The Watermelon
What should I have for dinner?

Please tell me?

WHERE WOULD YOU MOST LIKE TO VISIT ON YOUR PLANET?

The top!

Talk to me. Tell what to do tomorrow.
If no one posts, I am just going to eat tortilla chips and watch Kids in the Hall.
The Government is Slow!

“There was a moment, just one moment where Microsoft’s last CES keynote transcended the mundane and skirted the edge of fantastic. If you weren’t watching or have read the reports coming out of CEO Steve Ballmer’s hour-and-a-half-long goodbye to the Consumer Electronics Show stage, you might have missed it. But those of us in the audience did not and we thought, just maybe, Microsoft’s biggest salesman was going to deliver something really big,” Lance Ulanoff reports for Mashable.“There was a moment, just one moment where Microsoft’s last CES keynote transcended the mundane and skirted the edge of fantastic. If you weren’t watching or have read the reports coming out of CEO Steve Ballmer’s hour-and-a-half-long goodbye to the Consumer Electronics Show stage, you might have missed it. But those of us in the audience did not and we thought, just maybe, Microsoft’s biggest salesman was going to deliver something really big,” Lance Ulanoff reports for Mashable.“There was a moment, just one moment where Microsoft’s last CES keynote transcended the mundane and skirted the edge of fantastic. If you weren’t watching or have read the reports coming out of CEO Steve Ballmer’s hour-and-a-half-long goodbye to the Consumer Electronics Show stage, you might have missed it. But those of us in the audience did not and we thought, just maybe, Microsoft’s biggest salesman was going to deliver something really big,” Lance Ulanoff reports for Mashable.“There was a moment, just one moment where Microsoft’s last CES keynote transcended the mundane and skirted the edge of fantastic. If you weren’t watching or have read the reports coming out of CEO Steve Ballmer’s hour-and-a-half-long goodbye to the Consumer Electronics Show stage, you might have missed it. But those of us in the audience did not and we thought, just maybe, Microsoft’s biggest salesman was going to deliver something really big,” Lance Ulanoff reports for Mashable.“There was a moment, just one moment where Microsoft’s last CES keynote transcended the mundane and skirted the edge of fantastic. If you weren’t watching or have read the reports coming out of CEO Steve Ballmer’s hour-and-a-half-long goodbye to the Consumer Electronics Show stage, you might have missed it. But those of us in the audience did not and we thought, just maybe, Microsoft’s biggest salesman was going to deliver something really big,” Lance Ulanoff reports for Mashable.“There was a moment, just one moment where Microsoft’s last CES keynote transcended the mundane and skirted the edge of fantastic. If you weren’t watching or have read the reports coming out of CEO Steve Ballmer’s hour-and-a-half-long goodbye to the Consumer Electronics Show stage, you might have missed it. But those of us in the audience did not and we thought, just maybe, Microsoft’s biggest salesman was going to deliver something really big,” Lance Ulanoff reports for Mashable.“There was a moment, just one moment where Microsoft’s last CES keynote transcended the mundane and skirted the edge of fantastic. If you weren’t watching or have read the reports coming out of CEO Steve Ballmer’s hour-and-a-half-long goodbye to the Consumer Electronics Show stage, you might have missed it. But those of us in the audience did not and we thought, just maybe, Microsoft’s biggest salesman was going to deliver something really big,” Lance Ulanoff reports for Mashable.

This pretty much sums up Mexico. Tequila, palm trees, some spinning, whatever. That’s how it goes.

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hello!