I know for stasis warlocks that this roll is highly sought after. But as someone that has used the gun with only headstone and not demo, it still feels lackluster. I mean quicksilver for instance feels way better to use against any trash mob and even anti barriers in PVE GM content. There's also Aeger's Scepter, Wicked Implement, and Verglas Curve.

I know it isn't fair to compare this weapon against an exotic. But Headstone just feels like it isn't doing all that much on this weapon to begin with and the slow fire rate makes it feel like I'm missing out by running it vs any other amazing legendary weapon in my energy slot or exotic in my stasis slot. I'm wondering if anyone that has gotten the god roll has felt it was worth their time.


Rig N Roll Download Free Demo


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It opened in April of last year with the backing of seven different organizations. The hope is to spot and help start-ups on their road to pairing with investors which will, in turn, pump money into the community. Original director Mike Carroll has been replaced by new director Jim Briggs, who had worked for twenty years in San Francisco as an attorney and software consultant for non-profit agencies and came on board here this past January.

Greetings, loyal devotees of RSS readers and webcomic bookmarks! Just wanted to pop by and keep you abreast of the latest goings-on in the Expanded Badniverse. Mainly, that Rog & Roll currently has a demo on Steam that you can try for free on PC and Mac!

I have noticed a few questions coming up lately about how to do "rolled" or turned-under edges for pockets and other lined portions of projects such as book covers, wallets, and cases. For another approach to linings and pockets, Kevin King posted a great tutorial on his method of making wallet insides. This demo shows another method of rolling inside pocket edges to give them a smooth leading edge, using a French skiving knife.

For this demo, I have a book cover for which I'm making sleeves for the cover of the sketchbook or journal to be inserted into. This is some very light chrome-tanned pigskin split (1.5oz), so it works well to turn the edge under, or "roll" it, to give it more strength and a more professional look. Here's what I'm talking about:

The inside edge is the one that is turned under. With it turned under like this, it won't stretch as much with use, and looks more "finished". Sometimes a modeled groove is pressed about 1/8" from the folded edge to give it a nice trim touch, but this particular piece of leather doesn't take a modeled impression very well. If I was using something veg-tanned, like goat or calfskin, I would do that. The outside edges for this particular item are "raw" (not rolled or turned under), but they are burnished to give them a finished look.

I start with a piece of leather that is to become the pocket of this book cover. I have the outline of the pocket transferred to the flesh side of it, and have already cut along the line of the pocket where it will face in towards the inside of the book. This is the edge to be rolled. The outside edges I leave uncut for now.

Note: The knife must be extremely sharp, something similar to that of a head knife, especially on this tough pigskin. The knife in this demo is a Hyde French skiving knife I got from Hidecrafter, and it took some time and attention to get it sharp enough to be useful, but now that I've got it really sharp, it does the job nicely. Leather Wranglers also makes an extremely nice (as in, WOW, beautiful and amazing!) skiving knife that I highly recommend.

The groove makes it easy to make a perfect, straight, and flat fold. To flatten it more, I sometimes run a rolling pin over it, but with leather this thin, I was able to just press it flat with my fingers. This is how it looks from the flesh side after the fold is done. Notice how the skived and folded edge blends into the back-side of the pocket to form a fold that is smooth and flat.

Simple as possible - Mountain bikes are $100 a day. Ebikes are $100 a day. Come in, get properly set up, go ride bikes, bring back. The demo cost is not lost as it will go towards the purchase of a bike (Some exclusions on this).

often in the TV world i'll be asked to make full blown demos that will never see the light of day. their sole purpose is to be a guide for those behind the scenes (director, producer, cameramen, management and handlers) of course because we are "The Roots" its a casual 3 second quip "we'll just make me a demo of it...." but often I'm like "COTDAMNIT!!!!!!!!!!! ANOTHER WASTED LUNCH HOUR!!!!!!!" (this pretty much happens like 50% of the time to artists that we back up on the show that have "well MY band"-itis.its like we have to pre-audition in order to prove what we knew all along; "we do your song better than you ever will," lol.

what you are listening to was a quickie lunch break demo i had to put together for the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame staff (basically the heads of Rolling Stone) and the Beastie Boys and the gazillion prospects of guests who were approached to be part of the performance.

This weekend, I noticed that someone named Fatsi Anzani Hakim had uploaded some photos from a recent Indonesian Drift Community demonstration event to the Speedhunters' Facebook Group page. An Indonesian drifting event? How cool is that!

The drift demo itself took place at a Herman Tilke designed, partial city track, named Lippo Village street circuit and was part of a larger GT racing event. Pretty good sized crowd, don't you think?

Some floors are not level, some are uphill, and some are downhill (you may be surprised). They can also be a hard or soft surface. All these conditions affect the roll distance of the ball. The amount the ball rolls back is not intended to have exact precision. Don't worry if your floor is a little off, have fun with it! Play your games and include your adjustments.

The latest in agricultural equipment and farming methods will be showcased at the 2015 Farm Science Review during a plot combine and plot planter field demonstration Wednesday Sept. 23 at 1 p.m., at the Molly Caren Agricultural Center near London, Ohio.

The demo is a great opportunity for crop researchers to see how different combines operate in corn and soybean plots and all aspects of the machines, said Matt Sullivan, assistant manager of the Farm Science Review, which is sponsored by the College of Food, Agricultural, and Environmental Sciences at The Ohio State University.

Other field demos during the show include GPS technology/strip-till, nutrient application equipment, tillage, unmanned aerial vehicles (drones), soil sampling, planter technology, corn harvest, corn stalk baling and wrapping, stalk shredders, soybean harvest and field drainage installation. A complete schedule can be found at fsr.osu.edu/node/111/mid/677.

Show attendees wanting to see the plot demo or any other field demo should board a shuttle wagon on the west end of the Farm Science Review exhibit area. The demos will be the first stop, across from the Gwynne Conservation Area.

Yasui Seiki, precision coating machine designer and manufacturer,\nlaunched a new demo room at their Bloomington, IN facility. The roughly\n1000 sq. ft. demo room features five test and pilot coating machines.\nOne of these, the \u03bcCoater 650TM, is the first of its model to be\ninstalled in the US.

Yasui Seiki, precision coating machine designer and manufacturer, launched a new demo room at their Bloomington, IN facility. The roughly 1000 sq. ft. demo room features five test and pilot coating machines. One of these, the Coater 650TM, is the first of its model to be installed in the US.

Anyone feel free to correct me if I'm wrong, but as I understand it Doom's RNG is an array of numbers that is always in the same order upon startup. If you replicate the exact same actions in the same environment, you will get the same results each time. So the demo doesn't need to track this stuff.

This is correct. And no RNG data is stored in the demos themselves; all games start with the RNG at 0. To quote from the wiki, "The function M_ClearRandom resets both functions' indexes to zero. It is called during initialization of each new game so that demos will be the same each time they are played, and so that multiplayer games are synchronised."

Basically for rng that affects gameplay (I think it's different for some visual things like doomguy looking left and right) there is a list of all rng values that is in what is supposed to be a random order. Any time something needs an rng value it gets the current number from the list and then moves the number to the next value for the next thing that needs rng. So if you do the same inputs at the exact same time under the same conditions, 100% of the time it will call the same rng number and do the same thing. This is how demos work consistently as long as your using the same settings on your source port.


So the demo file only needs the inputs (and probably some other miscellaneous information that has to do with the starting state) and doesn't need to include the rng values.

Rock & Roll Is Good for You: The Fieger/Averre Demos is an album by The Knack which was released on September 11, 2012.[1] It includes demo recordings made by Doug Fieger and Berton Averre made between 1973 and 1975.[2] Most of the songs are performed by just Fieger and Averre, both singing and playing guitar, but some songs include the full band.[2] Two of the songs, "Good Girls Don't" and "That's What the Little Girls Do," were released in more polished form on the Knack's debut album, Get the Knack.[1] Other songs whose demos appear on Rock & Roll Is Good for You later provided elements for other Knack songs.[1][2][3] For example, "Corporation Shuffle (Daddy Turns the Volume Down)," described by Allmusic critic Stephen Thomas Erlewine as "a nifty bit of fuzzy, snarky rock & roll in the vein of the Move," provided the basis for "Terry & Julie Step Out," a song from the 1998 album Zoom.[1][2] 0852c4b9a8

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