shoddy work) Well, Monday when I was returning from an interview, it not only ran slow, but made several stops between stations including on in the deep several mile long tunnel under the West Hills. Now not sure how earthquake prone Melbourne is, but here in the Pacific Northwest we have a seismic time bomb 70 miles off the coast (the Cascadia Subduction Fault) that is ticking away. Should that slip we will experience a quake and resulting tsunami worse than the one in Japan a couple years ago. The last time it triggered a quake was in 1700 which produced a tsunami that was recorded in Japan.
I usually take a bus that goes over the hills instead, however as I wanted to get through downtown before the 5:00pm commute crush, I took the tram since it was there and ready to leave while the bus I'd usually take was on a 20 minute layover.
Not a good thing to have in the back of your mind as you go through a tunnel!
Dana
We don't have many earthquakes here. Thing about the tunnels under the rivers is they leak, you can see water running down the walls sometimes waaah :lol:
*hugs* surely you will feel better about all this later on sweetie :)
I made ooolaid.
sounds refreshing :)
i'm drinking water with ice in it. sippy lid. :)
Frying pan sounds like an appropriately destructive weapon of mass dining :lol:
I made ooolaid.
sounds refreshing :)
i'm drinking water with ice in it. sippy lid. :)
Icy feeling rain here all morning so far :)
Meanwhile, in Australia...
It is about bed time and I want to go to sleep.
Must be getting toward spring if we have a croc vs shark story on the front page, usually is crocs in winter sharks in summer :lol:
A croc story every day in the NT Times is kind of a tropical Australia tradition :lol: http://www.ntnews.com.au
Just was slammed by a bad headache. going to bed. night all
Get well soon fyredrygyon.
On the topic of Australia I missed the sale of outback and kangaroo in the Daz Store. I think outback was on sale two or three times.
ah crap ! Hopes your day has improved a little by now :) And your room mate :) I was in a traffic jam in a tunnel this afternoon. Hates going down tunnels, imaginary disasters just seem to crawl out of all those little tunnel vent things every time I do :lol:
...during the recent heat wave we had (finally back in the low 80s again which i normal for this time of year) our LRT tam has to run as slow speeds so as not to damage the tacks or overhead catenary (I think the transit system needs to get it's money back for such shoddy work) Well, Monday when I was returning from an interview, it not only ran slow, but made several stops between stations including on in the deep several mile long tunnel under the West Hills. Now not sure how earthquake prone Melbourne is, but here in the Pacific Northwest we have a seismic time bomb 70 miles off the coast (the Cascadia Subduction Fault) that is ticking away. Should that slip we will experience a quake and resulting tsunami worse than the one in Japan a couple years ago. The last time it triggered a quake was in 1700 which produced a tsunami that was recorded in Japan.
I usually take a bus that goes over the hills instead, however as I wanted to get through downtown before the 5:00pm commute crush, I took the tram since it was there and ready to leave while the bus I'd usually take was on a 20 minute layover.
Not a good thing to have in the back of your mind as you go through a tunnel!
Dana
We don't have many earthquakes here. Thing about the tunnels under the rivers is they leak, you can see water running down the walls sometimes waaah :lol:
Yes, that's how I feel going through the "Big Dig" tunnel in Boston. Boston itself is just a big landfill, and what they filled was the Boston Bay! And yes, I see water on the walls here and there sometimes. I hate going through it, but the alternative is going on Rt. 128 all around greater Boston. It adds a lot of miles and worse, it doesn't really save you from heavy traffic. We'll be heading through that tunnel again later this month when we go to New Hampshire. I get nervous when the traffic starts to slow down in there. :gulp:
Dana
There was an outback sale? Never any shortage of kangaroos here :lol: Or outback :lol:
...during the recent heat wave we had (finally back in the low 80s again which i normal for this time of year) our LRT tam has to run as slow speeds so as not to damage the tacks or overhead catenary (I think the transit system needs to get it's money back for such shoddy work) Well, Monday when I was returning from an interview, it not only ran slow, but made several stops between stations including on in the deep several mile long tunnel under the West Hills. Now not sure how earthquake prone Melbourne is, but here in the Pacific Northwest we have a seismic time bomb 70 miles off the coast (the Cascadia Subduction Fault) that is ticking away. Should that slip we will experience a quake and resulting tsunami worse than the one in Japan a couple years ago. The last time it triggered a quake was in 1700 which produced a tsunami that was recorded in Japan.
I usually take a bus that goes over the hills instead, however as I wanted to get through downtown before the 5:00pm commute crush, I took the tram since it was there and ready to leave while the bus I'd usually take was on a 20 minute layover.
Not a good thing to have in the back of your mind as you go through a tunnel!
Dana
We don't have many earthquakes here. Thing about the tunnels under the rivers is they leak, you can see water running down the walls sometimes waaah :lol:
Yes, that's how I feel going through the "Big Dig" tunnel in Boston. Boston itself is just a big landfill, and what they filled was the Boston Bay! And yes, I see water on the walls here and there sometimes. I hate going through it, but the alternative is going on Rt. 128 all around greater Boston. It adds a lot of miles and worse, it doesn't really save you from heavy traffic. We'll be heading through that tunnel again later this month when we go to New Hampshire. I get nervous when the traffic starts to slow down in there. :gulp:
Dana
Don't really get claustrophobic in small spaces but big freeway tunnels are kinda so huge and so far underground and full of a mess of incomprehensible moving parts to go wrong I guess :lol: And all that water up there just waiting to fall down here :lol:
...during the recent heat wave we had (finally back in the low 80s again which i normal for this time of year) our LRT tam has to run as slow speeds so as not to damage the tacks or overhead catenary (I think the transit system needs to get it's money back for such shoddy work) Well, Monday when I was returning from an interview, it not only ran slow, but made several stops between stations including on in the deep several mile long tunnel under the West Hills. Now not sure how earthquake prone Melbourne is, but here in the Pacific Northwest we have a seismic time bomb 70 miles off the coast (the Cascadia Subduction Fault) that is ticking away. Should that slip we will experience a quake and resulting tsunami worse than the one in Japan a couple years ago. The last time it triggered a quake was in 1700 which produced a tsunami that was recorded in Japan.
I usually take a bus that goes over the hills instead, however as I wanted to get through downtown before the 5:00pm commute crush, I took the tram since it was there and ready to leave while the bus I'd usually take was on a 20 minute layover.
Not a good thing to have in the back of your mind as you go through a tunnel!
Dana
We don't have many earthquakes here. Thing about the tunnels under the rivers is they leak, you can see water running down the walls sometimes waaah :lol:
Yes, that's how I feel going through the "Big Dig" tunnel in Boston. Boston itself is just a big landfill, and what they filled was the Boston Bay! And yes, I see water on the walls here and there sometimes. I hate going through it, but the alternative is going on Rt. 128 all around greater Boston. It adds a lot of miles and worse, it doesn't really save you from heavy traffic. We'll be heading through that tunnel again later this month when we go to New Hampshire. I get nervous when the traffic starts to slow down in there. :gulp:
Dana
Don't really get claustrophobic in small spaces but big freeway tunnels are kinda so huge and so far underground and full of a mess of incomprehensible moving parts to go wrong I guess :lol: And all that water up there just waiting to fall down here :lol:
Here in the UK we have tunnels that actually go under the water. There are 3 vehicle tunnels under the Thames for example, the longest of which is almost a mile long (1430 metres), and then there is of course the Channel tunnel, which connects Britain to France under the sea. and is 31 miles long. but you can't drive through that one, you have to put your vehicle on a train to go through.
Tunnel near me is 3.4 km long, not sure how much of that is under the river. On the antique Melways maps from the 1940s and 50s that whole area is called "the old Melbourne swamp" :lol:
sooooo cyuuuuuuute !
Melways could be a candy bar name :)
my rmp w/l shrank :bug:
huh.
looks like emma and jordi pulled their rmp store stuff?
there was an arm bracelet with a dragon motif on it. oh well.
I didn't even know DAZ had an armadillo. Thanks to you, it's wishlisted. As a Texan I have it. It's our state mammal, you know. How does "Dead Armadillo" compare to the Shiners?
Yeah, being an ex-Texan an armadillo is a nice reminder of past days at Ginnys Little Longhorn Saloon, listening to Dale Watson.
Dead Armadillo isn't as smoothly drinkable as a Shiner, though both are amber beers. The Dead Armadillo is a high alcohol-per-volume beer.. 6.9 as opposed to 4-something for Shiner, so it has a more bitter alcohol aftertaste, and it's very hoppy. 2-3 is my limit before I have t change to Shiner, Heineken, or the like. But after 3, you'll be pretty happy (heh)! :bug:
...mmmm...hoppy beeeeerrrrrrrr
Hops to it! :P
Thursday, and it's time for complaints!
- Got rained on coming to work
- Had to get breakfast out of the cold-food junk machine
- Didn't get a giant armadillo rendered yet
- Sinuses acting up
- Will have to eat junk for lunch if it doesn't stop raining
- Coffee is horrible again :blank:
Non-complaints:
- Got the last bacon cheeseburger out of the cold-food junk machine
- Got a V8 :)
- FOOTBALL BEGINS TONIGHT! :coolsmile:
Back to eating...
Okay. Gonna be moving my work station to the living room today so I will be ready for FOOTBALL. Need more chips, get queso made early.
Easter Island free today, w00t! :cheese:
Argh a SALE! :bug: Spend $50 and get a free Genesis 2 one of them!
There goes all this months content money... "*cry* *cry*
i still need the Stephanie 5.
it's a day of denial. again.
chocolate caustics pron :bug:
There was an outback sale? Never any shortage of kangaroos here :lol: Or outback :lol:
Outback is the restaurant makes the bloomin onion.
bloomin orion girls?
I remember hearing about Outback Steakhouse. I don't think I have seen the actual restaurant in person. Maybe there aren't any restaurants in my neighborhood.
...during the recent heat wave we had (finally back in the low 80s again which i normal for this time of year) our LRT tam has to run as slow speeds so as not to damage the tacks or overhead catenary (I think the transit system needs to get it's money back for such shoddy work) Well, Monday when I was returning from an interview, it not only ran slow, but made several stops between stations including on in the deep several mile long tunnel under the West Hills. Now not sure how earthquake prone Melbourne is, but here in the Pacific Northwest we have a seismic time bomb 70 miles off the coast (the Cascadia Subduction Fault) that is ticking away. Should that slip we will experience a quake and resulting tsunami worse than the one in Japan a couple years ago. The last time it triggered a quake was in 1700 which produced a tsunami that was recorded in Japan.
I usually take a bus that goes over the hills instead, however as I wanted to get through downtown before the 5:00pm commute crush, I took the tram since it was there and ready to leave while the bus I'd usually take was on a 20 minute layover.
Not a good thing to have in the back of your mind as you go through a tunnel!
Dana
We don't have many earthquakes here. Thing about the tunnels under the rivers is they leak, you can see water running down the walls sometimes waaah :lol:
Yes, that's how I feel going through the "Big Dig" tunnel in Boston. Boston itself is just a big landfill, and what they filled was the Boston Bay! And yes, I see water on the walls here and there sometimes. I hate going through it, but the alternative is going on Rt. 128 all around greater Boston. It adds a lot of miles and worse, it doesn't really save you from heavy traffic. We'll be heading through that tunnel again later this month when we go to New Hampshire. I get nervous when the traffic starts to slow down in there. :gulp:
Dana
And now they've got some of the same companies digging a highway tunnel along our waterfront. They swear it will be different, but so far all they've done is wreck the world's biggest tunnel boring machine...