Well some friends of Buffy played a funny joke and they took her stuff and now she wants us to help get it back from her friends who sleep all day and have no tans.

Xander ,'Lessons'


Natter 67: Overriding Vetoes  

Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, nail polish, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.


Gudanov - Nov 11, 2010 8:14:58 am PST #4880 of 30001
Coding and Sleeping

GM's new Cruze got an EPA rating of 28 city, 42 highway. Pretty impressive for a conventional gas engine. I believe the car is rated as mid-sized for interior space too. Nice.

[link]

Good to see GM putting out good product, especially since there is a factory here in KC (not for this model though). That bailout was probably the most cost effective jobs program the government could have done, and maybe we'll get our money back too.


tommyrot - Nov 11, 2010 8:20:25 am PST #4881 of 30001
Sir, it's not an offence to let your cat eat your bacon. Okay? And we don't arrest cats, I'm very sorry.

GM's new Cruze got an EPA rating of 28 city, 42 highway. Pretty impressive for a conventional gas engine. I believe the car is rated as mid-sized for interior space too. Nice.

Huh. That highway mileage is better than the Ford Fiesta, which is what I'm leaning towards if I buy a new car soon.

eta: Fiesta is 30 mpg City, 40 highway.

First Drive: 2011 Ford Fiesta aims to be the new subcompact king [w/video]


Gudanov - Nov 11, 2010 8:25:18 am PST #4882 of 30001
Coding and Sleeping

Have you seen the Top Gear review of the Fiesta? It's amazing.


tommyrot - Nov 11, 2010 8:26:26 am PST #4883 of 30001
Sir, it's not an offence to let your cat eat your bacon. Okay? And we don't arrest cats, I'm very sorry.

Have you seen the Top Gear review of the Fiesta? It's amazing.

Nope. How so?


Kathy A - Nov 11, 2010 8:26:46 am PST #4884 of 30001
We're very stretchy. - Connie Neil

When I got my Civic five years ago, it was getting 30 city/40 highway, but it's down to 25/35 now.


Gudanov - Nov 11, 2010 8:30:50 am PST #4885 of 30001
Coding and Sleeping

Here's the review.

[link]

It's amusing all the way through, but it gets really interesting just over the 4 minute mark.


tommyrot - Nov 11, 2010 8:32:57 am PST #4886 of 30001
Sir, it's not an offence to let your cat eat your bacon. Okay? And we don't arrest cats, I'm very sorry.

ION, I was wasting time reading about the Boeing 707. Did you know the 707 was the first commercial aircraft to have an inherent instability issue that was fixed with an auto-pilot type device?

The 707 wings are swept back at 35 degrees and, like all swept-wing aircraft, displayed an undesirable "Dutch roll" flying characteristic which manifested itself as an alternating yawing and rolling motion. Boeing already had considerable experience with this on the B-47 and B-52, and had developed the yaw damper system on the B-47 that would be applied to later swept wing configurations like the 707. However, many new 707 pilots had no experience with this phenomenon as they were transitioning from straight-wing propeller driven aircraft such as the Douglas DC-7 and Lockheed Constellation.

This is kinda' cool (Tex Johnston was a Boeing test pilot who at the time probably knew more than anyone else about flying the 707):

In his autobiography, test pilot Tex Johnston described a Dutch Roll incident he experienced as a passenger on an early commercial 707 flight. As the aircraft's movements did not cease and most of the passengers became ill, he suspected a misrigging of the directional autopilot (yaw damper). He went to the cockpit and found the crew unable to understand and resolve the situation. He introduced himself and relieved the ashen-faced captain who immediately left the cockpit feeling ill. Johnston disconnected the faulting autopilot and manually stabilized the plane "with two slight control movements".

[link]


§ ita § - Nov 11, 2010 8:33:48 am PST #4887 of 30001
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

I have to admit I didn't know who Marianne Pearl is, so that's news to me. Although I'm sure there's a full-lipped exception for Angelina, because she's so exotic.

Orange juice gives women gout. Trufax.


Gudanov - Nov 11, 2010 8:36:14 am PST #4888 of 30001
Coding and Sleeping

Oh shoot, that link left out the best part.

This seems to take over about where the other ends.

[link]


Jesse - Nov 11, 2010 8:36:22 am PST #4889 of 30001
Sometimes I trip on how happy we could be.

Is gout back, or was it just not as talked about over the past however many years? I feel like it's an old-timey old-man's problem, but suddenly it's everywhere.