

They sit in a break room staring at each other. When Stimpy asks Ren what he wants to do, he suggests they spend some quality time together.

Ren's patience quickly wears thin, and he lashes out at Stimpy simply because the latter keeps idly drumming his fingers on the table. Ren apologizes, as he thinks he might've gone crazy from being cooped up and Stimpy suggests that they eat a hot meal. Stimpy goes off to get the three course meal, which turns out to be three different flavors of meal-substitute paste.

Ren bangs his head on the table, as Stimpy comforts him.Ĭommander Hoek (Ren) is 'forced to use' a toothbrush. Stimpy then suggests that Ren takes a bath to relieve his stress. To help him relax further, Stimpy turns off the gravity in the ship, causing Ren and the water in the bath to float several feet above the floor. Stimpy goes off to do his duty and Ren sits alone. He tries to concentrate on pleasant thoughts, thinking of actual food. The longer Ren soaks, the more manic his thoughts become, before announcing to no one in particular that he isn't crazy, but rather mad. The bathwater and Ren float out of the bathroom and to the bridge. As the sequel to Apple’s LED Cinema Display, the Apple Thunderbolt Display (Orig. $999, now on Ebay for much less) was originally introduced in July 2011, and had not changed until it was discontinued in June 2016. Measuring 27″ on the diagonal, the metal and glass Thunderbolt Display uses the same 2560×1440 screen found in the original 27″ iMac and the LED Cinema Display, with a chassis thickness somewhere between the last two iMac generations. Three speakers are inside the frame for 2.1-channel audio, along with a basic FaceTime HD camera and a microphone. The display is different because it has a Thunderbolt connector, which makes a MacBook Pro, MacBook Air, Mac mini, or Mac Pro easy to hook up. After plugging the monitor into a wall outlet, you connect your Mac via the Thunderbolt cable to gain access to three powered USB 2.0 ports, a Firewire 800 port, a Thunderbolt port, and an Ethernet port. There’s also a MagSafe plug to supply up to 85W of power to a MacBook, as well as a packed-in MagSafe 2 adapter for newer MacBooks.

Thunderbolt is required for the video connection no other video standard is supported.
