Does anyone know how to help me fix the camera on this? I'm playing on PC, with a wired Xbox controller. I have pitch and roll on left stick, the default, but whenever the cockpit camera is also translating around when I fly - so if I pitch up, the camera translates down into my seat, like I was hitting down arrow on the keyboard. I'm digging through all the menus, and I can't figure out what's going on. Left stick isn't bound to anything else.
I get annoyed when I hear people call gorillas and chimps monkeys, but I realize it's an irrational pet peeve of mine. You're doing great work, keep it up. If your boss asks what you're doing you can tell them you're making a sign for an exhibit.
This also annoys me, because it's not a hard rule to remember or learn. On the other hand, if you want to be super technical/pedantic and consistent with modern cladistic taxonomy, then really you shouldn't use monkey as a defined group at all OR you should include apes as monkeys. Assuming I'm understanding this bit on Wikipedia right.
In the past day or two, the GB player stopped working for me when using Firefox. Embedded youtube videos still play fine. But in the GB player I just get the loading circle.
Okay, so I've been on Skellatraz for what seems like forever. I'm at the part where you need to befriend the hammerhood in The Hole. Does anyone know about how long this section of the game is? It's just killed my momentum to the point where I don't really want to play anymore.
I really like 08th MS Team. It's a self-contained story in the original Universal Century timeline/continuity, and only about 12 episodes, so pretty easy to digest. Mobile Suit Gundam: The Origin is also pretty good - it's a series of movie prequels to the original series, so if you end up liking that you're well-positioned to jump into the first series.
Bart Ehrman has a ton of books about early Christianity that might be what you're looking for. I would say comparable to Reza Aslan in terms of their intended reader; popular histories for a general audience.
If you haven't already read it, Robert Graves' Goodbye to All That is fantastic, though there are some bits of casual racism typical of the time it was written.
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