Tristan-I
Tristan
Tristan-I

Long before the blockchain existed, these systems had methods for tracking them... it was called a database.

This is factually inaccurate. The “Scan to Computer” function doesn’t require a HP account, nor does the “Scan to Network Location” (which I prefer, because the scan to pc daemon is a bit flakey).

Reaching video game competence in the late 80s and early 90s would put the author into Gen X. But, I suspect the author is younger than that and it’s more of a hipster thing.

Also, I found when researching my comment, they don’t list how many pages their cartridges print. I had to get these numbers from a 3rd party site.

This isn’t a great list, it is just a clear demonstration on when you reached an age where you could competently play video games.

Seeing the best “value” as an inkjet printer that uses a black cartridge that costs $32 and prints around 400 pages and a color cartridge that prints 100 pages for $30...

Or, option #3 where they roll back everything and start from scratch again.

It might be a little unfair to compare Ford to a company that started designing and building electric cars from nothing.

Interesting... It would accomplish what I want, but I think it would be outside the spirit of the experiment.

It would be nice if instead of resetting the feed, we could review our watched history and mark certain content as “ignore” or “avoid” to better tune the algorithm.

We have textured ceilings at our house in the main room. They collect dust after we installed ceiling fans.

It has been decades since copper phone lines carried analog signals beyond local switching. It gets converted to digital frames, combined and sent upstream for regional switching. Fiber simply made it possible to send more frames faster.

I don’t think that charging for blue checkmarks is a good idea.

People who deserve respect don’t need to ask for it.

That wooden spoon sitting in the water is triggering...

This is almost as bad as Tom forcing everyone to be friends with him.

Definitely not strange. It’s a perfect choice. Consider the question you are asking right now. To an outsider, it seems like a perfectly rational question to ask. It gives them plenty of cover and plausable deniability.

I think that the current standard doesn’t work, but we should have a means to identify food which has had a greater number of steps from whole foods to whatever form that we are ultimately presented with.

Melamine sponges clean via abrasion. Wet or dry, they clean by sanding a fine layer off of whatever you are attempting to clean. That fine layer may be dirty crud, or it could be the object you are attempting to clean.

Is there any way to setup an iPhone to ignore these messages, but send an automated response thanking the user for their warm wishes?