Swamp 6 Link Dump Extravaganza
Posted: Tue Mar 19, 2013 2:49 pm
It's the sixth version of The Swamp. What could possibly go wrong?
http://www.sportsfrog.net/phpbb/
That is fantastic.
Why can't i figure out what it is?govmentchedda wrote:That is fantastic.
When I clicked through, I picked a game and it took me to a page with the score in 40 point font (along with highlights, stats, etc).travzilla wrote:"don't tell me the score"
For people who want to see the highlights not knowing what is going to happen or how it ends up.
Clicking through takes me to the video game highlights from the NHL.Shirley wrote:When I clicked through, I picked a game and it took me to a page with the score in 40 point font (along with highlights, stats, etc).travzilla wrote:"don't tell me the score"
For people who want to see the highlights not knowing what is going to happen or how it ends up.
Is it just that the scores aren't on the first page?
That looks pretty awesome, but our company switched to Concur a couple of years ago, and that has made my expense report submissions infinitely easier. Only downside is I have to scan all of my receipts, which can take several minutes depending on the length of my trip.kranepool wrote:The swamp has a few road warriors.
For me, http://expensify.com" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false; is the most important development in years.
My company also went to Concur a couple years ago and I like it a lot. We don't have to scan/provide receipts other than hotels, unless you didn't use the company credit card and the expense is over $25.Sabo wrote:That looks pretty awesome, but our company switched to Concur a couple of years ago, and that has made my expense report submissions infinitely easier. Only downside is I have to scan all of my receipts, which can take several minutes depending on the length of my trip.kranepool wrote:The swamp has a few road warriors.
For me, http://expensify.com" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false; is the most important development in years.
I think the idea is that you can see the highlights, but they have blacked out the scoreline at the bottom of the screen so you don't see the scores of other games.govmentchedda wrote:Clicking through takes me to the video game highlights from the NHL.Shirley wrote:When I clicked through, I picked a game and it took me to a page with the score in 40 point font (along with highlights, stats, etc).travzilla wrote:"don't tell me the score"
For people who want to see the highlights not knowing what is going to happen or how it ends up.
Is it just that the scores aren't on the first page?
Under IRS guidelines (help me out, HDO), receipts aren't required for expenses less than $25.howard wrote:Ok, Expensify. They gave me ten free Smart Scans. After that, $0.20 each. In January, I had 18 receipts (mostly taxis); that would be $3.60. I think I can handle that cost. Not sure if it is worth it, on a larger scale, but it is cool and convenient.
Tiny white print on that dark background was very hard to read, but well worth it.SlimChristian wrote:One bad ass Medal of Honor winner.
I would argue that any Medal of Honor winner is a bad ass, but wow, that guy is a REAL bad ass.SlimChristian wrote:One bad ass Medal of Honor winner.
Strange but strong intimacies are the hallmarks of field friendships.
...
3) Taking turns kicking the bloated and steaming corpse of a cow to marvel at the spectacle of vultures, flying as if newly born, from its half-eaten anus (they just keep coming…). Then looking at each other and knowing, without having to say a word, that you will wait together so that you can watch them crawl back inside.
4) Maintaining eye contact - and I will neither confirm nor deny that hands were held, as well - while mutually defecating in the forest. Just to see if you can stand it. Which you can, but just barely. (And please, try not to laugh so hard while pooping in the future… it’s exceedingly strange in both sensation and outcome.)
Jesus.SlimChristian wrote:One bad ass Medal of Honor winner.
NPR and the Center compiled reports of the nearly 180 worker deaths from grain-related entrapments since 1984; you can view them by state or browse through the disturbing event summaries. The entire “Buried in Grain” series is well worth reading — and bookmarking for those times when anyone tells you OSHA is being too hard on businesses.On a stifling hot day in July 2010, Whitebread joined his buddies Alex Pacas, 19, and Will Piper, 20, at the Haasbach LLC grain storage complex. Piper had begun working there the week before, and it was Pacas’ second day on the job.
The boys carried shovels and picks as they climbed a ladder four stories to the top of the grain bin, which was twice as wide and half-filled with 250,000 bushels of wet and crusty corn. Their job was to “walk down the grain,” or break up the kernels that clung to the walls and clogged the drainage hole at the bottom of the bin.
The work went well at first, with the boys shoveling corn toward a cone-shaped hole at the center of the bin. But around 9:45 a.m., Whitebread began sinking in the corn. He was sucked under in minutes and disappeared. Pacas and Piper also began to sink and desperately struggled to stay on the surface.
Six horrific hours later, only Piper was carried out alive.
Damn. That's amazing.SlimChristian wrote:Badass of the week
The most prolific sniper known. One thing that write up didn't mention is Hayha would put snow in his mouth so condensation from his breath wouldn't give his position away. Imagine putting snow in your mouth for hours on end when it's well below zero. Then again, if the alternative is getting shot and killed, it doesn't sound so bad.SlimChristian wrote:Badass of the week
This read, in part, like one of SLolz'z presidential biographies.SlimChristian wrote:Badass of the week
I thought the exact same thing.DSafetyGuy wrote:This read, in part, like one of SLolz'z presidential biographies.SlimChristian wrote:Badass of the week