jeremy-akers
jeremy.akers
jeremy-akers

I think it depends upon the market. For a cross-country rig, sure. But a lot of semis do urban delivery (delivery from warehouse to grocery store). They don’t go very far. They spend a lot of time idling. And they are back at their warehouse by the end of the work day.

1/3 the range? Leaf is 107 miles. Bolt is 238.

This is word soup at it’s finest. Perfectly seasoned with what the fuck and are you serious.

As a Justice Officer in the Brazilian Judiciary system, allow me to try to explain the legal aspects of this, since other commenters seem to be confuse by how it’s possible a man convicted to 22 years to be released after 4 years.

I think you’re missing something fundamental with all the posts you have replied to because they completely show the cost-effectiveness of changing to LEDs from, say, incandescent lighting (the calculator link I posted very very clearly shows that - in the default case (that can be changed) the savings was, like,

“...I save $11 a year for 3 LED bulbs and spend at least $14 a year to buy replacements. How is my net loss of $3 saving me any money...”

Do the math.
Incandescent bulb consmes 60w.

Uh, dude, the link I gave you? That’s from *Home Depot*. Home Depot is a national retail chain, not a “spam site”.

Actually, I *do* work a desk job. Guess what? We have switched to LED lighting, and did it a long time ago. We have not had a run on our eye care insurance in the years since.

Look, you seem to have some

Who cares? My time is better used not having to replace bulbs all the time. Almost yearly I have to change the stupid bulbs in the light portion of the fan in my old apartment and there were about 5 of them. But I usually had to remember to buy the stupid things which I never remembered to get while out and I don’t

Slickdeals a spam site? You’re a hopeless idiot.

Not to pick directly on you, but I get irritated when people claim that LED’s don’t save money. There is a price premium for LED’s, but that is usually alleviated over time by the savings in electricity and the longer-lasting nature of the bulb. Simple math shows this.

Step 1: Use actual meat, like, from a dead animal.

Step 1. Open box

Step 1) Throw out veggie burgers

I think it comes from a misunderstanding/miscommunication in the term “risk”. In evidence based decision making, risk says that there is a correlation between the exposure (drinking alcohol) and the incidence (violence, unwanted pregnancies, STDs, etc). What it says is that studies have found that women that drink had

The worst thing I see about the infographic is that, amongst the direct negative physical effects that can possibly result from drinking are some indirect ones potentially caused by alcohol’s ability to impair judgment.

If I have a full-size cart, it means I’m buying all the stuff for the week (which includes fresh meat, veggies, etc etc).