LifeInMultipleChoice @ LifeInMultipleChoice @lemmy.world Posts 18Comments 2,368Joined 2 yr. ago
Not sure Hungary does. But most of Europe I agree
I read the title and had to go to the article because my brain read pipes instead of wipes. I was trying to figure out how/why they were trying to transition to having dry pipes for water lines.
Yeah, it's more like keep repeating the lie until people start believing it. It's the same way FOX news works. I couldn't go more than a day without hearing Hunter Biden's laptop pertaining to everything. State secrets and national defense issues, his laptop. Why Russia is invading Ukraine, laptop. Why dinosaurs died, his laptop.
They use harder plastic here, but often times they make items like this, then refrigerate some and package them next to the hot food section. So they don't get as dried out sitting under a heat lamp for hours. This also qualifies them for SNAP (food stamps) as hot food does not qualify. Then you just take it home and throw it in the oven when your ready to eat it.
Yeah, I remember seeing that Amazon was putting small percentage off items to make sure they dropped below free shipping charges as well. Basically if it was going to cost them $5 to ship it, and it was only $3 over, they'd give you $3.01 off in a sale to get it under.
This reads like complete anti free market pro dictator bologna.
It's basically saying it is NVIDIA's job to make sure the U.S. stays dominant in the AI field because we have an insecure president that doesn't invest in the future of technological innovation, yet rather divests from free trade to in attempts that slow it.
I can give you a 18 min tutorial and you'll know how they work as well. It isn't super"knowledge" I'm a doof like all others. DM me and I have no problem discussing how those mechanics work. I started college in Aerospace engineering. Left with a degree in Math/physics and spent most of my career in IT. I promise the aptitude to learn and the wanting to learn aren't on the same plane. Most of computer science proves such
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I haven't ever been afraid of those things, I see more likely scenarios of them having it disable the O2 sensor to cause the check engine light to come on and depending on the vehicle cause sputtering and other "serious issue signs." To convince drivers to take it in for repair. Then just re-enable or replace the sensor for dealers to make a quick hefty buck.
You can steer someone's car once and when it hits the news people would freak out and the companies stock would crash. You can send 500,000 people to the shop for a sensor malfunction and charge them $200 to repair it make an extra $100,000,000 and fly under the radar pretty easily I imagine. It would be hard to prove that "reseating" the old sensors cable didn't infact fix the issue
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Isn't that the same one we found out that most of the data being recorded wasn't from the cars but data that the sales/maintenance workers were allowed to record when you were at the dealership and they manufactures/dealers could legally sell it do to the contracts. It's horrible that they do it, but the cars weren't tracking your sex life, and trying to figure out if you were a lesbian, or if you were even male/female. The dealership was just able to mark information like that down and sell it.
It's one more reason buying cars direct from the manufacturer for those who choose to should be allowed and not banned by law like states such as Florida have done. We don't need more middlemen between producer and consumer. It usually only raises prices and creates more privacy issues.
If this is true, that has got to be infuriating:
“We have known from the beginning that Ajay Dev was wrongfully convicted,” Purcell told the Chronicle. “Judge Beronio was the first judge to really look closely at the evidence and read every document.”
16+ years to get a judge to actually read the documentation, accounts, and listen.
It seems like there are 2 types of charges in the U.S. Those that spend years in prison before getting someone to review the facts, and those who spend years pushing back trials and staying out of jail until eventually they drop the cases without looking at all the evidence.
Same with regulations being rolled back. I would love to see a 10 billion dollar price tag be marked for every life lost do to a practice a company was required to perform, then was allowed to stop because an administration rolls back regulations. Just because a regulation was rolled back doesn't mean there wasn't a known threat to someone's life. Executives should all receive pre-meditated murder convictions because they were already told it was a danger to the population, and the fines be paid directly to the family's with no ability to declare bankruptcy to default on it. If a new company is started by any of the people involved the unpaid costs should transfer indefinitely ensuring they cannot own anything until they pay off the 10 billion.
The microphone was part of Alexander Graham Bells invention I believe. I assume speaker was included as well, otherwise what would it be used for, the radio wasn't around yet
I think they were just emphasizing what they found important, like cummings. To each their own.
But you have to admit the smell is nice. Not the burning one, just the expanded batteries. They always have a sweet smell that you can sometimes even smell through the gaps on the outside of a device when they are expanding. Always makes me think they smell like radiator fluid should taste like. Both of which should be kept away from dogs and such just because of that. I remember years ago one place I worked they kept all the expanded batteries in a closed container and we would stack them all there until taken for disposal. If you opened the container anyone within a 10ft radius could immediately smell them.
A gas powered engine, for sure. That's why I said the telephone might not end up holding up. Spark, fuel/oxygen varies by carburetor. Contained in a cylinder. Head pushed up, attach to opposite side, and get your sparks in sync. Carburators don't need electronics so I wouldn't try for fuel injectors at that time. All you need is a working concept and evidence it can work for a patent really. Then anyone who comes about wanting to use the concept, say Mercedes in Europe or Ford after in the U.S. and you take your payouts. Don't need to continue making the products. Invest the earnings into battery research. Paying researchers and giving them the information that we can beat lead acid with nickle cadmium and eventually lithium ion should get us pushed into a company patenting the future of battery tech for that time. Throw in sodium ion based for shits and we've got the future of all batteries for 100 years paying a fragment of production.
*Note by in sync you should be able to instigate the spark just using the downward stroke of the opposite head. So the time could never be off, just have to ensure your spark stays connected to the aforementioned lead acid batteries that we are looking to phase out
Found an aerial photo. Definitely not a roadblock by Hamas being shown in the photos
Found another supposed camera view
So the fences all appear to be set up by the distribution network by the looks of that
I guess you have to call a place on solid ground Starbase when everything you build to carry building supplies into space to build a Starbase fails.
Yeah, Gnusocial matches the body text they listed. Never used it, so can't give any insight
Can you not still lift slightly, wrap a spludger around the end of the "glue" tape then pull outward as flat as possible with the board so it stays as close to 180 degrees as you can keep it. That's how we used to pull them out years ago. Never had issues with them tearing and such. The whole process would take 15 minutes to having the device booting back up. Maybe they changed the adhesive again after the models I'm thinking of.