Pack rat gay furry porn game
between binary elements) is not very "fluid." Also, that damned "F" in the revealer is bugging the hell out of me. Further, to get technical for a sec, having squares that toggle to one of two options (i.e. I'm glad the NYT is warming up to the concept of inclusivity, but tick tock. Indie puzzles have acknowledged and played around with and built entire puzzles around LGBTQ topics for years. How is that even possible? What year is it? Again, the puzzle is clever, but the NYT doesn't get points for coming around to the acknowledgment of queerness / gender fluidity so belatedly. the pre-edited) clues, and I liked those better than the NYT's version, but that's hardly surprising, since I like the puzzle Ben edits ( American Values Club Crossword) much better than the NYT, on average. I solved the puzzle early, with Ben's original (i.e. Don't get me wrong, I really like the concept, but it plays like an easy themeless with good, not great, fill. There's the added bonus of having QUEER be clued in reference to sexuality (as opposed to "oddness") ( 55D: Part of L.G.B.T.Q.), but none of this feels terribly boundary-pushing. It's really only the revealer, the central answer, that makes the puzzle particularly contemporary and noteworthy. This is a "Schrödinger"-type puzzle (where two different letters work for the same square-the 1996 election-day CLINTON / BOBDOLE crossword is probably the most famous iteration of this theme)-this is cool but not new. I don't understand the hype, and I think the fact that there *is* hype shows you how behind-the-times and stale the NYT has been of late. (wikipedia)Īnd I got interviewed by Slate about it ( article here). Sutton is also known as the namesake of Sutton's law, although he denied originating it. For his talent at executing robberies in disguises, he gained two nicknames, "Willie the Actor" and "Slick Willie". During his forty-year criminal career he stole an estimated $2 million, and he eventually spent more than half of his adult life in prison and escaped three times. (J– November 2, 1980) was an American bank robber. Word of the Day: Willie SUTTON( 47D: Bank robber Willie who co-wrote "Where the Money Was").
I think I am starting to use them for two different kinds of information. If I find that I need real information about a single thing, I'm more likely to search Wikipedia than Google now. With more and more information that is available and the amount growing, searching is rapidly becoming less useful than it was even a year or two ago. I can often find stuff very quickly when my wife has been looking for a half hour because I can think of ways to quantify the search better to find information that's useful. I often wonder if it's not just a skill that we need to teach people - data mining, or searching. A Comment Tom made on my last post about Google really got me thinking.