Laughable wikiHow guides

Protip, earth gravity doesn't exert more than 1g. Because 1g just stands for earth gravity.

But, we're getting off topic. Here's How to handle your dogs remains. I looked at the wikihow new pages list and along with this, there's a huge glut of weirdly specific articles about caring for an old dog, specifically, like: http://www.wikihow.com/Know-if-Your-Senior-Dog-Is-Healthy-Enough-to-Travel http://www.wikihow.com/Feed-Your-Senior-Dog-a-Healthy-Diet http://www.wikihow.com/Foster-Senior-Dogs http://www.wikihow.com/Know-if-Your-Senior-Dog-Should-Go-on-a-Diet http://www.wikihow.com/Keep-an-Older-Dog-Warm-in-Cold-Weather And to go with the first one, http://www.wikihow.com/Honor-and-Remember-a-Dog-After-Death
That's a lot of autistically specific articles in a short time. I wonder if they're all from one guy who wishes he took better care of his dog that died. Honestly the new articles list is a gold mine, except that sadly none of these new articles have pictures.
 
@Mauvman Shuffleboard misslunarose is back!
http://www.wikihow.com/Distinguish-Between-ADHD-and-Autism

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Also count as your blessing that you'd likely be knocked unconscious by the G-force before you hit the ground.
In free fall you don't feel any G-force, you're weightless -- that's why astronauts "float", they're in free fall around the earth.
When falling in air, the friction will slow you down until you reach constant velocity (around 160 km/h). Then, during the rest of the fall, you just feel normal earth gravity, like in a lift moving at constant speed.
 
In free fall you don't feel any G-force, you're weightless -- that's why astronauts "float", they're in free fall around the earth.
When falling in air, the friction will slow you down until you reach constant velocity (around 160 km/h). Then, during the rest of the fall, you just feel normal earth gravity, like in a lift moving at constant speed.
that's why we have the phrase "it's not the fall that kills you"
 
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