I saw the face right away, but...Nicholas Cage?!? Um, no, don't think so.
Type: Posts; User: Lee DeRaud; Keyword(s):
I saw the face right away, but...Nicholas Cage?!? Um, no, don't think so.
The Greenworks one I have (not sure bout the newer ones) can do that, but I only tried it once when it was new. I just don't have that many leaves to deal with, and reconfiguring it from blow to suck...
The first thing that grabbed my eye in the original pic was two people and five hands...huh?
Reminded me a bit of an AI-generated pic I saw awhile back:
519044
Back on topic...
I have two, a 18V Ryobi now used only for blowing cruft out of the garage, and a 40V Greenworks that shares batteries with the lawnmower, string trimmer, and hedge trimmer. One...
I'm still amazed the Tesla people let that particular trademark get away...
I dunno, my neighbor has a Harley that looks like it's using that stuff for fuel.
No one on either side of my family has ever made it to 80. I'm currently the oldest, and the number of candles required on the cake each year is making it really hard to stay optimistic.
Chronic...
Also I'm guessing that the people with 6-digit pad life are doing a lot of freeway rather than stop-and-go.
That does depend on the car. My Corvette (C5...I suspect the C6s had the same design) had a caliper bolt that was almost inaccessible unless the car was on a lift, and was spec'd for 115-120ftlb of...
Hadn't heard that one.
One story he told had to do with a family friend who was in the queue a rocker. The guy said, "I used to worry that I wouldn't get it before you [Sam] die, now I'm worried...
Those are like Sam Maloof lead times, but his "factory" consisted of him and two helpers. They turned out about a piece (chair/table/whatever) per week: the real gotcha was the multi-year backlog....
That is pretty much exactly what I said in the portion you redacted. If you don't want to compare current data to historical data, don't. But there are decades of current (i.e. satellite) data...
Have a cite for that? (I'm finding lots of stuff about how names are picked, not so much about what qualifies a storm for naming.)
It seems quite logical that "historically" (prior to weather...
So you're not old enough to remember the 1970-1980s. That, sir, was serious inflation.
That's a problem for a lot of people, going back well before 2019, but it really wasn't what you asked about...
How about the computer you're using to access this forum?
Heh. I've long had the impression that the overlap between economics and politics is nearly 100% for a largish percentage of the population.
(Of course, the same is true for politics and religion,...
It would have to be something that doesn't require you to verify your email address by sending email from it. Off the top of my head, that's a very short list, and I'd be surprised if opening a...
The real issue is that when inflation is (near-)zero, it doesn't mean that prices aren't higher than they used to be, which is really what most people complain about.
(The people who expect prices...
Cost-push inflation tends to have a ratcheting effect baked in unless there is active pressure to reduce prices when/if costs go back down. Whether you call it "greed" or "maximization of shareholder...
Higher rents -> higher real-estate prices -> higher insurance -> higher rents -> lather, rinse, repeat.
It's a classic feedback cycle.
If you google the word "recursion", it pops up a question, "Did you mean: recursion".
Some body there does indeed have a sense of humor.
1972 DU grad here. My take on the whole Coors mystique was always that it wasn't guys from the west talking it up, it was the eastern tourists. They'd drink a can or two on their first day at high...
My various "house" policies (homeowner's, earthquake, and umbrella liability) were fairly stable, small changes over the years. E.g. homeowner's went from $680 in 2007 to $925 in 2020, earthquake...
Thus perpetuating the cycle.
People on this thread seem to be sloppier than usual about who they're quoting/replying to. Just sayin'...