"The results indicate that cats may find it more difficult to crawl through a short opening than squeezing themselves through a tall but narrow one." Tell that to my cat who pancakes himself and limbos under the approximately 3" high bottom edge of the couch so he can hide when company comes.
It's too late now, but there's a trick to SeaTac security. Everyone goes to checkpoint 3, but there are five checkpoints. They're not always all open, and sometimes they're not open for just anybody, but I've often had a much better time going to checkpoint 4 even when I needed concourse B.
Is there ever a time he's NOT doing something stupid over there?
That, or remembering that you ran it under a debugger, switching to the debugger, and realizing that it's just downloading gigabytes of symbols.
If a Newfoundland sits on your foot, you definitely notice.
Now watching the video, so I'll add that my car radio was an aftermarket model that I added to my 2000 Ford Ranger. I can't recall the manufacturer.
It wasn't a great experience, because when you turned off the ignition it would only remember the track and not where you were within the track, so you'd have to do a lot of fast-forwarding when you came back to it.
I had a car radio that played MP3s from CDs. In the days before widespread cellular data, I used to download and burn hours worth of Librivox ebooks and older episodes of This American Life before long road trips.
I used to do that whole "how many grocery bags can I lift with one hand" thing but then I bought one of these.
Sounds like a good way to get a semicolon.