After all, the chances of anything coming from Mars are a million to one
Born a bit ago, I have continued living until the present day
After all, the chances of anything coming from Mars are a million to one
My pleasure! I saw it on a Deutsche Welle documentary: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DaiS_lp_4JM
The st Kitts train!
The only correct answer
Exactly so!
I’ve been meaning to get his latest work which he predictably didn’t finish. Have you read it?
Aside from the obvious, has anyone noticed, that those stairs lead to a wall?
Do it! It’s a fantastic science, with ever expanding horizons! That being said, if working in the field is a bit too much, amateur astronomy is a fabulous and friendly hobby - if a bit expensive
I’d have to disagree on the moistening bit: try it with lotsa butter and various toppings of your choice, like cheese, cold cuts or jam or any combination thereof. Super tasty!
When last I looked, something akin to hardtack was what Tolkien had in mind. As for a recipe, I recommend looking to the Scandinavians
Never eat whole garlic gloves: they’re simply too powerful
That’s some exceptionally excellent handwriting
The watermark is only applied if something is printed directly from Fade In: export and print somewhere else and there should be no watermark. As for the formatting, I don’t recall - but I do know, that everything is configurable; so you can make the formatting the same, if it differs
My pleasure. I will mention, that unless the author changed the program since last I used it, it also has a small popup every ten minutes or so, asking if you’d like to buy it. Remarkably, I didn’t find this terribly annoying, and forgot all about it until writing this comment - so don’t let that be a hindrance!
It’s free tho? Except for some minor limitations:
“The free downloadable demonstration version of Fade In includes all key functionality except for online realtime collaboration, and will place a watermark on any printed/PDF output.”
And there are ways around those
Out of curiosity, have you tried Fade In?
This is a very good paraphrase from an excellent series, Yes Prime Minister (formerly Yes Minister). In the scene, the Prime Minister (dude in the middle) is explaining to the Permanent Secretary (dude on the left) the difference between the various English newspapers. The Permanent Secretary is famous for giving lengthy and exceptionally convoluted monologues in which he says nearly nothing
Some of these suggestions are genuinely genius
Airwolf’s opening I’ve seen before; and the Dallas one is pretty great. Here are a couple I’ll throw in to the mix:
Rupert note the interesting time signatures
Gormenghast the first and second books are excellent. The third is… different…
The Prisoner possibly the greatest (and surely the longest!) opening
36 / M / Canada. I fit