Doesn’t quite fit that exact archetype, but the Iran-Contra Affair is sortof in that same genre.
Doesn’t quite fit that exact archetype, but the Iran-Contra Affair is sortof in that same genre.
You are right! There isn’t any indication in the app itself that I could find though; but when I searched it up on google play it says I have classic installed, not standard.
Pretty sure I am using the free version, or if I paid it was a one time thing and long ago but it will walk you thru at least some problems. Example:
It is directly pulled from their recent remake of link’s awakening, so that makes a lot of sense
It is though: self driving into objects
Sausage, eggs, home fries, english muffin, milk, oj
I posted this comment on a similar topic a while ago, for context it was replying to someone who wanted to pick 2 LeGuin novels to read to essentially get a survey of her work. I’ve liked her standalone novels as well, but I see them get less discussion generally. I think her work that I see referenced most often is the short story The Ones Who Walk Away from Omelas.
LeGuin is one of my favorite authors. I’ve read a lot, but not all of LeGuin’s novels. She has 2 main multibook series that I’ve read, the Earthsea books and the Hainish cycle.
Earthsea is sort of YA fantasy, but grows up throughout the series. The first 3 are a self contained trilogy, and my favorite is Tombs of Atuan which is book 2, I think would be okay as a standalone title. My other favorite is Tales from Earthsea which is book 5, and is a collection of short stories set in the setting. You’d be missing a little context only reading Tales, but this could also be a standalone.
The Hainish cycle is scifi, and are only loosely connected by the setting and don’t have a too firmly established chronology, or any shared main characters. My favorite from the Hainish Cycle is The Left Hand of Darkness and my 2nd favorite is The Dispossessed.
Nonono, we had this discussion about the snake yesterday: the tree kills you by dropping a limb on you long before it eats you.
While the food itself looks a little plain for my tastes, the idea is really cute, and I’m willing to hold a 7 year old’s birthday dinner to a different standard than my own cooking. So I’d call this in good taste, and good execution.
Real mustache twirling villian energy here.
I don’t want to argue
Is this true? Doesn’t seem true.
I gave you a reasonable explaination as to why a slight difference in pan volume wasn’t a particularly meaningful criticism of the less voluminous pan, particularly when it has the other characteristic you want: more edges per volume of brownies.
This is maybe as plainly as I can say it, you’ll be able to fit your standard “pan of brownies” recipe in both pans, without folding space, or having to tune your recipe down by some awkward amount. If your recipe can’t fit in one, you probably shouldn’t go single in the other even if you physically can, and are in for multiple pans or cycles anyway.
Originally bringing total pan volume into it confused me, a baking pan has an upper limit to how much brownie you can bake per cycle in it, but by the time you are anywhere near that limit you are probably already better off using a second pan.
The example brownies from the picture are nowhere near that limit, so if there was a moderate but significant decrease in the volume of the pan in the change to the squares It doesn’t seem like it should be a problem even on a per cycle basis. Even so, the cost of doing an additional cycle of baking is not that high anyways.
The main factor in how much volume of brownie you make will be the amount of brownie batter you make. Non-euclidean space isn’t required to bake an additional 25% or so of brownies by volume in that pan, and so your reply seemed snide, and I responded kurtly.
They’re reusable though
Okay, but the volume depends on the batter, not the pan.
Lever action is not semi automatic though. Needs both characteristics.
Perception of the vietnam war protests at the time were also very split, and I would be very unsurprised to find that the people most against the student protests now are, or are the children of people who were very against the social movements of the 60s. The 60s were also an incredibly divided time in the US politically. Nixon won the whitehouse in 1968, and the civil rights movement had met extremely bitter opposition.
Damn Hawaii, you’ve been eating well
All means testing does, is split support for it.
It also makes it more expensive to implement, because there is bureaucratic labor involved in compliance.
Yeah, it somewhere in the edit it flipped, and I didn’t care to change it back
Is it even sharp? Like is it any more dangerous than a knitting needle?