"I don't like pickles in my burgers and don't understand the point of having them in there, Is that thing a given that it's in there? I like cheese, however the cheeseburger has that bastard in it."Pako
Since milk isn't vegan, shit wouldn't be either. The only way it could be is if you're a quasi-religious "moral vegan" who only eats vegetables because animals can't consent to being eaten or having their products used by another. So if you're one of those vegans who thinks cannibalism is ok, you can also eat a human's shit if they agree to it.
Since milk isn't vegan, shit wouldn't be either. The only way it could be is if you're a quasi-religious "moral vegan" who only eats vegetables because animals can't consent to being eaten or having their products used by another. So if you're one of those vegans who thinks cannibalism is ok, you can also eat a human's shit if they agree to it.
Holy shit. Not too long ago, that was the world record for shooting a man-sized target. A damn red bull is... that's absurd. I guess technology has made it easier to make long shots like that, but still incredible. I'm curious if he used that drone to essentially spot for him or if he had a person doing it still, I'm not familiar with how sharp-shooting has changed in the drone age.
Holy shit. Not too long ago, that was the world record for shooting a man-sized target. A damn red bull is... that's absurd. I guess technology has made it easier to make long shots like that, but still incredible. I'm curious if he used that drone to essentially spot for him or if he had a person doing it still, I'm not familiar with how sharp-shooting has changed in the drone age.
I would have liked more explanation as to what was happening, but I think the drone was to film the shooter and the target at the same time so you could see the three seconds between the shot and the impact.
I'd really love to watch a longform video about all the work that goes into shooting that accurately, that far, I imagine it would make for fascinating content.
I'd really love to watch a longform video about all the work that goes into shooting that accurately, that far, I imagine it would make for fascinating content.
Thinking about switching off Linux Mint's default desktop environment to something else, and while I don't think I could install it on my system, whoever works on Hyprland might have good music taste
Thinking about switching off Linux Mint's default desktop environment to something else, and while I don't think I could install it on my system, whoever works on Hyprland might have good music taste View attachment 78375
You can, in fact, use it all on latest Mint. Just relogin to wayland session.
hyprland dev might have good taste, but he's also have supremely retarded hot takes (like all good programmers)
Holy shit. Not too long ago, that was the world record for shooting a man-sized target. A damn red bull is... that's absurd. I guess technology has made it easier to make long shots like that, but still incredible. I'm curious if he used that drone to essentially spot for him or if he had a person doing it still, I'm not familiar with how sharp-shooting has changed in the drone age.
I would have liked more explanation as to what was happening, but I think the drone was to film the shooter and the target at the same time so you could see the three seconds between the shot and the impact.
I'd really love to watch a longform video about all the work that goes into shooting that accurately, that far, I imagine it would make for fascinating content.
It's the wind & bullet drop computation that's changed. It's not that the bullets can make those distances, it is that the rifle's stability while firing and just how much air resistance there is between the two points. That rig to stabilize the rifle is also super expensive.
He's doing precision shooting at what are actually Artillery types of range. It's wild in general.
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