And much worse in some other areas of the body. Pretty cool ... unless you are the unlucky victim.
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Exploding Washing Machines
I honestly thought this was a joke when I first heard about it, but in addition to exploding smartphones, Samsung now has exploding washing machines. No link; story easy to find.
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A Huge "Thank-You" To FedEx
I wish I could reach out to FedEx today and thank the employee who delivered the package I was waiting for well after dark.
Tracking the package, I was being told that my FedEx package with "absolutely, positively" be delivered by Tuesday.
I keep watching, all day, but no package. I do know that FedEx generally delivers to businesses during the day and to residential addresses after 5:00 p.m. -- catching businesses when they are open, and homeowners when they are home.
It stays light date into the evening in the summer but now it gets "absolutely, positively" dark by 8:00 p.m.
I left our door open, but by 8:30 p.m. last night, no package.
At 10:00 p.m. I decided to take another look --- and, lo and behold, our FedEx package was "absolutely, positively" outside our front door. It appears that after 8:00 p.m. FedEx does not "wake up" folks to announce the delivery. Just like Christmas elves they leave the package at the door without making a sound.
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Back to the Bakken
Active rigs:
10/12/2016 | 10/12/2015 | 10/12/2014 | 10/12/2013 | 10/12/2012 | |
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Active Rigs | 33 | 68 | 190 | 184 | 192 |
RBN Energy: the second wave of US LNG export projects.
Developing a multibillion-dollar liquefaction/LNG export project takes perseverance and patience––and having good luck wouldn’t hurt. The “first wave” of U.S. projects is now cresting; the first two liquefaction “trains” at Cheniere Energy’s Sabine Pass LNG facility are essentially complete, and 12 other trains are under construction and scheduled to come online in the 2017-19 period. But what about the “second wave” of projects that was supposed to be arriving soon thereafter? Today we continue our series on the next round of U.S. LNG projects with a run-through of the projects themselves and a look at how (despite the current market gloom) there is at least some cause for optimism that a few may get built by the early 2020s.There are too many to list here but I counted at least 17 new LNG export projects.
DAPL: lots of DAPL news out there, but I will leave it to others to report. I have no interest in it until the situation is resolved.
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