SaltCollector

34159 pts · February 17, 2012


if you screenshot this and get it to the front page I'll continue doing nothing.

Don't be ridiculous, it's fabric smudging grime. "

10 months ago | Likes 8 Dislikes 4

Legal in the UK, and defined in the Highway code with the advice given: "Additionally, when filtering in slow-moving traffic, take care and keep your speed low", which he did.

10 months ago | Likes 13 Dislikes 1

And as an additional that was just for university. My UK secondary school (highschool) has a 90% threshold for the highest mark. Look my point is that it can vary and doesn't necessarily reflect an easier testing regime, but maybe I've just rambled on about somethings that's completely irrelevant because this clearly isn't university level grading.... I'm going now.

10 months ago | Likes 1 Dislikes 0

Just a quick note, this was 10 years ago and my memory of the scores has gotten a little foggy. I can't remember the tests I got 80%, but I'm sure there were some. I also remember getting 100% on a few of them and wondering why even bother testing us. In the UK 20% of the exam is on "uncovered material", so were always going to be tricky marks, you were expected to use your own intuition and understanding to transfer your knowledge from other topics. I did physics for reference.

10 months ago | Likes 1 Dislikes 0

I went to university in both the UK and the US. In the UK you need just 70% to get the top grade, in America it was ~90s%. To cut a very long story short my scores typically hovered around the 60-80% range in the UK, and the 80 to 100% range in the US. The differences were due to things like how often and small the tests were, and how in the US there more ways to marks, like homework. Both systems had their pros and cons, overall I think the US maybe taught me more, but both scores felt valid.

10 months ago | Likes 2 Dislikes 0

OOOhhh, sorry, it's dawned on me. It's restored OPs faith in humanity as if passing around a few books offsets the savage brutality in the world. Gotcha.

1 year ago | Likes 4 Dislikes 1

What a very specific question.... So 45K Civilians... That's probably Gazan deaths.... So either the OP or The bookstore is Pro Israel and you're not happy about it. Can't find anything Israeli related about the bookstore owner, Michelle Tuplin, and I can't find anything related to the war on OPs profile. I give up, my detective skills aren't good enough. What's your angle?

1 year ago | Likes 7 Dislikes 0

https://maps.app.goo.gl/2caBQPmU6T6sNn1L7 Stuðlagil, Iceland

1 year ago | Likes 2 Dislikes 0

It's like 2km, maybe less, all along a river so it's fairly flat. I did it last summer, perhaps they've built new infrastructure since you saw it?

1 year ago | Likes 4 Dislikes 0

White women majority voted Trump, 53:45. Not letting men off the hook, obviously, I'm not even American, I just thought it was interesting.

1 year ago | Likes 8 Dislikes 2

"iRememberLOLcats"... Dude, you might as well be writing your comments through a ouija board.

2 years ago | Likes 1 Dislikes 0

Ooh, very good job, nailed it!

2 years ago | Likes 2 Dislikes 0

Liverpool / Real Madrid 50/50 scarves, most likely from the Champions League final in 2018 or from 2023. Given the Ukrainian colours of our protagonist I would assume it's 2018, which was held in Kyiv, so this happened in Kyiv, 26 May 2018, late afternoon judging by the shadows. I haven't really got a point, I was just seeing how precise we could get with a slither of information. Would need someone with better detective skills to work out the actual Square itself!

2 years ago | Likes 3 Dislikes 0

Awful experience, once picked a route that had a strange pavement (sidewalk) adjacent to a 70mph motorway for about 3 miles thinking that it would be bearable but was just so noisy, dirty and unpleasant that it burned itself into my memory, and I've had a lot of drenched windy rides that it easily displaces in memorable displeasure.

2 years ago | Likes 13 Dislikes 0

Especially since they're often on the novice slopes, the climb being so small it's not worth anything greater. Here's your skis, may sure they're clipped it, there's the T Bar, ensure you've made peace with god.

2 years ago | Likes 5 Dislikes 0

Cos it's a skit!?

2 years ago | Likes 58 Dislikes 2

2 years ago | Likes 39 Dislikes 0

Then OP should have posted their shit at a time that they could reply.

2 years ago | Likes 2 Dislikes 2

Speaking as a guy that's dating someone a too obsessed with TikTok/Instagram for my liking, this ain't it. What she does with her Social Medias is her business, but what she does with our time is both our business. I sometimes get frustrated when we see something cool and it's 20% admiring it, 80% taking pictures of us/her/it. But, guess what, I might bitch about it, and she might bitch about my snoring! No one is perfect and I'm not gunna break up with her over an irritation.

2 years ago | Likes 13 Dislikes 2

Bright red hot sauce over a girl's pristine white dress... I could have drowned in my own embarrassment, but fortunately the grace she showed matched the dress she chose and she was a complete angel about the whole ordeal.

2 years ago | Likes 8 Dislikes 0

"Proper" VAR, proper being the keyword here. The way football and Rugby implement VAR is very different, and Rugby's is a lot better. 1) Can hear the official's comms - 2) VAR checks on everything whilst the game is ongoing - 3) VAR can change prev actions as the game is ongoing - 4) No arbitrary limitations on VAR to protect some bizarre sanctity of the onfield ref.

2 years ago | Likes 9 Dislikes 0

That last letter is doing an awful lot of work in that sentence.

2 years ago | Likes 2 Dislikes 1

What? Are you deliberately ignoring the fact that holding up the checkout line negatively impacts the people waiting behind them? And perhaps creative a system that supports the needs of both customers isn't a bare minimum but actually is a fairly novel way of accommodating a problem, loneliness in the elderly, that supermarkets don't actually have responsibility for solving, without inconveniencing the customers who don't require the service?

2 years ago | Likes 49 Dislikes 4

They're good monkeys, Bront.

2 years ago | Likes 3 Dislikes 0

I've done it over 10 times. Used to be a bit of a routine at Uni. We'd give blood, get blitzed, and have a cheap night out, there were never any particularly disastrous outcomes (I know, anecdotal isn't anec-data). Not to say it's not stupid, it absolutely is stupid, but you know, so were we.

2 years ago | Likes 4 Dislikes 0

I find how masturbatory Imgur gets over being introverted particularly grinding. If you were on this site exclusively you'd think introverted meant people who were quiet, intelligent, thoughtful, and empathic, and with the deepest and truest souls. Inversely extroverts are all just loud domineering arseholes incapable of a nuanced thought.

2 years ago | Likes 8 Dislikes 1

No on the street they don't, most people in this situation would say "no thanks" and keep walking without breaking stride. How many people do you see stop when charity workers are trying to grab passers by?

2 years ago | Likes 10 Dislikes 4