Water balloons work well but we used regular balloons and they turned out just fine.
Not exact matches
Take a page from Petco, where my wife
works, by hosting an employee picnic, complete with games like sack races and
water balloon tosses.
The complaint claims that the police officers who
work in Wake County schools unlawfully punish students and criminalize exceedingly minor misbehaviors such as «throwing
water balloons, stealing paper from a recycling bin and play - fighting with a friend.»
I do ask, and as it turns out, he has simulated the behavior of falling ping - pong balls (where the model
works rather well) and falling
water balloons (where the model fails to reproduce observed motion even if the
balloon doesn't break).
There's (1) the Beats Audio control panel, (2) switching to an annoying (but still easily - disabled) typewriter - derived set of sounds for the keyboard, (3) a default background image of a hot air
balloon over a body of
water in front of a setting sun with lens flare (oh, the poor Photoshopping at
work here), and (4), well, that's it.
The new built has been packed with
water - resistant capabilities and enable the smartwatch to
work under rain or during a
water -
balloon battle or even in a swim.
The idea is that by using a cryptographically secured and totally decentralized authority that can
work at the speed of a computer, we should be able to keep power distribution,
water treatment, self - driving transportation, and much more from
ballooning beyond all practical limits as cities continue to grow.
High expectations,
ballooning budgets, things that go creak (and crash and boom) in the night, a phalanx of strangers coming and going and limited access to those amenities you've grown accustomed to — like running
water and
working appliances — can get to anyone.