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Audio book recommendations?
Message
De
28/08/2011 19:52:06
 
 
À
28/08/2011 11:31:45
Information générale
Forum:
Books
Catégorie:
Guides
Divers
Thread ID:
01521541
Message ID:
01522039
Vues:
21
>>>>>>>>>Are there any audio books anyone would like to recommend for listening to in the car? TIA.
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>Personally I would not listen to a story while driving. Your focus should be in driving and not on anything else that requires concentration. So some sort of mindless drivel would probably be best. Maybe Mills and Boon or Harry Potter. :-)
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>A robot could be trained to do this drive. It's highway almost the whole way, long, flat expanses where you can do a steady 70 mph or more.
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>>Whats the US speed limit at the moment ?
>>>>>
>>>>>It starts about half way through the essay, but you should read it all.
>>>>>
>>>>>http://www.city-data.com/forum/automotive/137118-dave-barry-drivers-speed-limits.html
>>>>
>>>>All true.
>>>>
>>>>Dave Barry has been about as good as it gets as a newspaper humorist. For years I was in the habit of reading his syndicated column every Sunday, and still do when I see it. (He was also a pal of Warren Zevon, which is extra credit in my book). He is witty without having that grating quality that can alienate people. He draws on the observational humor of George Carlin without ever giving the reader the idea that, hmmm, this guy may be a little nuts. Barry is not nuts at all. He's like the funny neighbor or coworker we'd all like to have, if only we were lucky enough.
>>>
>>>At least in the UK the guidelines for issuing a ticket are public (10% over + 2mph):
>>>http://www.cprsp.gov.uk/resources/res.aspx?p=/PublicAttachment/attachmentFilename/23/speed_enforcement_guidelines_web_v7_foi.doc
>>>
>>>Also (presumably in the US as well) speedos in vehicles always over-read by 5-8%.
>>>
>>>In practice, conditions permitting, I usually drive at 85+ on UK motorways and have never had a ticket.
>>
>>Do you also use miles per hour system or km per hour?
>
>Still MPH. Odd in a way since we've gone metric for most things (buying in metres/kilograms).

Is it true that when talking about the temperature, you UK folks use Fahrenheit when it's hot, and Celsius when it's cold?
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