Lurker > Bio1590

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TopicRush Limbaugh has died.
Bio1590
02/20/21 10:41:32 PM
#466
TopicRush Limbaugh has died.
Bio1590
02/20/21 9:57:48 AM
#464
TopicFrozenPie is BANNED
Bio1590
02/19/21 11:23:08 PM
#12
I mean he obviously agrees with the majority of things Rush has said over the years, why wouldn't he
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TopicFrozenPie is BANNED
Bio1590
02/19/21 11:18:30 PM
#10
SolidShadow3 posted...
What happened this time?

He had a meltdown over people being the opposite of upset that Limbaugh died.
---
TopicRush Limbaugh has died.
Bio1590
02/19/21 11:17:02 PM
#460
Actually

*looks*

Next round may be Kissinger, but Trump will definitely be the final boss
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TopicRush Limbaugh has died.
Bio1590
02/19/21 10:38:50 PM
#456
Honestly all this topic proves is that the Mods are absolutely salivating awaiting Trump to die.
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TopicRush Limbaugh has died.
Bio1590
02/19/21 10:31:31 PM
#454
Well that was fun.

Glad this site is so concerned about the feelings of dead racists/homophobes/transphobes.
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TopicRush Limbaugh has died.
Bio1590
02/17/21 12:57:08 PM
#151
CyricZ posted...
Meltdown warning has now been lifted in the areas of:

Current Events

Thank you for your cooperation. *jingle*

I mean he still has his Main https://gamefaqs.gamespot.com./user.php?db=.7.user=Caution999
---
TopicRush Limbaugh has died.
Bio1590
02/17/21 12:56:24 PM
#149
Too bad it's moddable to repost Caution's white replacement rant
---
TopicRush Limbaugh has died.
Bio1590
02/17/21 12:44:28 PM
#105
FrozenPie posted...


I'll take things that were never said for $1000, Alex.

So you're denying you've posted white replacement rants now?
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TopicRush Limbaugh has died.
Bio1590
02/17/21 12:36:58 PM
#74
Literally zero surprise that Caution "The Democrats want to commit white genocide" 999 is having a meltdown over this
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TopicMaïwenn: Leon the Professional is based on my relationship w/Luc Besson
Bio1590
02/17/21 11:10:00 AM
#9
Her daughter was conceived when she was still 15 uhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh
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TopicTrump Plaza comes crashing down to the ground, just like his Presidency
Bio1590
02/17/21 10:45:21 AM
#1
TopicNortherners aren't better at driving in the snow than southerners
Bio1590
02/17/21 12:28:10 AM
#31
Winter tires are mandatory in Quebec.

They should be mandatory everywhere it snows and the snow stays.
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TopicERCOT officials say they have no fucking clue when the power outages could end
Bio1590
02/17/21 12:07:08 AM
#19
Still incredible to consider that the cost to "winterize" wind turbines is like a rounding error in their overall cost and Texas was like "lol no".
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TopicERCOT officials say they have no fucking clue when the power outages could end
Bio1590
02/16/21 11:29:03 PM
#8
legendary_zell posted...
My family just lost power so uh yeah....bad times in Texas. I hope heads actually roll for this and it's a turning point and a wakeup call. You actually have to invest in some things and do things the right way.

Some problems don't care about your obsession with freedumb and low taxes and no regulations. Covid doesn't care and the weather doesn't care.

Given Abbott's media appearances so far they're absolutely going to fuck it up even more to "fix" it.
---
TopicERCOT officials say they have no fucking clue when the power outages could end
Bio1590
02/16/21 11:17:53 PM
#1
https://www.dallasnews.com/news/weather/2021/02/16/ercot-says-they-have-no-idea-when-texas-power-outages-will-end/

Texas power grid operators cant predict when outages might end, Electric Reliability Council of Texas officials said Tuesday.

As of 6 p.m. more than 3 million Texans, many of them in North Texas, are enduring extended outages as icy conditions have settled in across the region.

ERCOT, the agency that oversees the states power grid, is trying to avoid a total blackout by instructing utility companies, including Oncor Electric Delivery, to cut power to customers.

We needed to step in and make sure that we were not going to end up with Texas in a blackout, which could keep folks without power not just some people without power but everyone in our region without power for much, much longer than we believe this event is going to last, as long and as difficult as this event is right now, ERCOT CEO Bill Magness said.

When reporters pressed for a timeline, he and Senior Director of System Operations Dan Woodfin could not say how much longer the outages would last. An uncontrolled blackout could leave Texans without power for an indeterminate amount of time, maybe a month, Magness said.

The officials also described the challenge of keeping power restored throughout peak-demand hours, including the morning and nighttime.

Throughout the day, ERCOT and Gov. Greg Abbott announced power was being restored to hundreds of thousands of customers, but the gains arent always maintained.

At the same time weve been adding supply to the grid from certain generators, weve also been losing other generators, Woodfin said. So we havent been able to add as much back during the course of the day that we would like and what we have added back, were hoping to keep online. But if additional generation doesnt become available as the day goes on, we may actually have to take some of it back offline to maintain that power and supply balance.

Controlled outages should have been rotated throughout areas for 15 to 45 minutes, but they have been drastically extended for thousands of people, even as others havent experienced any outages.

Oncor officials have not answered questions about how they choose which parts of the city they cut power to and which they dont, except to say they try to avoid critical infrastructure such as hospitals.

Oncor officials said they tried to trade power among neighborhoods but were unsuccessful because of the grids weakening stability, Dallas County Judge Clay Jenkins said in a call Monday with Oncor spokeswoman Kerri Dunn.

We recognize the hardships and extreme frustration customers without power face during these historical low temperatures and are ready to deliver power as soon as electric generators are able to provide it, Oncor said Tuesday on Twitter. As soon as enough generation is available, we will return to a regular cadence of rotating outages with the goal of providing any temporary relief that we can for those who have been without power the longest.

An Oncor representative would only refer to a news release that did not answer questions about how neighborhoods were chosen for outages.

Gov. Greg Abbott called on legislators, who are now in session, to investigate ERCOT and its handling of the storm.

The Electric Reliability Council of Texas has been anything but reliable over the past 48 hours, he said.

Reviewing the preparations and decisions by ERCOT is an emergency item so we can get a full picture of what caused this problem and find long-term solutions, Abbott said. I thank my partners in the House and Senate for acting quickly on this challenge, and I will work with them to enhance Texas electric grid and ensure that our state never experiences power outages like this again.

https://twitter.com/RafaelAnchia/status/1361753136306692097

ERCOT officials did not provide state legislators with a specific estimate for when outages might end.

After being pushed by lawmakers, ERCOT would say only that it could be days before power is restored for all customers, State Rep. Rafael Ancha (D-Dallas) posted on Twitter. In an email to members ERCOT said, Even if there is good progress, returning to normal conditions is going to take additional time.

State Rep. Gene Wu (D-Houston) wrote on Twitter that ERCOT told lawmakers that it knew last week that controlled outages would be needed but that it did not communicate that to the public until Sunday.

They apologize for not letting the public know that this was what was going to happen, Wu said.

https://twitter.com/GeneforTexas/status/1361732277638631425

During a call with reporters Tuesday, Magness and Woodfin did not say they knew outages would be needed last week, but they did say they saw the storm coming and were prepared for weather similar in severity to what Texas faced in 2011 and 2018. But they realized Sunday that conditions this week would be much worse than other storms inflicted.

What we saw this week is a historic unprecedented weather event, Magness said. ... There will and there should be a significant review of this event.

A big winter storm in 2011 also knocked power generators offline and prompted rolling blackouts in the state. Lawmakers conducted hearings and demanded changes to prevent similar problems.

Glenn Hegar, a Republican state senator at the time, authored a bill which became law that requires the state to track and report how well prepared the states electric grid is for extreme weather.

When I passed this legislation, it was intended to identify the mistakes made in 2011 and ensure that our power grid, including our generation capacity, was prepared for winter weather emergencies, Hegar, who is now state comptroller, said in a written statement. While the issues that are plaguing our electric grid system in this disastrous winter storm are complex, I am extremely frustrated that 10 years later our electric grid remains so ill-equipped for these weather events.

He said the first priority is restoring power to all Texans. After that, he said, we must address why, after 10 years have passed, are we in a worse position today than in 2011. Why are certain areas going without power for two days or longer, while other areas have successfully navigated through rolling blackouts, or never experience power outages at all? The most pressing question is what can Texas do in the 21st century to ensure that our grid doesnt experience these issues again?

The state is also required to review plans that power generators submit on how theyll withstand extreme heat or cold. But those plans are voluntary, not required. ERCOT reviews about 100 of those plans each year, Woodfin said Tuesday. Usually the reviews are in person, but they werent this past year because of the coronavirus pandemic.

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TopicTexas knew for years its power grid was at risk but did nothing to fix it
Bio1590
02/16/21 10:53:30 PM
#1
https://www.star-telegram.com/opinion/editorials/article249285685.html

Once again, Texans are suffering because of a failure of disaster planning and investment to prepare for the worst.

First, it was the pandemic. Texas public health infrastructure has been shown for a year to be lacking, at both local and state levels. Leaders tried to craft a plan in 2015 to prepare for the inevitable, but it was stopped over political issues.

This time, its an unprecedented but, importantly, not unpredictable stretch of cold weather and storms blanketing the entire state. Public and private sector leaders may try to say theres no way they could have been prepared for this. Thats a line of bull that no Texan should accept.

After 2011s epic winter storm known around here as the one that ruined the Super Bowl in Arlington agencies at all levels offered recommendations to address the very problems that contributed to this outage, too.

There must be accountability. People must be fired. Companies must be fined and required to do better. Winterization of power plants must be a priority.

The immediate focus, of course, is on getting power back up as quickly as possible. Were in for days more of this, and lives are at stake. If more electricity cant be generated, blackouts must be rotated to offer relief to Texans whove been without power for a day or more.

Power companies and the Electric Reliability Council of Texas, or ERCOT, as every Texan now knows, have compounded the problem with miserably poor communication and broken promises. The promise of rotating outages flopped, and no one can explain why in plain English.

Once the crisis is over, laws must change. A thorough investigation of both the public and private actors is necessary. Gov. Greg Abbotts declaration that ERCOT reform is an emergency priority for the Legislature is a start, but only that. Generators must be required to do a better job of winter preparation, even if the state or consumers must ultimately help pay the bill.

The failures here are spectacular and obvious. In November, ERCOT proudly announced that the state had sufficient energy supply for the winter. The excuse will likely be that no one could have predicted this storm. But its been evident for more than a week that a brutal cold was coming, and ERCOT officials were saying as late as Thursday that the system was ready. How can they have been so stupefyingly wrong?

But these cold snaps are not that rare. After the 2011 debacle, a thorough federal review found that parts of the Southwest have suffered these events at least every five years.

Texas is an energy giant. This shouldnt happen here. We have a large and diverse energy supply. The culprit here is a clear failure of preparation, period.

The blame game is already falling into predictable narratives. On the right, the problem is too much reliance on renewable energy. On the left, its privatization, Republican leadership and a failure to anticipate the effects of climate change. Theres some truth in most of it, but the focus needs to be on specific actions that were not taken, whos responsible for them and how to prevent them from happening again. Solve specific problems rather than railing at huge ones.

It seems apparent that power generators havent done enough to winterize their plants, so shutdowns and failures kicked in just when the power was needed most. That extends to renewables, too, as wind turbines froze over. Natural gas transmission has been a problem as well.

These are big, but fixable, problems. The Legislature must dig in to identify the specifics and then act accordingly. A law enacted in 2011 gave the Public Utility Commission power to require generators to report on their abnormal weather preparations and file an emergency plan. Has that been done, and if preparations were inadequate, why didnt anyone step in? Perhaps regulators need more enforcement teeth. Thats always a tough sell in Texas, but its clear these companies need a nudge, and perhaps help paying the bills.

Itll be all too easy to forget this dreadful week when spring arrives. But its not just the occasional winter storm. Every summer, our power supply and grid are stressed by the extensive heat. We havent seen this level of failure yet during a summer, but its coming.

When it does, Texans must be able to look back and see that everything possible was done to prepare. Lives depend on it.


Also if you care here's the report from 2011
https://www.ferc.gov/sites/default/files/2020-04/08-16-11-report.pdf

The precipitating cause of the rolling blackouts experienced in Texas and Arizona during the February 2011 cold weather event was the large number of electric generator outages. The principal cause of the gas service curtailments experienced in several southwestern states was the production declines in the supply of natural gas, which led to volume and pressure reductions in the pipelines. The task force has analyzed in detail the causes of these outages and declines, and found that the majority of them were directly or indirectly related to the weather, particularly so with respect to production declines in the gas supply.

This section of the report describes in detail those causes, both weather and non-weather-related. While the storm itself was an uncontrollable event of force majeure, the question arises as to whether the facilities affected should have been better prepared to withstand the severe weather. Was the cold spell so unprecedented that the entities responsible for those facilities could not reasonably be expected to have taken preventative actions? Or did entities fail to take into account lessons that could have been learned from past cold weather events in the Southwest?

These questions are addressed in the next section of this report, entitled Prior Cold Weather Events.

A. Electric

The rolling blackouts that utilities implemented during the cold weather event, which centered in Texas (ERCOT, EPE) and Arizona (SRP), were almost entirely the result of trips, derates, and failures to start of the generating units in those regions. The localized blackouts experienced by PNM in New Mexico, however, were caused by transmission trips. Units in Oklahoma and Kansas also experienced generator outages, but these did not result in blackouts.

The task force has analyzed these various generator outages to determine their underlying causes. By far, the most common cause of the outages was the cold weather, most commonly when sensing lines froze and caused automatic or manual unit trips. There were also several outages that were due to operator error or non-weather-related equipment failures. In a lesser number of cases, an interruption in the supply of natural gas prevented gas-fired units from providing power.


Shit that sounds familiar!
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TopicEpic Games is behind North Dakota bill to ban Apple/Google app sale fees
Bio1590
02/16/21 3:55:14 PM
#41
Tyranthraxus posted...

Maybe they shouldn't. Maybe they should just let people install whatever fucking software they want instead of only apple approved shit.

I'm gonna be honest here:

I take comfort in knowing someone can't install something on their iPhone that could potentially try and fuck with mine through email or text or something.
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TopicEpic Games is behind North Dakota bill to ban Apple/Google app sale fees
Bio1590
02/16/21 3:23:19 PM
#20
Could you imagine phone app ecosystems being even more fragmented than game launchers are on PC lol
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TopicEpic Games is behind North Dakota bill to ban Apple/Google app sale fees
Bio1590
02/16/21 2:49:00 PM
#14
thronedfire2 posted...
Epic is gonna have to make its own App Store now

That is what they are arguing they should be able to do yes.
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TopicEpic Games is behind North Dakota bill to ban Apple/Google app sale fees
Bio1590
02/16/21 2:39:59 PM
#6
There's really no evidence this would benefit the "common man".
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TopicEpic Games is behind North Dakota bill to ban Apple/Google app sale fees
Bio1590
02/16/21 2:34:04 PM
#1
https://kotaku.com/report-epic-games-is-behind-north-dakota-app-store-bil-1846278224/

Epic Games lobbyists drafted legislation that will be heard in North Dakota this week, attempting to bar app stores owned by the likes of Apple and Google from taking a cut of app sales, according to a report over the weekend by The New York Times.

Senate Bill 2333, introduced to the North Dakota Senate last week, seeks to prevent big digital storefronts like Apples App Store and Google Play from forcing developers to distribute apps exclusively through their storefronts, or exclusively use their payment systems. It also seeks to prevent the companies behind these storefronts from punishing developers who choose other distribution or payment methods. Epic is currently involved in a legal battle about this issue, taking both Apple and Google to court after both storefronts banned Fortnite when Epic introduced its own payment method last August in protest against the App Stores 30% cut of sales. The Times writes that debate on the North Dakota bill began on Monday and will be voted on this week.

The Times reports that North Dakota State Senator Kyle Davison was given the draft legislation by Lacee Bjork Anderson, a lobbyist with Odney Public Affairs in Bismarck. Ms. Anderson said in an interview that she had been hired by Epic Games, the maker of the popular game Fortnite. Anderson said she was also being paid by the Coalition for App Fairness, a nonprofit that includes Epic Games, alongside other companies such as Spotify, and that seeks fair treatment by these app stores and the platform owners who operate them.

(Update, 2/16/21, 12:40pmThe Coalition for App Fairness shared the following statement from executive director Meghan DiMuzio: The North Dakota bill is supported by the Coalition for App Fairness as a whole. Epic Games is a member of CAF, as are more than 50 additional companies. This is a broadly supported bill. Lacee Anderson works for Epic, Match, and CAF.)

Epic hired its first lobbyists in late January, drawing on people from both sides of the political aisle. While it might look self-serving for Epic to be behind the legislation, the US government has been looking into big tech monopolies for a while. The Times reports that several states are exploring bills similar to North Dakotas, or other measures that limit these companies power. While the bill, if it passes, would only apply to businesses operating in North Dakota, and only those that bring in over $10 million in revenue, it could change how Apple and its ilk do business. The Times writes that Apple has been pushing back against the legislation, and Apples chief privacy engineer, Erik Neuenschwander, testified that the bill threatens to destroy iPhone as you know it.

People with whom The Times spoke are uncertain if the bill will pass.

Even if you dont want to hand it to Epicand the company is certainly making it hard tothe issues the Fortnite case raises go beyond whether you can play a cartoon battle royale on your phone. (If youve lost track: no, you still cant.) The case, currently set to go to trial in May, could benefit smaller developers and be a blow to Apples dominance over mobile apps if it goes in Epics favor. The North Dakota legislation might be another tool in Epics toolkit, and yet another example of the company turning its desire to line its pockets into a moral crusade. But either way, its about more than just Fortnite.

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TopicCapitol Police officers overwhelmingly give vote of no confidence in leaders
Bio1590
02/16/21 12:17:13 PM
#1
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/capitol-police-officers-give-vote-of-no-confidence-in-leaders/

Capitol Police officers voiced their displeasure with the department's top leaders with an overwhelming vote of no confidence, after scores of officers were injured, one officer died and two committed suicide following the January 6 assault on the Capitol by crowds of President Trump's supporters.

The U.S. Capitol Police Labor Committee, the union that represents thousands of U.S. Capitol Police officers, announced that 92% of Capitol Police officers voted that they had no confidence in Acting Chief Yogananda Pittman, and substantial majorities also voted no confidence in six other top leaders in the department.

The previous chief, Steven Sund, resigned under pressure as officials cast blame on him for the massive security failures of January 6 on him.

"Capitol Police offers have delivered an overwhelming vote of No Confidence in the senior leadership of the U.S. Capitol Police," the union said in a news release. "The Executive Board of the Capitol Police Union called for rank-and-file members to consider a vote of no confidence late last week following the senior leadership's mishandling of the insurrection at the Capitol on January 6th. The board took this unprecedented step after reviewing details of the events on, and leading up to, January 6th and the subsequent deaths of 6 people, and injuries to approximately 140 Capitol and Metropolitan Police officers."

"[O]ur leadership clearly failed us. We know because we were there," union chairman Gus Papathanasiou said, according to the statement.

In late January, Pittman told members of Congress that the department had known by January 4 that the demonstration on January 6 "would not be like any of the previous protests held in 2020."

"We knew that militia groups and white supremacist organizations would be attending. We also knew that some of these participants were intending to bring firearms and other weapons to the event. We knew that there was a strong potential for violence and that Congress was the target," Pittman said.

That the leadership team "knew what was coming but did not better prepare us for potential violence, including the possible use of firearms against us, is unconscionable," union chairman Gus Papathanasiou said in a statement after Pittman's testimony.

On Monday night, Pittman released a conciliatory statement in response to the no-confidence vote. "It's been just over one month since one of our nation's darkest days, and the trauma is still incredibly raw and difficult for the many officers who fought heroically on the 6th. Since being sworn in on January 8th, my executive team and I have made the well-being of our officers our top priority," she said. "While progress has been made, more work remains. And I am committed to ensuring every officer gets what they need and deserve."

Meanwhile, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has said it's time to pass more funding for Capitol security and for the security of individual members. She's calling for an independent, 9/11-style commission to review the security failures on January 6.

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TopicSpain's Jewish communities call for probe into Neo-Nazi demonstration in Madrid
Bio1590
02/16/21 12:01:49 PM
#1
https://english.elpais.com/spanish_news/2021-02-16/spains-jewish-communities-call-for-an-investigation-into-a-neo-fascist-demonstration-in-madrid.html

The Federation of Jewish Communities in Spain (FCJE) has called on the hate crimes public prosecutor to investigate antisemitic accusations made during a demonstration in honor of the Divisin Azul, or Blue Division, held in Madrid on Saturday. The military unit, which was made up of volunteers, was sent by former Spanish dictator Francisco Franco to support Adolf Hitlers invasion of the Soviet Union during the Second World War.

In a video that has been shared online by the digital magazine La Marea, a young woman is seen at a lectern with a microphone surrounded by dozens of people carrying neo-fascist and Nazi symbols and paraphernalia. The woman in the video is heard saying that the enemy is always going to be the same albeit wearing different masks: the Jew. She adds: Because there is nothing that is more true than this statement: the Jew is to blame, the Jew is to blame, and the Blue Division fought for this. She later states that communism is a Jewish invention to pit the workers against one another.

https://twitter.com/lamarea_com/status/1361308263757848578

The FCJE, which represents Jewish communities in Spain, said that it considers it to be unconscionable in a country with rule of law and full democracy for these serious accusations to go unpunished, pointing out that in July 2020 Spain joined the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance, which considers accusations against the Jews of being blameworthy for any event to be antisemitic. The FCJE and the Platform against Antisemitism and the Movement against Intolerance said that they will use all the legal means at their disposal to bring these events to the justice system.

The Israeli ambassador in Spain, Rodica Radian-Gordon, wrote on Twitter that the antisemitic proclamations made in the homage to the Blue Division in Madrid are disgusting and cannot have a place in a democratic society. Education and learning the truth about history is the way to avoid the past repeating itself, she added.

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TopicMississippi Representative and NAACP sue Trump for violation of the Klan Act.
Bio1590
02/16/21 11:51:52 AM
#4
I assume the Republicans will be in full support of this given their statements during the Impeachment trial

lmao who am I kidding
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TopicBiggest storm in a century? Walmart shelves as Texas prepare for huge storm
Bio1590
02/16/21 4:25:45 AM
#226
TopicThe British pronounce "Featheringstonehaugh" as "fanshaw".
Bio1590
02/16/21 3:27:59 AM
#20
Thompson posted...
Leisure rhymes with pleasure

That's how I pronounce it!
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TopicBest Buy Canada has sold less than 500 of the Mario-themed Switch units
Bio1590
02/16/21 3:27:04 AM
#17
Kastrada posted...
Is there anything unique about it or is it just a Mario color scheme?

The Animal Crossing and Pokemon special editions (reg and lite) had unique color schemes as well as themed prints on it.

The Mario one just....looks red and blue

It's just a Mario colour scheme. Even the kickstand on the back of the unit is still a regular black-coloured one lol.
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TopicI saw this coffee creamer that makes your coffee taste like Columbian coffee
Bio1590
02/16/21 1:59:01 AM
#3
TopicBest Buy Canada has sold less than 500 of the Mario-themed Switch units
Bio1590
02/16/21 1:34:44 AM
#8
Smashingpmkns posted...
It's a weird time to buy a Switch. Everyone that wanted one during the pandemic eventually got one once they became more available, and now you have next gen consoles that people are competing for. Plus there isn't anything noteworthy on the horizon with a solid release date. 3D World could push consoles during a different season, but not right now. If they did this last summer it would have broke records.

I think the mass re-release of the Animal Crossing one totally destroyed this one honestly. I think BB Canada alone sold over 15k of those ones.
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TopicBest Buy Canada has sold less than 500 of the Mario-themed Switch units
Bio1590
02/16/21 1:15:44 AM
#2
Looks like Walmart Canada has sold less than 200 online. They didn't send them to any stores here but I've seen people report they saw them in stores around the GTA and GVA but I can't see sales being significantly higher.

This one is definitely destined to be a dud.
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TopicBest Buy Canada has sold less than 500 of the Mario-themed Switch units
Bio1590
02/16/21 1:11:23 AM
#1
Topic5-year old almost killed by Britt Reid in drunken crash wakes from coma
Bio1590
02/16/21 12:33:54 AM
#7
Dreepapult posted...
What happened to the coach?

Actual jail time? Or rich guy slap on the wrist?

I don't know, this only happened a few days before the Super Bowl.

He's fucked up in the past and was in jail like 12 years ago so I would assume jail time is a definite given here.
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Topic5-year old almost killed by Britt Reid in drunken crash wakes from coma
Bio1590
02/15/21 11:53:12 PM
#1
TopicImagine having 11 children and going to mcdonalds
Bio1590
02/15/21 11:18:28 PM
#4
TopicGina Carano fired for being a shitstain, not for "Politics" - GAMESPOT
Bio1590
02/15/21 11:08:34 PM
#59
TopicThe British pronounce "Featheringstonehaugh" as "fanshaw".
Bio1590
02/15/21 11:00:31 PM
#12
brestugo posted...
Wait until you hear how they pronounce:

garage
fillet
aluminum
vitamin

Aluminium is actually the correct international standard fwiw
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TopicDarkprince45 is SUSPENDED.
Bio1590
02/15/21 10:34:29 PM
#15
Ex-Kefiroth posted...

Fucking delete your accounts, pig.

Careful according to the Mods that's racist
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TopicDarkprince45 is SUSPENDED.
Bio1590
02/15/21 10:33:32 PM
#13
Jiggy101011 posted...


Is that the topic where he brought up BLM and Antifa randomly?

Nah it was mine about a challenge coin
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TopicDarkprince45 is SUSPENDED.
Bio1590
02/15/21 10:30:41 PM
#8
TopicNortherners aren't better at driving in the snow than southerners
Bio1590
02/15/21 10:30:06 PM
#24
Hop103 posted...
That 70 car pileup in Texas says otherwise.

The part of the highway that happened at is apparently bad even in good conditions and the company that operates it did not make sure their "product" was safe to use before allowing it to be.

Also the conditions that led to that almost never happen up north.
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TopicSpoiler tags don't work in quote boxes anymore?
Bio1590
02/15/21 8:48:46 PM
#14
Basically all this tells me is that they only ever worked in the first place because in that colour scheme the spoiler tags originally showed up as white, whereas now they're some off-grey shade so the text comes through.
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TopicLathissamus is SUSPENDED
Bio1590
02/15/21 8:32:50 PM
#13
TopicSix Days in Fallujah 'not trying to make a political commentary' says creator
Bio1590
02/15/21 8:25:39 PM
#18
TopicBiggest storm in a century? Walmart shelves as Texas prepare for huge storm
Bio1590
02/15/21 8:19:59 PM
#218
And my understanding is that they also can only generate a very small amount over their theoretical max capacity so when they started losing their generators it basically fucked the whole state over.

They should honestly be forced into the national grid at this point.
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TopicBiggest storm in a century? Walmart shelves as Texas prepare for huge storm
Bio1590
02/15/21 7:32:24 PM
#214
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