
Lafy BAR
BAR-
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Everything posted by Lafy BAR
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Is this not accessible to BAR, or am I blind?
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That was amazing. I did not expect that guy to survive.
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Cast, you're too awesome. Far too awesome. Try to get that under control.
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Looks like everyone is going to have to step up (down?) their game if they want to dethrone Thomas.
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Ummm... I think the video made it quite clear that the stuff is abundant.... "that mine" isn't unique.
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Good information there. My only comment would be that CANDU reactors are much much safer than the type that melted down in japan. Multiple passive safety features, they run on unrefined uranium and can use depleted refined uranium, so it is not a material that reacts without heavy water, in a catastrophe the nuclear material is plunged into normal water and stops reacting, or a couple other safety measures can shut it down. Thorium sounds like an awesome solution, but I have to wonder if the technology is commercially ready since we're not using it. CANDU reactors exist today. They're more expensive to build than typical nuclear, but the fuel is cheaper, so it works out about even.
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Ummm.... wow?
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That was........ horrible.
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he's so angry with that piece of fruit!
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I love the big grin on the cop's face......
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No minimaps, surging pings, but i'm sure TF2 players can now draw penises on their hats or some shit. Thank you for the update valve.
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"The first department store to hold a thanksgiving day parade was.....?" "Costco!"
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Think I could pull this off as business attire for sales meetings?
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Elf you are a gentleman.
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SPAM THREAD!?! WHERE?? I'm up for a challenge!
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That was awesome. You guys find the best videos.
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Name: Hammer Fist Steam I.D: STEAM_0:1:18275511 Reasons for the Ban: Intentional TW and then immediately leaving. Recommended duration of ban: Perm, I've warned him many times, I think i even banned him for a week at one point. Demo Provided?: N
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I've found this link that seems to have complete instructions for decompiling, renaming, and recompiling a model. Model Recompile Tutorial Let us know if that works out for you.
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Disc getting full
Lafy BAR replied to Branem 1st MRB's question in Hardware Guides & Maintenance Questions
you could certainly do that. you might just want to save your whole dod folder. C:\Program Files (x86)\Steam\steamapps\<username>\day of defeat source\dod -
Disc getting full
Lafy BAR replied to Branem 1st MRB's question in Hardware Guides & Maintenance Questions
If you want to move part of your dods install into another location you can do it, but it will require its own partition. This is a somewhat advanced thing to be doing, you should be aware that the partition will only be usable in that dods folder, so make it an appropriate size. Make sure steam isn't running. Make your partition, say 4GB (?) and assign it a drive letter. Use robocopy (available in the Windows Server 2003 Resource Kit) to mirror the folder you want to replace onto the new drive Delete the folder and recreate an empty folder with the same name. Right click on my computer, or computer, and choose manage Go to Disk Management Right click on the partition where you mirrored your folder and choose change drive letter and paths. Click Add, Choose Mount in the following empty NTFS folder, click browse Chose the empty folder you created and hit ok a couple times. You have now replaced a folder on your computer with its own dedicated partition. -
Canada and USA One year ago I had never been outside Canada and the USA. I had been to a bunch of eastern Canada, NYC a couple times, other places in the states. Mexico Last December I went to Cancun which was a huge change from what I'm used to, and frankly I hated it. I stayed in the city instead of a huge resort, which was a mistake. I would only ever stay in a beach front hotel if I went back. But regardless of that I had more or less decided that poor places suck. Everywhere I went in the area I was constantly being harassed to buy shitty stuff with city names written on it. I did find some things I liked. Good food sometimes, very bad sometimes, weird crazy markets where the locals shop, the most screwed up badly wired dangerous electrical meters probably anywhere in the world. On a whole it was interesting, but the near-endless harassment by tourist-junk-merchants really ruins the place. By the way, if you're going to Cancun I would check out the Island, Isla Mujeres, still has the crap-merchants, but on a smaller scale and the beach front hotels aren't the mega-resorts. This September I toured around Europe a bit with some of my family and it was awesome. Mostly eastern Europe. Turns out it wasn't poor places that suck, it's just Mexico. Turkey I started out in Istanbul which is an amazing city. I would go back any time the chance comes up. I think I could live there. It's by far the busiest place I've ever been. The mosques are so cool. There's still a massive culture of trying to sell people shit, but it's in thousand year old sprawling buildings built over hundreds of years.... and the stuff isn't tourist shit, it's just normal stuff. The markets are full of locals negotiating for shit, which makes them really interesting places. Serbia After Istanbul we headed to Novi Sad just outside Belgrade where my sister-in-law has family. Almost every Serb there seemed to have their own acre of grape vines for making wine and liquor. Life seems to revolve around meat and drinking. In the city there's a huge pedestrian area full of cafes and old Austrian buildings, with the odd hideous communist building mixed in. Life there seems pretty good. Wake up, eat piles of cured meats and yogurt, drink some liquor if you want... eat fruit straight off of trees... water the grapes if needed... go hang out in town at a cafe... come back home and get drunk and party into the night. That might not be the typical day for everyone... but it was awfully common. After that we went into Belgrade for a few days, which was very interesting. The Serbs have this understandable obsession with the war and NATO having bombed them. Everywhere you go it's still at the front of people's minds. As we rode around in taxi cabs the drivers would always point out this or that building which was bombed by NATO which they aren't fixing because it's a symbol of what NATO did to them. I didn't get to see it, but I kept hearing about some office building that's half gone and looks like it's about to fall over. Still no plans to fix it or take it down. My 3 year old niece was told by a 5 year old boy that he didn't want to play with her at the park when he found out that she's Canadian because that means she bombed him. The whole experience was very unusual for me. Of course, I only spent a very small time talking to anyone about this and most of the time it was going to bars and cafes! Bosnia My sister-in-law was born in Sarajevo, so that was our next stop. The city couldn't be more different than Belgrade. Sarajevo is pinched between two mountains so the area of the city has been limited by that. Through the valley is a dense busy downtown. We got there Saturday night and every alley was packed full of young people out at little clubs and cafes that were hidden away in behind the stores. The scale of everything there is remarkably small. The downtown isn't made up of huge buildings with parking and offices. Mostly it's one storey buildings with shops in front and restaurants down every alley. It seemed like every business there was thriving because they didn't have the room for failing businesses. I don't think you could have a single fat person there because of the mountains. My brother and I tried walking to the top of the mountain one day. It was an hour long hike going up about 45 degrees along winding streets with houses packed in everywhere a house would fit. We luckily chose the smaller of the two mountains. Once as high as we could get the other peaks still towered above us. Just getting to our hotel one block from downtown was a fair climb. probably about 200 yards vertically. Netherlands After the mountainous Sarajevo Amsterdam was a welcome grade. Flat. The only bumps are the bridges. What an intensely quaint city. I honestly feel like the building codes there have a required minimum quaintness factor. All the little brick buildings lining the canals makes it feel like no matter where you go you must be on the cutest street in the city. If most places publish books about all the nicest buildings they have I think Amsterdam could get away with a book of the 50 buildings not to look at. The city has an amazing modern art museum, if you're into that kinda thing.... which I am. I didn't make it to the Van Gogh or Rembrant museums, which in hindsight I shouldn't have missed. Oh well, reasons to go back! You'll all be disappointed in me, I didn't smoke any weed. Sorry, I don't smoke. Also the weather sucked and they have little metal fences you stand behind to pee into the canal... wtf? So that's everywhere I've been... I must have been to around 100 cafes in 3 weeks... I guess I'm a patio tourist.