Ergonomics was a lost technology after WW3.
Ergonomics was a lost technology after WW3.
Which is very in-character for him.
Normally these posts don’t have enough punctuation. Now there’s one with too much. Not sure which I prefer.
Probably wasn’t even coded in assembly.
This is, in fact, what makes Portland’s annual naked bike ride event possible.
Unless it’s a 24 hour clock.
She also was the computer voice in the last two episodes of PIC thanks to archive audio.
And controllers. Nobody gets rid of a controller unless it’s dying.
That Civilization 6 uses geological continents when the ‘continent’ key word is used where every other game in the series uses geographical continents for that key word still bugs me.
It depends on who’s writing the episode. In First Contact she was implied to be an avatar of the Collective rather than an individual that controls it. Or possibly a gestalt consciousness formed as a byproduct of the Collective’s structure of interlinking minds. The VOY writers didn’t really get it, though, so she became a true individual on that show and in her future appearances.
Judging by the windows, you should be able to fit a turbolift in the pylons. As for whether that’s a good idea…
As of the final season of PIC, Bev is also a really good choice for tactical.
It’s in the Klingon-Federation neutral zone in the classic setup, so I think the solution to maintaining relations with the Klingons would be to go a step further and blow it up, then apologize for the Kobayashi Maru’s crew’s dishonorable actions.
Looking at release dates, just a couple days before Bookworm came out. I’ll have to try that one.
“The Deb of Night” radio show from Vampire: The Masquerade - Bloodlines is consistently hilarious and a great way to relax between the more horrific parts of the game. Bonus points for one of the regular callers guessing the plot of the game by complete chance and one of the main villains calling in to threaten whoever might be listening.
The ‘printer of fire’ error used to be a legitimate and important concern. Ye olde printers really could light their paper on fire under certain circumstances and they would typically be huge devices in dedicated rooms rather than something right next to your system. Letting people know to check on it when specific things went wrong probably saved a few buildings from burning down with people in them.
Yes, but it’s significantly less automatic. Testing distros on an old laptop, Debian wouldn’t support the network card out of the box and I had to use USB tethering from my phone to get the necessary drivers off the internet. Ubuntu just had them in the image and installed them automatically.
He also might have been contracted for the role already. His contract for the first or second movie likely had something about sequels in it.