Fun fact: told someone most of my programming on desktop PCs is C# or python, he called me a noon and said he's learning binary. I then proceeded to explain the IEEE single precision floating point standard to him.
I've been sitting at my laptop for half an hour and I can't come up with a remark for that. Congratulations SixSixSevenSeven, you have done something that almost no one can do, you have rendered me speechless.
fun fact: A is equal to 10 Bonus fact: F is equal to 15 ill take a 18 speed manual over an auto any day, I cant stand an auto semi.
Fun fact: Steam is filled with trolls, And since this game is on steam we can just wait for all the little trolls to join us! I'm so excited, Aren't you?
Fun fact: That's already started happening. Note the definite increase in pointless threads posted on these forums.
Fun fact: the beamng community hub on steam is already full of either a. trolls or b. idiots (people asking for game to be free, people saying its a next car game rip off, things like that) Sent from the 3rd galaxy via the talks of tapping
Why do you think I haven't played this game ever since it was put on steam... Below: You took that in all wrong.
Never said that, nor did I even direct that at you (or anyone really) this is a thread about facts, and I stated a fact Sent from the 3rd galaxy via the talks of tapping
If this thread is open to historical "fun facts", I'd advise the community to ban me from ever posting here. Save us all a lot of time. One odd fact I recall is that, in the early twentieth century, a series of American companies that produced, funded, manufactured, or were otherwise invested in the automobile got together behind closed doors (probably cackling madly as a group, villain-style) to ruin American light rail once and for all. At the turn of the century, many towns too small to be blessed with the miracle of the flushable crapper still managed to have fairly extensive light rail/electric trolley lines. As a result, the value of the automobile to the average consumer wasn't that great. All of a sudden, a mysterious and certainly not at all suspicious collection of new rail companies started buying the light rail systems across the U.S. Strangely, the rail companies would then dissemble the rail systems and sell the leftovers for scrap. It only took a full few decades before the public caught on, and by then, pretty much every minor streetcar line was gone. Even Los Angeles became what it is now: a city completely dominated by the automobile. I may have exaggerated the details, but it wouldn't be as romantic to be docile about the theory. And if the above seems familiar, that's because it was the background story in 'Who Framed Roger Rabbit?.'