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Meridian Drainage Collapse

newtboy says...

I saw a report where they said it's looking like the pipe had holes and leakage formed empty pockets along the outside, removing all support, then as you said, the sides moved apart and, boom goes the dynamite.

Payback said:

Probably not back filled properly, or ground water, or "something" but the sides were allowed to move apart, which dropped the top.

10 Hours of Walking in NYC as a Woman

Catapult Base Jumping

Catapult Base Jumping

tancredemelet says...

Hi there, I am the base jumper appearing in the video, can you remove the catapult video PLEASE?
I guess you record it from the net, there was a LEAKAGE, this video was not supposed to come out before we release a full movie about the story.
Please can you erase it ASAP?
I am very annoyed people don't respect our work on this project by sharing a video with no rights and not even saying from who it is coming from. There was 30 people for one month to build the catapult and I worked 6 month to organise all project, we wanted to keep this secret before the official full movie is released...
Thanks for your cooperation
--

What happens when you give seagulls laxatives

Krupo says...

>> ^Brainmeats:

viral wtf? pringles -> diarrhea .. I'm sure thats the first thing they want people to connect with their brand....


So do they still do Olestra or not? It's the fake fat with the "anal leakage" problem.

So the laxatives would've been overkill if that were the case...

Breivik's Massacre = Rational; Demonstrates Moral Conscience

Karl Pilkington Gets His Prostate Examined Under Duress

alien_concept says...

>> ^Skeeve:

The problem is that people do get treated unnecessarily.
The real problem, though, is that doctors do not have a reliable way to determine which of these very small cancers that are caught by a biopsy are potentially dangerous and which will never bother a man in his lifetime. (Indeed, autopsy studies show that more than half of men in their 50s and three quarters of men in their 80s in the U.S. had prostate cancer but died of something else.)[...]Such ambiguity would not be so bad if the treatments were virtually risk free.[...] Surgery (open radial prostatectomy) often results in urinary leakage [...] damage to the nearby muscle that controls urination may lead to incontinence. [...] Meanwhile, the nerves and blood vessels controlling erections may be severed during surgery, causing erectile dysfunction (impotence).[...] Radiation therapy of the prostate often ends up damaging the rectum and bladder because it is hard to avoid radiation scatter[...] Moreover, rectal bleeding and fecal soiling are frequent but commonly unreported side effects of both radiation therapy (including radioactive seed implants) and surgical approaches.

People do get treated unnecessarily. And those treatments have side effects that can be far worse than living with the cancer. Only 4 percent of prostate cancers spread to the bones or organs. Medical organizations now advise that asymptomatic men should not have routine screening unless they have a strong family history of prostate cancer.>> ^alien_concept:
@Yogi Perhaps because it's the most common form of cancer here in the UK and so many men remain undiagnosed because they're too scared to have it done and he though, fuck it. I dunno. Because it was funny and he knew it would be? I don't really understand what's dangerous about it @Skeeve? I can guarantee you that here they wouldn't treat anyone unnecessarily here on the NHS



I have no idea dude, whether it's the same here or not. Your post is very interesting. All I do know is my dad had prostate cancer after being checked and they caught it early enough for him to get away with a few weeks of radiation therapy, so maybe I'm biased

Karl Pilkington Gets His Prostate Examined Under Duress

Skeeve says...

The problem is that people do get treated unnecessarily.

The real problem, though, is that doctors do not have a reliable way to determine which of these very small cancers that are caught by a biopsy are potentially dangerous and which will never bother a man in his lifetime. (Indeed, autopsy studies show that more than half of men in their 50s and three quarters of men in their 80s in the U.S. had prostate cancer but died of something else.)[...]Such ambiguity would not be so bad if the treatments were virtually risk free.[...] Surgery (open radial prostatectomy) often results in urinary leakage [...] damage to the nearby muscle that controls urination may lead to incontinence. [...] Meanwhile, the nerves and blood vessels controlling erections may be severed during surgery, causing erectile dysfunction (impotence).[...] Radiation therapy of the prostate often ends up damaging the rectum and bladder because it is hard to avoid radiation scatter[...] Moreover, rectal bleeding and fecal soiling are frequent but commonly unreported side effects of both radiation therapy (including radioactive seed implants) and surgical approaches.



People do get treated unnecessarily. And those treatments have side effects that can be far worse than living with the cancer. Only 4 percent of prostate cancers spread to the bones or organs. Medical organizations now advise that asymptomatic men should not have routine screening unless they have a strong family history of prostate cancer.>> ^alien_concept:

@Yogi Perhaps because it's the most common form of cancer here in the UK and so many men remain undiagnosed because they're too scared to have it done and he though, fuck it. I dunno. Because it was funny and he knew it would be? I don't really understand what's dangerous about it @Skeeve? I can guarantee you that here they wouldn't treat anyone unnecessarily here on the NHS

Detectable Civilizations in our Galaxy (plus Drake Equation)

budzos says...

I think about this stuff a lot. Lately I look at all the computer power we're developing and how dangerous the universe really is. I get fixed on the horrifying implications of "Von Neumann Machines" and think most civilizations like ours who reach out with radio probably get silenced by a swarm of machines as a consequence of their indiscretion. It could be that the galaxy will be endlessly culled for all time by such robots. Or, maybe the machines would be benevolent like the Monoliths in 2001, which are Von Neumann machines in that they appear autonomous and self-replicating.

It seems likely that really advanced civilizations might "go dark" and beyond ceasing to use radio (or at least ceasing to allow radio leakage) they might actually bury/hide their civilization. They might even offload their minds into computers and not bother communicating with the physical universe outside their programmed reality at all. I'm starting to think this last bit might be the most likely of all scenarios.

I've probably read too much hard sci-fi and I really love the stuff along these themes like Forge of God, Anvil of Stars, 2001 series, etc.

Nuclear expert warns Fukushima is "Chernobyl on steroids"

Intel Fellow explains 3D transistor invention

joedirt says...

There is no telling what kind of yield they will get on these. The transistors require about 5% more area, and the previous transistor design has been perfected for many many many years.

The huge advantage is less leakage current, maybe less capacitance for switching.

It's interesting that this technique was sort of used for memory where they used the 3D well shape to get more capacitance in the same area.

It's a motherfucking Roast, bitches and gentlemen! (Wtf Talk Post)

thinker247 says...

First things first, anal leakages of VideoShit. My name is thinker247, which means that I don't take time off from thinking, even when I'm sleeping. And in my sleep I could roast all of you like the testicle-kabobs that you are.

I told you motherfuckers to keep Blankfist away from the children, and now he's balls-deep in the kids and religion channels. Soon he'll be strutting around, preaching the virtues of anal deflowering as a method of salvation. Just like Oprah.

BeggedmetoPeeonher tells a yawn-inducing story worthy of some podunk Arkansas town's ratty news dish, and we're all supposed to fawn over it like Perez Hilton falling into punji stakes made of cocks.

The "Jester" pops his head in to make some serious announcement that he's made a million times, without even saying a word in jest. Hey Jester, you're as funny as rottenseed is relevant.

Speaking of rotten.cum, his appearance was as necessary as ovarian cancer and not nearly as comical. He couldn't buy a joke if he was Carlos Mencia. But enough of Flavor Flav's oreo baby...

It's time to fuck MrFisk. And unlike your dad, I'm not going to use a condom and I don't care if you tell your mom.

Where to begin with someone whose career hasn't begun? Seriously, of all your articles that I never read, they were terrible. And why pick the Nebraska paper? It's not like any of you can read more than the E at the top of the eye test. And that's only because you all guess.

Some of the fellow sifters mocked your employment at a porn shop, but it doesn't bother me that you were a blow-up sex doll. I just don't understand how you could stand having random semen forced into you every day. You had more douchebags grabbing your vinyl than a hipster music store.

I would write more, but I'm kind of bored...like anyone in Nebraska at any given time of the year.

Also, everyone at this roast has disappointed me. Except for thinker247. What a comedy stud. All of you should take a lesson from him. Seriously, give me money, assholes. I'm the king and I get this kind of worthless response? MrFisk, I'm sorry you had to be here for this. Mainly because there's a cow with a broken heart and an intact rectum, somewhere in Omaha.

Fuck you all.

Potential Solution To Gulf Oil Leak - No Cap, But Plug It

Fletch says...

^Well, probably not so easy as I stated.

However, I think you may be over-estimating BP's desire to avert a PR catastrophy. The world needs oil, and they have oil to sell. It's not about 6000 barrels a day. That IS chump change. But bad PR isn't gonna cost them shit. The clean-up will. I'm sure BP beancounters have already calculated the costs of clean-up vs the cost of capping the well. That 100-ton funnel monstrosity they first tried, and the two more they have since tried, were never intended to buy time so they could cap it. They are buying time for the relief wells. It's always been about getting the oil and doing whatever they can to stem the flow WITHOUT capping.

But hey, I'm just pissed. Could be wrong. Happened before. The whole "we're getting 6000 barrels a day" stuff could be seen as PR or public mollification. But they have no plans to STOP the leakage any time soon. From the BP ROV page: "We may leave some of the LMRP cap valves open to ensure system stability - one is currently closed".

So when did they start selling air to us? (Food Talk Post)

Why use dynamite when you can use an atomic bomb!?



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