@Dan but but but, it could sit there and wait with some of its friends like Laphroaig, MacAllan, Abunad'h, Oban, Glenngrant, his Irish cousins Bushmills and Connemera and that japanese exchange student Taketsuru
and Glenmorangie and Highland park might come over to visit!
@Dan I think the fact that it actually worked should totally cover shipping. "Eric / IT / 1801 East Cotati Ave / 94928-3609 / US". Something from Islay, like a nice Bruichladdich or Port Charlotte would be ideal, but I'm not picky, as long as it's single malt... ;)
@JoelESalas you basically push it from test to acceptance and let users interact with it. You then also contact a pentest team to validate that your library is secure.
@JoelESalas you can't "acceptance test" a library -- you can unit test it, then you give it to the developers to write test apps with and they do the acceptance (or rejection) bit.
@LucasKauffman The community stuff is just marketing - when all is said and done the 3 I mentioned earlier all use the same water, peat, and maltings so they have to have something to differentiate themselves with
It's nice because there are like 8 starting cards that you use that are always the same, but then there are 8 that you choose randomly out of 16 (I think) at the start of the game, so no two games are the same
And the board has two sides, Osaka and somewhere else that we didn't play. So you have two possible boards to play on as well
Lots of fun decisions to make too. Almost anything you do gives you a "waste" card that does literally nothing, so the more actions you take, the more chance you have of drawing dead cards on your turn. So it makes you evaluate your actions carefully
I haven't heard of them. I need to do some research
All of my knowledge of these things is through my brother-in-law. If he hasn't shown it to me after Sunday dinner, I don't know about it. I'll check them out, maybe I can surprise him
I don't speak German but who wants to work for pizza.de? http://careers.stackoverflow.com/jobs/46387/system-netzwerkadministrator-m-w-schwerpunkt-pizza-de-gmbh?a=UzBvXT3O
The Winter of Our Discontent is John Steinbeck's last novel, published in 1961. The title is a reference to the first two lines of William Shakespeare's Richard III: "Now is the winter of our discontent / Made glorious summer by this sun [or son] of York," .
Plot summary
The story concerns mainly Ethan Allen Hawley, a former member of Long Island's aristocratic class. Ethan's late father has lost his family's fortune, and, consequently, Ethan now works as a clerk in a grocery store. His wife Mary and children resent their mediocre social and economic status, and do not value the honest...
@LucasKauffman my office gal's husband brewed us a beer for work. And brought in the kegerator. All I had to do was go to Air-Gas to get a 5# CO<sub>2</sub> bottle...
Hey if any of y'all have experience with hp switches, i'd really appreciate a once over on my question on network engineering... with a clear-ish goal, I'll be more motivated to work on the damn thing rather than sunbathe & drink from my keg.
You know how we tease devops types about giving root to devs? I'm going in from the other side. I'm going to start describing this as either opsdev or perlops.