COVID causes long term health problems if you're unlucky.
It's not a flu it's sars and should be treated as such.
Literally everything is subjective
Ending private landlords seems easier
That would be the difference in cubic yard (27-1)
Here we're comparing the total volume. 27 is 27 times bigger than 1 (27 / 1)
Sources as in causes of poisoning not references. Maybe work on your reading comprehension before you're pointlessly rude to people.
touché
In this case its don't be openly supporting of transphobes and racists.
Seems like a pretty easy line to walk.
The transphobes and racists are wrong here.
You were actually wrong here mate. They provided, correctly, the multiple sources of lead poisoning.
It wasn't kids eating the paint but the dust that was a big problem.
It's the correct term though.
It's like when people get confused about what a scientific theory is. We still call it the theory of gravity.
It's literally the name of the field of study. Chances are this uses the same thing as LLMs. Aka a neutral network, which are some of the oldest AIs around.
It refers to anything that simulates intelligence. They are using the correct word. People just misunderstand it.
Yeah it's pretty gobbledygook. Don't think you explained yourself that well.
Many people just want to do their job and go home. They don't want to make friends. Or they have no motivation to do anything beyond what they are paid for to help the company or colleagues.
Which is totally fair enough to me. If I didn't need to work to live I 100% wouldn't. Even though I quite enjoy my job and like the people I work with.
Given their age it's more likely lead poisoning
Not really. They have massive breakthroughs that increase capacity and charging hugely.
People just seem to expect some world changing development constantly.
Yeah the more power phones have available the more manufacturers use.
It's why I miss replaceable batteries.
Battery tech is constantly having huge breakthroughs. They are just come in small steps.
I mean a smart phone is literally a battery powered computer. It's absolutely astounding compared to what we had 10/20 years ago.
I think complication is actually how it interacts with other language features. As opposed to implementing the actual objects.
I was pretty surprised at how much faster switch can be
For dependency injection there's no need to store them in fields. You can just access them directly.
I find it cuts a huge amount of boiler plate if done this way.
You can actually use the dynamic type here for late binding of overloads. You will get a runtime error for unknown types though.
You essentially define the function overloaded for each type. Then call the function with a dynamic and the runtime will figure out what method to call