I have a Hasselblad 500 and I like to fill the whole frame with interesting architecture at odd angles. 1920s and 30s art deco is especially good to photograph.
I have a Hasselblad 500 and I like to fill the whole frame with interesting architecture at odd angles. 1920s and 30s art deco is especially good to photograph.
In the first mission of Battlezone, it’s possible to travel out of the map and find a 1960s lunar lander that you can enter and pilot. It’s equipped with a one of a kind super weapon that plays trance music as you fire it.
Unfortunately it’s only available in the first mission and you can’t take it with you to subsequent missions.
yeah. That kind of money is top 5% of homes in most of Europe outside very wealthy areas and districts like Zurich. In the UK the average house price is about £300k ($400k)
me typing “sudo !!” instead of rewriting the shell command undoes this.
Cleric, interrupting: I CAST SHATTER!!!
$100k
that’s ten times what it costs to install domestic solar, battery storage across all of Europe including major cities. Why is it so expensive? Panels are ~$200 each online and an inverter is $5k for a really good one.
A quick google search shows prices more in line with my expectations (sources: https://www.forbes.com/home-improvement/solar/solar-panel-costs-texas/ and https://www.energysage.com/local-data/solar-panel-cost/tx/)
yes. in great numbers. and then they go on to purchase things they see. otherwise companies wouldn’t invest in them.
it’s waterproof and the battery is charged by a hand crank on the side
yes, but based on estimated savings from doing it, they’ve given tax handouts (like the “british ISA” scheme for folks who already exceed their allowed £20k tax free savings a year) to their mates. meanwhile schools, businesses, civil servants and single parents scrounge up scraps to survive.
jupyter notebooks, or if you’re super trendy give zerve.ai a try