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Moderators: Bookworm, starkruzr, MrFireDragon, PrettyPrincess, Wapsi
Gross physical similarity means nothing.AmriloJim wrote:https://socialcompare.com/en/comparison ... comparisonAnotherFairportfan wrote:Can you provide documentation?
For fun, compare the card that carried your new Net10 SIM to any chip-enabled credit/debit card in your wallet. Orientation of the elements are the same, no?
In a way, they remind me of Aztec glyphs. Hmm, Wapsi come to real life?AnotherFairportfan wrote:Gross physical similarity means nothing.AmriloJim wrote:https://socialcompare.com/en/comparison ... comparisonAnotherFairportfan wrote:Can you provide documentation?
For fun, compare the card that carried your new Net10 SIM to any chip-enabled credit/debit card in your wallet. Orientation of the elements are the same, no?
I would say that the fact that the card that carries the SIM and a credit card have th chips in the same relative position is because that means they don't need two different kinds of production machinery.
Quotes:AnotherFairportfan wrote:Jedi training - the tradition endures
That will get better with practice, and it's a skill you never lose.Alkarii wrote:As it happens, I can drive a stick shift now. I haven't quite got the hang of shifting smoothly, but I can still manage to drive.
I watch films from the Forties with cute teenage girls driving cars that i MIGHT be able to drive after a few hours of intensive practise ... but not as smoothly.Typeminer wrote:That will get better with practice, and it's a skill you never lose.Alkarii wrote:As it happens, I can drive a stick shift now. I haven't quite got the hang of shifting smoothly, but I can still manage to drive.
You oughta see an old semi tractor.Alkarii wrote:The former general manager at the Nissan dealership where I used to work has a truck with two sticks, for shifting into 4-low or 4-high. First time I'd seen anything of the sort.
And the old Jeeps had three: One for 3 forward gears plus reverse, one for 2- or 4-wheel drive, and one for high or low range.AnotherFairportfan wrote:You oughta see an old semi tractor.Alkarii wrote:The former general manager at the Nissan dealership where I used to work has a truck with two sticks, for shifting into 4-low or 4-high. First time I'd seen anything of the sort.
Two separate sticks you sometimes have to shift simultaneously...
That WAS user friendly.GlytchMeister wrote:"User friendly" wasn't really a thing back in the day, huh?
Whoa. You could afford kerosene? We had to use the old coal-fired steel guitars. I know guys who still get pissed off if you mention hot jazz.AnotherFairportfan wrote:I could joke about "In the Old Days, us'ns had to play our Music With Rocks In on kerosene-powered guitars..."
We drive it only once in a blue moon, but my dad always gives me grief for crunching second gear in his 1965 MGB. Really, the synchro's busted (he and my brother grind it, too), and I never drive it enough to get the double-clutching right. I never ground gears in the Miata, or the Prizm, or the Toyota Corona, or the E150, or the Plymouth Cricket, or the Rambler Classic wagon, or all them Volkswagens, or the International dumptruck, or my uncle's Studebakers, or the Willys Jeep, or . . . .AnotherFairportfan wrote:My 1969 Austin-Healey Sprite didn't have synchro on first gear, on the theory you would never shift into it except when standing still - and even then, in order to prevent the occasional minor "crunch!" as i shifted into first, i briefly would shift into second and then down to first. After the first month driving it, that became an automatic reflex.
There's a really pretty Indian - a bit newer, i think - in the window at a McDonalds near here.Sgt. Howard wrote:I learned motorcycle on my Grandpa's 1937 Indian- manual spark advance on the left twist, clutch on the left foot and shift over the tank