The date he uses is the date they are published on the Far Side website. That doesn’t have the original publication date.
It bothers me that the height chart suggests there are 10 inches in a foot
I guess the front fell off
I think it’s Acacia
Specifically, this is Eixample
The roads in the old city are much more chaotic.
Did they dig the tunnel with cow tools?
I still remember the code for Braeburn Apples, over 25 years after I worked in a supermarket.
For some reason, their code of 6969 sticks in my mind.
This book digs deeper into that sort of stuff:
The Self Illusion: How the Social Brain Creates Identity https://a.co/d/fZhHVrG
Worth a read
A spaceman came travelling on his ship from afar
And he created Trello
This is the book: https://www.dk.com/uk/book/9781409352723-bread/
It has a few more guides to various things. The link shows what it has for some types of flours.
As luck would have it, I own the book that this is from. Here’s a higher resolution photo of that page.
Actually, maybe not that much higher. Looks like the uploaded version is lower resolution 😕
Fun fact. The river that these falls are on turns into the infamous Bolton Strid a little further south.
Or is that just what you want us to think?
Same, using Chat GPT 4. It explained the steps without prompting, which is different from the single line answer shown in the post too. I got this…
Let’s break this down step by step:
Sally is one of those sisters for each of her 3 brothers. Therefore, the second sister that each brother has would be the same other sister.
This means that Sally has only 1 other sister, making a total of 2 sisters in the family (including Sally herself).
So, Sally has 1 sister.
Just move to Brixton
https://maps.app.goo.gl/hdEvTsPzTj8eYD5z5?g_st=ic
And if anyone’s not familiar, the song was written about this street.
That one’s actually really easy to prove numerically.
Not going to type out a full proof here, but here’s an example.
Let’s look at a two digit number for simplicity. You can write any two digit number as 10*a+b, where a and b are the first and second digits respectively.
E.g. 72 is 10 * 7 + 2. And 10 is just 9+1, so in this case it becomes 72=(9 * 7)+7+2
We know 9 * 7 is divisible by 3 as it’s just 3 * 3 * 7. Then if the number we add on (7 and 2) also sum to a multiple of 3, then we know the entire number is a multiple of 3.
You can then extend that to larger numbers as 100 is 99+1 and 99 is divisible by 3, and so on.
Look out for cows in the air