
Going through my old photos, and... I have no recollection of taking this photo, but I'm pretty sure it was for all of you.
I add a bit of chicken bullion to my fried onions, and it's delicious.

I add a bit of chicken bullion to my fried onions, and it's delicious.
I love in north Texas.
No bites that I can see it feel, just a very startling awakening!
Context
In the days after the most recent ice age, hard drives used spinning metal disks to store a computer's data. An actuator arm with a read/write head used magnets to position itself over the right part of the disk so that it could read the data passing under it. And that was ok, as long as the data that it was reading was stored in the same place on the disk. But if your data was fragmented on different parts of the disk, then the arm would have to constantly jump around to different parts of the disk to read the data, which meant slower loading times and decreased lifespan of the hard drive.
To solve this, there was a utility called Disk Defragmenter, which would transfer data to different parts of the disk so that the arm wouldn't have to jump around as much. This process was known as defragmenting, and it was visualized with a very pleasant graphic which showed fragmented files in red being moved to be contiguous with other files and turn a blue color.
Also, Germany united and became one country or something.