A mate of mine at uni used to brew his own... well, I suppose you'd call it 'wine'.
We made gallons of stuff brewed from tinned peaches and tinned mandarin orange slices. It seemed pretty alcoholic when it was finished but had a disturbing aftertaste of, against all reason, ham. You know those plastic packets of thin-sliced turkey ham? Like that.
If I had to choose to keep either my tablet or my phone, I'd keep the phone, no question.
My phone is a Samsung Galaxy S2 and my tablet is a Samsung Galaxy Tab 2 - pretty much the same thing just with a 7" screen and no 'phone' parts. The phone can do everything the tablet can and more, due to the mobile internet (tablet is WiFi only) and the only disadvantage is the smaller screen.
The Tablet was really just a decadence ao I could browse, play games etc on the larger screen and to stop the Mrs pinching my phone to play Bejewelled.
Once you go smartphone, you'll never go back and you'll wonder how you ever coped. Within days being able to check where you are with the GPS, or find out something from the internet, check Facebook/Emails/etc becomes just another thing your body does, like breathing.
From what I've read, they're not allowed to use the data to penalise 'bad' drivers, only reward good drivers with discounts. So your quote won't increase if you speed, but it might not decrease over time as fast as someone who doesn't.
No idea if the police are allowed to seize the data to prove how you were driving if they ever feel the need to.
Graphics really have now got to the point where I am truly unsure whether that's a photo or a screenshot. It's only the wheels give it away as real I think.
EDIT: and the caustics being reflected onto the road from the doors.
'Where's My Water?' is my current favorite little game.
You have to direct jets of water (with proper fluid dynamics modelling) to a target by hollowing out the ground it flows in and later with various movable valves and platforms plus extra liquids with different properties.
There's a lot of artists and designers on this forum, both aspiring and already established, and I thought you'd all like a read of this (it's a short article, maybe a minute to read)
I give you 'The Helsinki Bus-Station Theory of career development':