Rolling coal is an extremely inefficient method of converting little dick energy into kinetic energy.
Rolling coal is an extremely inefficient method of converting little dick energy into kinetic energy.
“Not having a gun in a crowd” would have been better.
If you’re about to catch a beating, you can’t just shoot.
What if they beat you to death. Can you shoot then?
Very much this. Think about it from the perspective of selling tickets. If I were shopping for a ticket from multiple airlines, I’d pick a window seat in a 2-4-2 over a window seat in a 3-2-3 every time if cost was comparable. Middle seats are crappy no matter what so I don’t see being the middle seat in a row of 3 being better than 4.
Also, the report is in Canada.
Octopi are neat and all, but did anyone else notice that one of the scientists quoted in the article is named Robyn Crook? I wonder if there was a singular moment in their childhood when they put that together and was like “wtf mom and dad, am I a joke to you?”
I run pfSense virtualized along with a wireguard vm and a couple of other vms for core services. A benefit of virtualization is that you can live migrate your router to another physical host if you ever need to do any hardware maintenance. It’s nice being able to service the hardware without waiting until every user is asleep so you can safely bring your router down.
The article implies that current patients essentially have no choice but to continue storing whatever frozen embryos they have at the cost of hundreds of dollars per year. It also mentioned that fertility clinics have “paused” services due to the legal risk posed to anyone involved if the embryo were to fail at any stage. So what happens now? Will these clinics be legally obligated to continue maintaining these embryos in their frozen state until the end of time? Considering their business model has been made illegal, it seems like bankruptcy is inevitable. Who then becomes responsible for these embryos? This is all so absurd.