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BigPoopMayor posted:Tell me the name of the 2d Platformer game for PC that you played as a ball, and would have to change into different balls to solve different puzzles; glass, hard rubber, bouncy rubber etc. I may be completely wrong but I remember the name being something like "The Long Journey" Ballance?
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# ? Jan 8, 2011 19:29 |
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# ? Jun 6, 2024 06:28 |
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BigPoopMayor posted:Tell me the name of the 2d Platformer game for PC that you played as a ball, and would have to change into different balls to solve different puzzles; glass, hard rubber, bouncy rubber etc. I may be completely wrong but I remember the name being something like "The Long Journey" Gish? The Longest Journey is probably the title you're thinking of, but I can assure you that game doesn't resemble your description in any way
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# ? Jan 8, 2011 19:30 |
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Can anyone identify the plant in this photo? E-mail the address on that page if you can, but I'd also like to know, so please reply here, too.
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# ? Jan 8, 2011 19:46 |
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BigPoopMayor posted:Tell me the name of the 2d Platformer game for PC that you played as a ball, and would have to change into different balls to solve different puzzles; glass, hard rubber, bouncy rubber etc. I may be completely wrong but I remember the name being something like "The Long Journey" Within A Deep Forest?
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# ? Jan 8, 2011 19:53 |
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Travakian posted:Within A Deep Forest? YES Dear god thank you. Google searching for "Ball Game" wasn't working.
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# ? Jan 8, 2011 20:00 |
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Does anyone know any real life examples of the following situation? A couple breaks up once, or twice, gets back together, ends up getting married, and has a successful marriage. I am under the impression that it's not possible.
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# ? Jan 8, 2011 21:08 |
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Liface posted:Does anyone know any real life examples of the following situation? A couple breaks up once, or twice, gets back together, ends up getting married, and has a successful marriage. Many people I know have been in that situation. The stresses of a relationship are usually external, and the dynamics change once you are living together in marriage. For many people once they commit and are sharing a life the external pressures become positive pressure.
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# ? Jan 8, 2011 21:34 |
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Liface posted:Does anyone know any real life examples of the following situation? A couple breaks up once, or twice, gets back together, ends up getting married, and has a successful marriage. My parents did this. They met when they were like 16, and dated throughout high-school. My mom went to University to be a hospital lab technician, and my dad bought a motorcycle and worked in a garage. My mom dumped him at this point, because "he was kind of a loser who didn't plan on doing anything with his life." A year later, the garage went out of business, he enrolled in an Electrical Engineering program at the same University, and they got back together. They married four or five years later, have been happily married for the past 25 years, and have three children. Edit: My parents' relationship is not your relationship, or your friend's relationship. This is an anecdote, not advice. Gravity Pike fucked around with this message at 01:49 on Jan 9, 2011 |
# ? Jan 8, 2011 21:48 |
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So when the verizon CDMA iphone comes out, can I just jailbreak one and activate it under sprint?
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# ? Jan 9, 2011 00:52 |
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Liface posted:Does anyone know any real life examples of the following situation? A couple breaks up once, or twice, gets back together, ends up getting married, and has a successful marriage. Are you asking this because you are in such a relationship where you two keep going back and forth?
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# ? Jan 9, 2011 00:54 |
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change my name posted:So when the verizon CDMA iphone comes out, can I just jailbreak one and activate it under sprint? Not at all.
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# ? Jan 9, 2011 02:48 |
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Liface posted:Does anyone know any real life examples of the following situation? A couple breaks up once, or twice, gets back together, ends up getting married, and has a successful marriage. My wife and I, we were "just friends" first, then stopped talking when it became too much of a relationship, started talking, dated, broke up, didnt talk for months, started talking again, moved in together, now we are married and have a baby. We have a great marriage. We will both admit however, that we never thought we would end up together.
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# ? Jan 9, 2011 02:52 |
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Every one in a while on Firefox, websites like Something Awful and TSN will display like this and this. It goes away eventually, usually after a few hours or something, but it's extremely annoying and seems to happen randomly. Internet Explorer never has any problems like this. Anyone know what's going on?
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# ? Jan 9, 2011 10:22 |
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Soal_Fish posted:Every one in a while on Firefox, websites like Something Awful and TSN will display like this and this. It goes away eventually, usually after a few hours or something, but it's extremely annoying and seems to happen randomly. Internet Explorer never has any problems like this. Anyone know what's going on? For some reason the style/CSS information isn't being translated/rendered. Hold Shift and click the reload button and things should clear right up, as your computer requests the relevant information.
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# ? Jan 9, 2011 10:54 |
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I'm going to be spending 6+ months cycling through Central + South America later this year so would like to pick up some basic Spanish. What online resources can people recommend? Google gives a lot of hits but I'd like some that others have actually used and found good. Living in Korea there's not much of a local Spanish speaking population to practice with and the books in the bookstores aren't that great.
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# ? Jan 9, 2011 11:14 |
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Soal_Fish posted:Every one in a while on Firefox, websites like Something Awful and TSN will display like this and this. It goes away eventually, usually after a few hours or something, but it's extremely annoying and seems to happen randomly. Internet Explorer never has any problems like this. Anyone know what's going on? Your stylesheet hasn't loaded properly. This normally happens to me when I'm downloading at high speeds so I imagine firefox is losing packets that would be stylesheets and other attached files, stuff that isn't hardcoded into the html document.
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# ? Jan 9, 2011 12:30 |
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Soal_Fish posted:browser things Hey, I just wanted to say, gently caress yes pimpzilla. As for my question, a friend of mine used my cast iron skillet a few months ago while I was away from my apartment and didn't clean it. I return home to find it rusting in spots. What do I do?
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# ? Jan 9, 2011 18:16 |
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Huntersoninski posted:Hey, I just wanted to say, gently caress yes pimpzilla. Scrub the rust away and re-season it. Cast Iron is basically indestructible, and the solution to just about any problem is to scrub and re-season. For more specific advice there's the Goons with Spoons general questions thread, or the actual cast iron thread. Nighthand fucked around with this message at 20:01 on Jan 9, 2011 |
# ? Jan 9, 2011 19:58 |
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FreshFeesh posted:For some reason the style/CSS information isn't being translated/rendered. Hold Shift and click the reload button and things should clear right up, as your computer requests the relevant information. Thank you sir, you are a scholar and a gentleman.
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# ? Jan 9, 2011 20:24 |
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usually fucked around with this message at 09:21 on Jul 19, 2011 |
# ? Jan 9, 2011 21:59 |
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DVD Drive posted:What's a good storefront site for selling old junk if you don't want to use eBay? I've only ever used eBay and I don't really know how those storefront stores work. It's not quite the same but if you have old electronics you want to be rid of, try http://www.gazelle.com/ You tell them what you have that you want rid of, they tell you the price they'll pay you based on condition (some stuff they won't pay for but they will properly recycle for you) and then you print out a UPS or FedEx label from them, put your stuff in a box, attach the label, and drop it off at a UPS or FedEx location. They'll pay you in either a check mailed to you, a paypal deposit, or Amazon.com credit.
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# ? Jan 9, 2011 22:09 |
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Two completely unrelated questions: My forearms are dainty, to say the least. I realized this for the umpteenth time just over a week ago when I struggled to properly throw a 10lb. bowling ball down a lane and came away with a sore arm after one game. What would be a good forearm workout that I could perform without spending any or much money? I have in my possession a couple of 10lb. dumbbells that may be of use. Also: What causes gravity?
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# ? Jan 9, 2011 23:27 |
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Apple iPhoto question: I just merged two events, which are comprised of photos from two different cameras operating over the same general period. Is it possible to organize the photos by the time they were taken? If so, how?
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# ? Jan 9, 2011 23:30 |
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Raimundus posted:Two completely unrelated questions: Lots of curls. Use those dumbbells to flex your forearm at the wrist (start with the weight hanging down, then bring your fist up towards your arm as many times as you can stand.)
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# ? Jan 9, 2011 23:56 |
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Raimundus posted:Also: 2 physics views: 1. Space is warped. (General Relativity) (read Elijya's post two down for full explication) 2. Massed bodies shoot out sticky bits that attract things. (Quantum Theory) #1 is supported by various experimental results. #2 is predicted by an otherwise completely vetted theory, but has no experimental support. But it is probably better to recognize that the entirety of science just is, for no reason whatsoever. Scientists come up with different ways of describing what is, for different purposes, usually predictive power. But they are always describing, with their equations, what is, not explaining why it is. kapalama fucked around with this message at 02:59 on Jan 10, 2011 |
# ? Jan 10, 2011 02:02 |
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kapalama posted:But it is probably better to recognize that the entirety of science just is, for no reason whatsoever. Scientists come up with different ways of describing what is, for different purposes, usually predictive power. But they are always describing, with their equations, what is, not explaining why it is. Yeah, but this is one of those fairly obvious and possibly necessary "why" questions. Gravity is the only reason that large groups of matter can exist as they do.
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# ? Jan 10, 2011 02:07 |
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Raimundus posted:What causes gravity? It depends how in-depth of an answer you want here, as it gets pretty complex, and the actual answers as to the ultimate cause aren't still fully understood. But the short answer is that it's caused by matter. The presence of matter actually warps space, and the greater the concentration of matter, the more space is warped and gravity near that mass is stronger. Typically when trying to convey the idea of gravity, it helps to think of a 2 dimensional space. Are you familiar at all with flatland? Take a stretched out piece of fabric for example. The fabric represents space itself. Place a baseball on it, and the fabric will sink where the ball is, right? Now place a bowling ball, and the fabric will sink even more in that spot. If you have both the baseball and the bowling ball near each other on the fabric, they're going to race towards each other, although the baseball will move a lot faster since the greater attraction is to the larger mass that is having a greater effect on the fabric. Essentially this is why you stick to the Earth. The Earth is so big it's warping the fabric of space so much that you're pulled right towards it. Now start with the bowling ball in the middle, and think of it like the sun. Roll the baseball along the fabric towards the bowling ball at different angles and at different speeds, and you will observe several different things: The ball may fall right into the 'sun'; the ball may zip around it and come back out escaping the influence of the depression made by the 'sun' (this is known as a parabolic trajectory). Or the baseball may enter into an 'orbit' around the bowling ball. Perfectly circular orbits are nearly impossible, and so you're likely to end up with an elliptical orbit. Now, you're probably only rolling the baseball at a few miles per hour, and friction will decrease that, so as the baseball loses speed it's orbit will get smaller and smaller. On a planetary scale, space is essentially frictionless, so whatever speed you're going is what speed you'll pretty much stay, so the size and shape of your orbit pretty much stays the same and only changes very slowly. The outstretched fabric example is two dimensional, with the warping of the fabric being in the third dimension. Where gravity is concerned, the fabric of space is 3 dimensional, and the presence of matters warps it in a 4th direction we can sense but not exactly perceive. (any science geeks can feel free to correct me on that though)
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# ? Jan 10, 2011 02:24 |
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Pizer fucked around with this message at 02:50 on Jan 10, 2011 |
# ? Jan 10, 2011 02:48 |
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TremendousMajestic posted:Apple iPhoto question: If you get no love here you might try: Small Mac Software Questions: http://forums.somethingawful.com/showthread.php?threadid=2682424
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# ? Jan 10, 2011 02:59 |
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When did you (whoever wants to answer who is not a marijuana smoker) first become aware of 4:20 as a codeword for smoking marijuana? I first noticed it about 7 years ago.
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# ? Jan 10, 2011 10:44 |
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kapalama posted:When did you (whoever wants to answer who is not a marijuana smoker) first become aware of 4:20 as a codeword for smoking marijuana?
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# ? Jan 10, 2011 10:58 |
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kapalama posted:When did you (whoever wants to answer who is not a marijuana smoker) first become aware of 4:20 as a codeword for smoking marijuana? Freshman year of high school, 1999. Someone had scratched "420" into a desk and the teacher gave us a lecture about it. I had no idea what it was at the time and found the whole thing very amusing.
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# ? Jan 10, 2011 11:12 |
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kapalama posted:When did you (whoever wants to answer who is not a marijuana smoker) first become aware of 4:20 as a codeword for smoking marijuana? 1993, maybe earlier, but definitely that early. We were told that a "420" was a police code somewhere for people smoking teh weeds; that was probably apocryphal, though I've never snopesed it.
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# ? Jan 10, 2011 15:33 |
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Is the term "Aussie" offensive when used by an American to describe something Australian ("Aussie hotels")? Or is it seen as obnoxious or an affectation? (I like using "Cheers" to close out emails and the word "wanker", but some online style guide said that they would be annoying when used by a non-British person.)
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# ? Jan 10, 2011 16:11 |
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Is there a way in firefox for me to find out like a "referrer" for a tab? The page on which I clicked the link that opened the tab. For if I have some weird tab open for a week or something and wondering where the hell did I click a link to that? Very Strange Things posted:1993, maybe earlier, but definitely that early. We were told that a "420" was a police code somewhere for people smoking teh weeds; that was probably apocryphal, though I've never snopesed it. I remember first hearing it around 93ish too, my sophomore year in HS and my 1st year smoking up. I also remember reading about its origin way back then too, it was in either high times or on some weed-related fidonet board. All I remember from that was "it was possibly a police-code on hawaii five-o for dope-smoking in progress or it was taken by stoners from an anti-weed campaign's sensational type omg 420 different chemicals contained in the smoke" John Redcorn fucked around with this message at 17:06 on Jan 10, 2011 |
# ? Jan 10, 2011 17:00 |
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The Aphasian posted:Is the term "Aussie" offensive when used by an American to describe something Australian ("Aussie hotels")? Or is it seen as obnoxious or an affectation? (I like using "Cheers" to close out emails and the word "wanker", but some online style guide said that they would be annoying when used by a non-British person.)
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# ? Jan 10, 2011 17:03 |
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'Wanker' is reserved for Brits, but 'cheers' is acceptable
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# ? Jan 10, 2011 17:21 |
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What's it called when someone creates a problem for a solution instead of the other way around? The best example of this phenomenon I can think of are the "Black and White World" infomercials. I'm pretty sure it's a marketing term.
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# ? Jan 10, 2011 19:13 |
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WHEEZY MISS A DUDE posted:What's it called when someone creates a problem for a solution instead of the other way around? I don't think this is quite it, but it reminds me of the Law of the Instrument--when all you have is a hammer everything starts looking like a nail.
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# ? Jan 10, 2011 19:36 |
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# ? Jun 6, 2024 06:28 |
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WHEEZY MISS A DUDE posted:What's it called when someone creates a problem for a solution instead of the other way around? This isn't quite it, but it's an interesting article about the similar phenomenon in the health products and pharmaceutical industry -because the first thing I thought of when you posted that was "Restless Leg Syndrome". http://www.drfranklipman.com/creating-disease-big-pharma-and-disease-mongering/
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# ? Jan 10, 2011 20:07 |