Brianorca
Brianorca
Brianorca

Inner hallways I thought were generally recommended in case of tornado? And doorways are often recommended in case of earthquakes. (Though I’ve heard more recent conflict on that point.) So it’s good to have a recommendation backed up by data rather than “hrrm maybe it’s kinda like a tornado?”

Of the three types of appliance, gas stoves are the only one that vents into the home. Water heaters and furnaces have external exhaust pipes, so the childhood asthma argument goes out the window.

Most break-ins occur without using the key. Hence the term “break”-in. Plus, if you’re in your house, then they can’t get your hand until after they break-in, so what’s the point?

The poison pill makes it unpalatable for any new shareholder to try to gain control of the company by just buying stock. If somebody increased their holding over a certain limit, then everybody else gets the chance to buy more stock at a substantial discount, which would dilute the share of whoever was trying to go

Neutral: We also have a small pumpkin that seems unchanged since October.

Oh swell, just manually review each and every packet? That would go real smoothly. /s

Some of them are even fingerprint driven:

No, the fact that they roll over is only evidence that the number of tickets played in any one draw is smaller than the possible combinations. The last three draws only had 23%, 33%, and 47% of combinations played. (Assuming best case of each ticket was unique.)

The paint has been peeling off of mine the last few years. The only reason it’s still readable is the imprint.

If a restaurant wants to open up a spot along the highway, they don’t need a rest stop to do so. Same goes for charging stations. Out here in California, there are plenty of spots where restaurants create little towns with the sole purpose of feeding travelers and their cars. (Grapevine, Baker, Primm, etc.) But rest

Most of those were launched from a French territory near South America.

Please enlighten us how to convince foolish people to just “not drink”.

We tried Prohibition. It didn’t work. As a matter of public policy, a free Uber is cheaper than losing 10,000 people each year to drunk drivers.

Then the court will have more tools to get repeat offenders off the street. Their addiction to alcohol is not the problem, it’s the decision to drive afterwards. (And that may include the sober decision about when and where to drink.)

Maybe not, but if the price is right, then you’re getting 100 games which stores in the space of 2 game boxes, and you never have to worry about missing pieces or the math of keeping score. Maybe $500 is still too much for most people, but there will eventually be a price that works.

One aspect of the quantum computing factor that some people might not know: If we ever do get working quantum computers, it’s not as if we just need to worry about our encryption from that point forward. If an enemy has collected encrypted data in the past, they can use the quantum computer to decrypt that, too. Hence

Both can be true if you don’t get more public involvement on your side. For a long time, right to repair has been a very niche movement. For many people, in that time, it might have sounded nice, but it wasn’t an issue that would change who they voted into office.

It’s not science unless you write it down. Since they didn’t track anything, or do follow up measurements, it doesn’t count.

They are still there, and can still reflect lasers even now. (It was even featured in an episode of Big Bang Theory.) 

The newest AI (OpenAI, Imagen, Stable Diffusion) don’t scrape. They are trained on billions of images, literally a hundred terrabytes even when compressed, but the AI model is less than 2 gigabytes. There’s literally no where for it to store all those images, so it can’t do a direct copy from any of them.