Ferrari_Freak
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Sep 22, 2008
- Messages
- 768
- Location
- Windsor, Ontario, Canada
- Car(s)
- Specialized Allez Elite :)
Wow that was pretty breathtaking. +rep for sharing.
am i the only one who thinks that they are just being incredibly stupid. especially since its on a open road. one mistake and that person is being smeared off the road.
Wow that was pretty breathtaking. +rep for sharing.
You are the only one. I regularly hit 50-60km/h on my bike down hills, you don't think about what might happen if it goes wrong, in the same way you don't think about being rear ended at a redlight by a fast moving truck.
https://pic.armedcats.net/k/ka/kajun/2011/05/06/110504_wardogs1.jpg
"top-secret, super-elite U.S. Navy SEAL special forces are to deploy heavily armoured bulletproof dogs equipped with infrared nightsight cameras and an 'intruder communication system' able to penetrate concrete walls."
"top-secret, super-elite U.S. Navy SEAL special forces are to deploy heavily armoured bulletproof dogs equipped with infrared nightsight cameras and an 'intruder communication system' able to penetrate concrete walls."
I thought this was awesome:
am i the only one who thinks that they are just being incredibly stupid. especially since its on a open road. one mistake and that person is being smeared off the road.
In April 2008, after 16 years of inactivity, work on the hotel was restarted by the Egyptian company Orascom Group. Orascom, which has entered into a US$ 400 million deal with the North Korean government to build and run a 3G mobile phone network, has denied that their telecommunications deal was directly related to the hotel work.
Didn't they say that the concrete was horribly, structurally unsound?
Wikipedia said:In the late 1990s, the European Union Chamber of Commerce in Korea inspected the building and concluded that the structure was irreparable.
In the late 1990s, the European Union Chamber of Commerce in Korea inspected the building and concluded that the structure was irreparable.
Questions have been raised regarding the quality of the building's concrete and the alignment of its elevator shafts, which some sources say are "crooked". In 2008, Orascom's resident project manager stated that, at a minimum, their goal was to make the facade more attractive.
looks like the movie Sunshine.