Well, if that's the valve...what's the faucet? My guess would be the nose. I've felt like that at times.
Printable View
Well, if that's the valve...what's the faucet? My guess would be the nose. I've felt like that at times.
What is valve? I believe I may've heard of it before.
It's a device used to regulate flow. There are other names for them, including faucet, and thingamajig.
Lol, I know what a regular valve is. I thought there was some software called valve.
Valve is supplement software to Steam. You open the valve to let off Steam
Now I definitely heard of Steam before. I think my friend downloads all sorts of games from them.
So....now people can refer to that nut Ella.
Since this is the post race, let me mention my conclusion from DeflationGate.
For those who have been living in caves for the last week, there was some controversy over the balls used by the New England Patriots in the AFC title game. Some 11 out of 12 of the balls were found to be under inflated by about 2 PSI. A company in Pittsburg has recently gone public with a study that replicated the rainy, cold, conditions under which the game was played, and the warmer, drier, clubhouse where the balls were supposedly initially tested. They found a drop of about 1 PSI due to the temperature, and about 2 PSI when the temperature was combined with the balls being wet. In other words, this appears to be physics at work, and isn't really worth discussing....except that I thought it was Boyle's Law that governed this, so I went to the net to check it out, and that's when I discovered the ugly little secret of the universe.
There are three ideal gas laws that relate temperature, pressure, and volume. I kind of think that these laws were kind of divied up among eminent scientists of whatever era that was, because the three points are related, so why did it take so many different people to figure them out? Boyle's Law relates pressure and volume at a constant temperature, but apparently, Boyle couldn't be bothered to go on and hold pressure or volume constant and figure out the relationship of temperature to the other two. Sounds dodgy to me. At first, I thought they just wanted to spread the wealth. Let Boyle relate pressure and volume, while Charles related volume and temperature.
But then I noticed the third leg of that stool: The law that relates pressure to temperature at constant volumes, which is therefore, the law that governs the deflation/inflation of balls with temperature. The name of that law is not a simple name like Boyle or Charles. It's the Gay-Lussac Law. If you just glossed right over that name, go back and say it again......sloooowly.............while thinking about how it relates to ball deflation. That's when it struck me: The universe is an adolescent boy that has been waiting hundreds of years for people to get the joke. Heck, it doesn't even matter whether you use the modern or archaic definition of "gay".
Just imagine it in a Bevis and Butthead voice, "Hehehehe....ball deflation...hehehehe....soft balls....gay!...loose sack!....hehehehe!"
Hehehe. Stool. Hehe.
It's a conspiracy of low-brow comedians.
Just saw a thread with this wording in General Developer:
Discuss!Quote:
Hello jocular mater is a suborn and elements diablo ser Ocie93tx3L mokitpse
tuapse deremosimus Ocie93tx3LOcie93tx3L Patriarh was burg brill teeth sentience reasonable
Intimate issues post of turistus in your days and years
Attachment 123167Quote:
Hello jocular mater is a suborn and elements diablo ser Ocie93tx3L mokitpse
tuapse deremosimus Ocie93tx3LOcie93tx3L Patriarh was burg brill teeth sentience reasonable
Intimate issues post of turistus in your days and years
A (very) good friend of mine who's into ham radio picked up this 1940s-era Turner CX crystal microphone at a hamfest last weekend for $50 because he knew I would love it and be more than happy to reimburse him for it.
Attachment 123171
The guy he bought it from said it doesn't work and 70 year-old operable crystals are pretty much extinct outside of museums. But when I opened it up I found the hot wire (to the center of the connector) was broken, and frayed wire strands were shorting the contacts. It is entirely possible (though highly unlikely) this crystal actually works. I'm going to rig up a test cable and try it.
Oh Elwood.
Bow bow bow...
One cat picture? No more discussion on that profound subject than that?
What da ya want for nothing?