

Puckipuppy Boxer ebike
Seer of the tapes! Knower of the episodes!


Puckipuppy Boxer ebike


To redeem myself, I went back:



I’m sitting on it behind the camera. I failed at the internet :(
But here’s the bike on today’s journey:



Was there an aromatic scent in the air, OP?
A perfume of a million plants getting it on. I can’t confirm whether eucalyptus was in there.


I don’t know what kind of tree, but it’s Northern/Coastal California.


Like “Exploding Bird of Prey”, the “Flying Klingon” clip is originally from The Undiscovered Country.


With mint frosting!


sips my store-brand Colombian
Just stick your hands between your buttocks. That’s nature’s pocket.


Yvan eht nioj!


One of the best scenes in Trek. Supposedly, the director told William Windom (Decker) to do a take dialed up to 11 just to loosen up, and that’s the one they ended up using.


The rug really ties the room together.


Multiple HTTP requests can be performed over a single connection, and not all connections are for HTTP requests in the first place. The only way to know that an HTTP request is being made (or how many) is to actually see the requests.


It would be a privacy nightmare, of course. Either we would all have to install monitoring software on our devices, or we would have to allow ISPs to break HTTPS.


Short answer, “yes” with an “if.” Long answer, “no” with a “but.”


Any military intervention into North Korea would have to be a joint effort by the USA and China. Neither power would tolerate the other moving troops into North Korea unilaterally.
Secondly, even a successful intervention would be a humanitarian crisis that would require a decades-long commitment by the powers involved.
And finally, North Korea has nukes. Any intervention would start off in a mad scramble to destroy, capture, or neutralize North Korea launch sites, and then to secure any surviving warheads.
This also partly explains why other countries are willing to send aid. Nobody wins if North Korea collapses.


Quiet, she’ll hear you!
GPS is the devil’s treasure map. I googled the nearest intersection like our forefathers’ forefathers did.