All Natural HOT Cinnamon Flavored Toothpicks 4 Pack

: All Natural HOT Cinnamon Flavored Toothpicks 4 Pack

All Natural HOT Cinnamon Flavored Toothpicks 4 Pack

from: Candy Crate










Binding: Misc.
Brand: Candy Crate
EAN: 0050571031019
Label: Candy Crate
Manufacturer: Candy Crate
Publisher: Candy Crate
Studio: Candy Crate

Features:
  • 300 picks for under $10
  • ALL NATURAL
  • GREAT VALUE!

Rating: 3 out of 5 stars - Toothpicks
The quality of the wood used in the toothpicks is not high. The flavor is cinnamon, but if you're expecting the cinnamon toothpicks from the 70's you will be disappointed.



Rating: 1 out of 5 stars - stale and nasty tasting
The product was old and no good!! I gave the box to some kids and they even complained. What a waste of my money. The HOTLIX cinnamon tooth picks our much better, but they where out.
Thank you
tom Troglia



Rating: 3 out of 5 stars - Good but beware of shipping costs
These toothpicks are great and everything you would expect them to be! Just beware of shipping! i was charged $5.88 for shipping which is almost as much as the toothpicks themselves.



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Spicy Flavored Toothpicks
I loved these and shared these with my dad who loves to have a toothpick in his mouth. I was glad to have him spice up his mouth with these which are also sugar free since he is a diabetic so he gets taste with no negative side effects to his health.



Rating: 3 out of 5 stars - Not like I remembered from my childhood
I bought these for my brother for Christmas, because we loved Cinnamon toothpicks as kids. I remember the solid, round, quality wooden toothpicks, but I was surprised when these arrived and they are actually flat and pretty flimsy. I'm sure they still taste good (I can certainly smell them strongly!) and I'm sure my brother will appreciate them, but I'm wondering what happened to the nice solid toothpicks of my youth - maybe it was a different brand.


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Page added by Erik Drolshammer

Secondary benefits:

  • More content and more consistent content in the Agile 2.0 wiki space
  • A list of unsolved "pains" that we should know how to solve
  • Code examples/patches to ease some known pains.

Some starting questions

  • Deployment and packing
    • Create Maven-archetype? (programming)
  • Maintenance
    • What problems usually cause problems later on?
    • Can these be prevented with simple/cheap means?
    • Code monsters?
      • There has recently been created a maven-plugin which checks for new versions of the dependencies in a project. Perhaps this is worth looking at as a means to detecting possible library update candidates?

This is a first for yours truly--Wi-Fi from a commercial flight: I'm blogging from somewhere above 10,000 feet on Virgin America's press event flight to kick off its commercial launch of Internet in-flight Internet service. The flight is littered with e-celebrities and a few real ones (a couple of the great ensemble from 30 Rock are here). We're flying over the ocean. And the Gogo Internet service from Aircell seems to be working just fine. I've Twittered, I've IM'd, and I'm about to post this blog entry. (Success! Updated later.)

There are about 130-odd people aboard, and I should apparently recognize lots of people, but I am so unhip, as Douglas Adams once wrote, that it's a wonder my bum doesn't fall off. I was able to talk briefly with Dave Cush, the head of Virgin America, who is very keen on having this rolled out, and at some length with Jack Blumenstein, the head of Aircell. (I did a in-flight air-to-ground interview with Blumenstein for BoingBoingTV which I'll link to when my fine friends there have the segment edited and up.)

virgin_wifi_small.jpg

The service works as one might expect: Aircell has had months to troubleshoot problems via the American pilot, and we're flying right around San Francisco, so nothing unpredictable in the middle part of the country. In a quick test using Qwest's bandwidth tester, I was able to get 700 Kbps downstream--while there were 100 other people using the service, too.

This wasn't a commercial flight (it was technically a charter), but it was on a regular Virgin America Airbus 320 using Aircell's ground network. Some material was broadcast live from the plane to YouTube Live, which was hosting a simultaneous event on the ground at Fort Mason in San Francisco.

This is the first time I've used Internet service on a commercial plane. Back a few years ago, I was on a Connexion by Boeing press flight that used ground stations for the flight instead of the production satellite servers.

Virgin isn't the first domestic airline to launch Internet service; American Airlines has a pilot with 15 planes that have been in the air on cross country routes for nearly three months. But Virgin is poised to be the first airline to launch Wi-Fi fleet wide. Delta has made a commitment--and they have several hundred planes in the U.S.--but hasn't gotten its first bird launched with service. Alaska, Southwest, and JetBlue have various plans that seem to have been pushed into 2009.

(Photo courtesy Virgin America. I'm the guy in an oatmeal sweater holding a white MacBook up. Disclosure for clarity: I paid my own way to San Francisco for the event.)






All Natural HOT Cinnamon Flavored Toothpicks 4 Pack

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