Ohh I see, yes. Gotta grind a bit finer them :/

Buy a lesser magic or greater magic wand, on the auction house. They're cheap

How far off would it be? Could it still give a general area after a few million years? Like a 100ly bubble or something? Or is it totally useless?

I know right? I can't fathom playing like this. I have so many key binds, I've run out of keys. I'm having to use a few shift key binds to have enough lmao

If your output is high, can't you just cut the shot short so it hits the right mass?

Next comes the ring gates

Srsly if you haven't read or atleast watched the expanse, you need to do that.

Lol go play any other version of wow where they actually fixed prot paladins.

I hate this bitch and want to see him in jail also.. but judge is going to follow the guidelines. He's a first time offender, and the crime was non violent and near victimless. Maximum says 1.5-4 years, or anything less. He's not going to jail and that's not unreasonable.

There are a few things. 1, you have to use a burnish tool to press the foil down, on all the tops and sides. It has to be ultra pressed. Make sure you're using fresh foil, not super old stuff. And you have to grind every edge of every piece to rough them up. If you're cutting glass and leaving the shiny edge, the foil will not stick.

Fresh foil, grind edges, burnish aggressively

Yep, I experienced the exact same thing. Taco bell, two meals and an extra quesadilla, $33. Fucking insane.. went to a local non chain burger place, 2 burgers with sides, and a kids chicken plate. $32. Sure, it was more than Taco Bell after tip.. but wtf? How is a sit-down, non chain burger place the same price as taco bell wtf is going on

zbertoli
1
Stir Rod Stewart
10hLink

Spice was a molecule called JWH-200. cannaboid receptor agonist. Nasty stuff

zbertoli
2
Stir Rod Stewart
10hLink

It's a cannibinoid. Spice was traditionally a molecule called JWH-200. It is a cannibinoid receptor agonist, but you can tell it doesn't look like thc at all. There are a lot of derivatives of jwh-200.

Not much to think about. Quarks can't exist by themselves for more than a few nano seconds. They always form groups of 3, sometimes 2. You can't add a quark to a proton. Furthermore, the protons don't do much besides help bring in more electrons, that gives the elements their properties. Even if you could add a quark to an atom, the electron count would not change, and the atom would be the same.

We discussed it elsewhere in this thread and came to an agreement

Are you talking a graduate degree or an undergraduate? Usually, undergrad degrees would just be in "chemistry" or "biochemistry" not specifically organic chemistry.

Okay, over time, yes, I would agree. Others in this thread are saying that they are bad simply because they are chemicals.

Good luck on your degree! I had a blast with my ochem masters.

False equilivency. Not the same thing at all

The claim was, "synthetics" destroy soil, which I'm not explicitly disagreeing with. But it's not as simple as "chems are bad mkay" the plants don't care if the nutrients are hydrolyzed from microbial enzymes, or just given to them as a already hydrolyzed salt.

For farming practices, sure, organic is more sustainable and environmentally friendly, it won't build up a toxicity like inorganic nutrients will. I agree. But a single hydroponic bucket can grow weed that is just as good.

Ya I mean, space itself has very low thermal energy. It's cold. If you were somehow in space with no suit, it would probably be difficult to feel hot and cold because the lack of convection. But yes, if you were in the shade. You would probably feel cold after a while, and if you were in the sun, you'd feel hot real quick.

Okay, I have a masters in chemical organic synthesis. The problem is, the discussion is more nuanced than you make it seem. The problem is not that "synthetic" nutrients are bad. The problem is, they are normally inorganic salts, and therefore very water soluble. They wash away with the rain and etc. Organic, complex nutrients break down over time, they are essentially slow release and much less water soluble, so they persist in the soil. Your comments of "chems are bad mkay" really glosses over the nuances of the discussion. You are the one that would get a low grade on a bio 101 short answer question.

Of course, farms that use natural fertilizer are more sustainable and environmentally friendly, I'm not arguing that. And farms that use inorganic salts will have a problem with soil toxicity after many years. But I've grown some top tier cannabis, peppers, tomatoes etc. Using hydroponics. That's pure, 100% water soluble inorganic "synthetic" salts, no soil needed. It's not as simple as "organic"= better as you make it seem.

I've grown steller weed, tomatoes, peppers, herbs, using nothing but "synthetic" (lol) inorganic salts. I've done it in soil, and I've done it In hydroponics. Hydroponics is king, and there is nothing organic about it.

Lmao bro you're posting about being annoyed by bullshit claims and then immediately comment a bullshit claim. This has to be a troll post.

That bag have a roast date? Because anything older than 2 months will taste bad

I've been trying for a month or two, and only yesterday made a nice wiggly pattern. I'll tell you the main problem for me was actually getting the correct milk consistency. Inject air for only the first few seconds, and then spin. It only looks correct during the last 5 seconds or so, so it can feel like it's not working.

Ya I love it! It's a lot of fun. Ochem feels like sudoku puzzles or something, to me. And there is very little math.

Ya, the vaporization of the water in/on your skin would feel cold, and space itself is super cold. But if you were in space, directly in the sun, it would feel insanely hot. It's just harder to give off heat, so you would freeze quickly, and then probably slow roast in the sun lol