Nope. I teach them in my car. And yeah, the car might sometimes stutter but that doesn't hurt anything. It's hard to harm to a clutch without using the gas pedal or a graded street.
I love teaching my friends how to drive stick. The first lesson is how to make the idle car move by lifting the clutch foot so slow that you can feel the car move and keep going slowly until the foot is off the clutch pedal. It's about a 15 minute lesson and the driver understands what to do with the clutch. The gas is easy.
36 hours in and I would think I'm in the clear then someone would need some real help, like loading their truck to move some stuff for their kids party and ask me, "think it will all fit?" In that moment reflexes would lose the money.
You ever sit down at home, after a long day of getting shit done and being responsible with work or family, and want to jump into 2 hours of something else entirely new? Or do you do like so many of us and scroll through a streaming catalogue and aspirationally look at the new shows and movies, finding lots of things to watch but nothing that strikes you as being the right thing to watch? Do you ever settle for something good that you know and promise yourself that you will watch something new later? That's why sequels do so well.
People are tired and just want to see something comfortable that they know. Lay off sequels. Fix society, make us all not tired, and you will see more new shit.
Chinese chef knife is missing. It's not a meat cleaver, the blade isn't nearly thick enough for it, but it does make quick work of veg. It's also one of the only knives used for Chinese cooking. Learned about it from Martin Yan.
Studies and reports show the world's wealthiest have about half the wealth. That fewer than 1000 people who have as much as 8 billion. Why not go where the money is? Go where there is an excess per person instead of repeatedly pulling the same tired taxe hikes from the majority as they can.
Bad faith argument. You don't actually care about Everest. You are looking for a double standard without understanding what you are actually comparing.
That's the result of a fucked business model. Many software devs came and went prior to the subscription model. Technofeudalism is not wanted by anyone but the software publishers.
Nope. I teach them in my car. And yeah, the car might sometimes stutter but that doesn't hurt anything. It's hard to harm to a clutch without using the gas pedal or a graded street.