I've never gotten one to work anywhere.
Huh. My sister has had good luck with them, even though she ended up with a tape deck in the end. I think she even had one working in DC, which surprised me. I've also used the technology successfully in New Orleans, but in LA I'm not sure where I'd even try and start.
Good for him, JZ. I hope that sort of thing happens more and more.
bluntly stated in his homily that we should all be hoping and praying for the day when the Church accepts the spiritual gifts women have to offer and honors the lifelong commitments made by its LGBT members
Oh, that's marvelous, JZ! I am so impressed.
That's good to hear, JZ!
I use an FM transmitter all the time, but I am not in a dense market. Works okay. It's supposed to find the best frequency to transmit on with the push of a button, but I'm not sure that feature actually works. The cassette thingy only works okay, too, although I guess the shortcomings are different, so it's nice to have both options. I was able to plug an iPod cable into the stereo of the Volvo and then control the iPod with the stereo buttons, which was very nice but required a special cable and only worked because a previous owner had put in an aftermarket stereo. It supposedly had some kind of bluetooth capability, but I never did figure out how to make that work.
Talk about The Good News, JZ!
Several people I went to high school with are posting photos of their children dressed for prom. How are we old enough for that?
I've never gotten one to work anywhere. City, highway, dirt road in the middle of nowhere - IME they need constant fiddling regardless.
I had pretty good luck with mine, even in Chicago. The only place I had trouble was NW Lower Michigan. I think it was picking up Green Bay signals in addition to local ones.
Here's an exception to the "don't read the comments" rule. [link]
JZ, I hope there's a surge of positive ramifications--set an example, maybe, that hesitant by tolerant people can follow.
I have a couple Hindi questions, and for one I think I have an answer. I've been trying to work out how to ask them without seeming rude, but they're kind of "No offence but..." questions. I notice that a lot of folk I know whose first language is Hindi say "today morning" instead of "this morning". Now, this could be incorrect extrapolation ("yesterday morning" and "tomorrow morning" are epically unhelpful), but I did wonder if it was more of a literal translation issue. The co-worker I asked eventually exploded with "I don't read or write Hindi! I just speak it!" so my plan of getting a Westernised Hindi point of view was flouted. But when I walked him through saying the Hindi for "this morning" and ascertaining it's two words and the first word means "today" and he still couldn't say if "today morning" was a literal translation of same...untrustworthy source.
But at least there's an answer to that. It is or it ain't a literal translation. My other question is: What's up with "determine?" It seems to be the most consistently mispronounced word amongst native Hindi speakers, even including some people with no discernible accent for the other 99.97% of their vocab. What's so special about it? Why de-tur-MINE?
I NEED TO KNOW.
I may be reduced to asking my big boss this, but it's such a random question that who would even know what the answer is?
Shit, that was close. Almost left a "Happy Mother's Day" message. Google first, kiddoes.
I wonder--could I draw something for my mother? I sent my family the results of my 30 day challenge (30 days of drawing Dean and Cas canoodling was way easier than that--pretty appalling, in that way that doesn't appal me at all) and they seemed to like it, but I am way out of practice drawing any of the things I can think of as applicable (e.g. ducklings and likenesses of my family). Don't know what to do...
Hand drawn mother's day card from your daughter has to be the best gift ever, right? That's my understanding.
Some of those poetry comments are hilarious. The East Orange one may be my favorite.