Brianorca
Brianorca
Brianorca

Since the Airpods would require an iPhone nearby to send the music, (And I assume you’re not just running laps around a table with the iPhone on it,) why would step tracking in the earpiece be any better than step tracking from the phone’s own sensors?

Apparently the owner was signing the errant projectiles for the fans to keep.

I don’t think this is a temporary contamination. The lab lists the lot number that they tested, but that doesn’t mean other lots are ok. Given how many different Neutrogena products are listed, I would assume it’s unsafe if the UPC is on the list.

So you list 5 species, but only 1 photo? And the photo isn’t even labeled, though I’d guess it’s the first species.

It’s a brand new ship built in Spain. Somebody has to sail it out of there.

I think it’s more of a reflection of the relative availability of the vaccine in whatever country they departed from. 

It sounds like the starting port doesn’t have widespread vaccine availability yet. It says they will be vaccinated when they reach the US.

It might not be COVID if everyone is vax’ed, but chances are good that a rhinovirus or something will circulate.

http://www.eattheweeds.com/citron-melons-abandoned-preserves-2/

Since they were in the final approach, they would not have been highly pressurized at that point in time. It was probably only ambient pressure, or just slightly above.

Now playing

DM density is still variable, but it seems to not be as densely concentrated as baryonic matter is. But filaments and clumps are part of the hypothesized distribution of dark matter. Just not denser objects like dark stars or planets. We have also observed entire galaxies that seem to mostly lack any dark matter, as

Simplest option is to use the backup codes that Google gives you. Print them out and keep in a safe place at home, preferably a sealed envelope. There are also some authenticator apps that you can backup (encrypted) to a cloud account, (for example Authy) but there is a small extra risk there. But I’d really suggest

Just a note that SMS is considered less secure. As noted in this incident: https://gizmodo.com/how-hackers-reportedly-side-stepped-gmails-two-factor-a-1653631338

I think you missed this part:

The patent does expire in 20 years, so if your plant has been at your home for that long, then you’re safe. Or if you grew it from a sexually produced seed. Or if you know it wasn’t patented. (When you bought it at a nursery, the tag will say the patent number if it has one.) But otherwise, assume it still has a

There’s still one trick that emergency blankets have: they pack into a tiny space that’s just not possible even with a lightweight cotton sheet.

Google allows you to define multiple 2FA devices on the same account. So they can have their authenticator app, and you can have a hardware token, and either one will work. Or even have another hardware key you keep in a safe.

I’m no lawyer, but doesn’t Google have a point, if these employees were sharing personal information (PII) about other employees with a third party? Or the other employee that added code to create a pop-up, that’s basically hacking. It’s certainly not just a email or instant message. I would sure hope unions don’t

Try https://broadbandnow.com/national-broadband-map

I’d guess it would only alert if the tag is unaccompanied. So as long as somebody’s phone nearby is claiming the tag, then it doesn’t alert the others.