It looks like you're new here. If you want to get involved, click one of these buttons!
Tonight on GeekNights, tired of complaints about "wasted" RAM, we talk about memory. Fiddleheads aside, we consider whether wireless really is that important to business, and the pwning of Chrome.
Comments
Also, no, they cannot talk to Earth in real time.
And I don't think many people born post 1995 will recognize Vitameatavegamin, possibly born earlier.
I wonder how Rym wanted to add numbers without transistors, though. Vacuum tubes?
Really good show, lads, very enjoyable to listen to.
For all practical purposes, a quiche is both a pie and a custard (a "tart" is a kind of pie - specifically one without the top layer of crust). However, non-practically, a quiche is primarily designated as a pie because the custard portion is a sub-component of the finished quiche, rather than, say, a cheesecake, where the whole finished component is one big custard.
However, I'll finish by saying that I can think of exactly zero situations where this subtle difference in quiche naming convention would actually matter, even to a professional baker.
But, I've actually had a few classes on ovo-lacto vegetarian cooking, and one specifically on vegan. I have to admit they gave me a lot of trouble, since breaking the meat-centric mindset that's been ingrained in me since birth was no easy feat, but I have no bigoted or condescending feelings towards vegetarians or vegans. I also don't fault you for assuming I did, because I've met a lot of that negative sentiment within my field.
The trade-off is always that the weight of the stuff necessary to catch meat, or the weight of hauling meat, is not worth the taste, and certainly not the calories, when the ultralight backpacker can get those nutrients elsewhere. On normal-weight treks, or if I was hiking with a second person, I'd probably bring an ammo box for a box stove and some fly-fishing gear to have a good tuck-in by a stream before bed. But for ultralight stuff, vegan food is definitely the way to go, it seems.
I'll report back once I've actually tried that stuff; the summer's just starting and I still have more kit to assemble before my first trip out. Should be interesting.
My girlfriend told me about some ultralight hikers she met on the Appalachian trail. Everything was super high tech, ultralight, some of it custom made -- except for their double-chambered Graffix bong.