America is so widely spaced out that there are some huge stretches of mostly empty highways, so the only feasible way to monitor for speeders is by helicopter watching over the massive stretches of road. Or at least that’s how it used to be, these days i bet they are increasingly just using cameras
That’s so odd, i thought usually sports car speedometers go higher than the car is actually able to achieve in order to trick people into thinking it’s actually capable of going that fast. But now that i think about it i guess that was just an assumption
I was once on an empty road that was straight all the way to the horizon and i got it up to 100. I woulda gone higher but my passenger didn’t want to
We hit that point in spinning disk drives a while ago for me
You could do “spooky vision” from South Park
I’d guess that’s probably true for most of them, this one is probably an outlier
We do have those things. That’s how many technologies already work.
The caller is clearly trolling
Nah, i think that’s signs of a cat in heat
Me as well. I crack up at nonsense type comedy like the eric andre show, and imo this snl skit is just plain unfunny
Every album by the band Can
A million dollars buys a lot of food and shelter which gives you more time to do mushroom picking. And the process of accepting the prize probably wouldn’t have taken more than a couple of days
Russia is still profiting handsomely from oil sales, in large part due to India buying so much of it.
There are 2 different categorization systems - botanical and culinary. Both are valid systems for their topic, but ONLY for their one topic. Calling a tomato a vegetable is the correct answer for cooking, but the incorrect answer for botany, and vice versa.
The drawings are so expressive!
Just a question for clarity here - you’re saying that a person of sound mind and can communicate should be killed against their will?
News Flash: Cause and effect exists. People don’t pop into existence each day as a brand new slate unaffected by their past.
There may or may not be value to the study, but this pop-sci article is trying to make a mountain out of a molehill.