https://cen.acs.org/environment/recycling/Bill-Nye-plastic-guy-turning/100/i23
He did shill for Coca-Cola, which isn’t a great look.
https://cen.acs.org/environment/recycling/Bill-Nye-plastic-guy-turning/100/i23
He did shill for Coca-Cola, which isn’t a great look.
https://cen.acs.org/environment/recycling/Bill-Nye-plastic-guy-turning/100/i23
Coca-Cola paid him to talk plastic.
Easy if you have money. If a new phone is a financial stretch, then in the short term it can be cheaper to get a nice phone for “free” with carrier lock in (which of course means it wasn’t free at all). It probably ends up being more expensive in the long term, but your paycheck can cover it.
Wrong. I breathed in some helium once and it made my voice all high pitched which threatened my fragile masculinity. Very toxic.
(/s…)
Never worked much with cryogenics, but the one thing I learned was to never get in an elevator with (large quantities of) liquid nitrogen — if the elevator stops it can displace the oxygen and that’s…kinda bad.
Wait til anon realizes you can look at the cross traffic lights…
Well if you throw a party with 800 people surely someone will know how?
I think the biggest sin that South Park and The Simpsons have made is the disaffected “both candidates suck equally” bit. Essentially advocating for voter apathy is appalling. Just look at the makeup of the US Supreme Court and say with a straight face that “Giant Douche” and “Turd Sandwich” was a reasonable take.
At the hospital, one of the nurses joked that whenever a fellow medical professional walked past a newborn they’d always ask for a hit of that new baby smell. Coke for the neonatal wing of the hospital.
If your baby predominantly smells like shit, you may need to be changing diapers more often…
That’s…not what (many) babies smell like most of the time.
Dr. is used extensively in Europe. It’s even tacked on to existing titles, where in the US you rarely use Dr. if a “higher” honorific is applicable (e.g., it’s usually just “Prof. X,” where in parts of Europe it’s “Prof. Dr. X”).
Do you mean that doctorates in medical-adjacent fields (but not unqualified med school) don’t use the term in Europe?
Perhaps parent was suggesting that anything in this chart is indeed part of the human experience, because we can — in some small way — comprehend or “experience” it. An intellectual rather than a visceral experience.
Or not, I dunno.
For their own good, let’s hope anon doesn’t become “more than friends” with this mantis…
Yeah, but this is (according to OP) faster, which saves money. And, because it’s open, if there are features that could add serious value, they could be added in-house.
But yeah, perhaps a bit of a pyrrhic victory.
The irony in some of these budgets is that you can eat pretty affordably…if you aren’t overworked, and can afford to spend a huge chunk of your time cooking. But because you’re working two jobs, this isn’t the case.
Bulk rice and bulk dried beans are dirt cheap. Bulk vegetable oil, coconut milk, potatos/onions/garlic are all cheap. Homemade Thai curry is cheap and delicious, but ain’t no one got time for that after working a double shift. Homemade Mexican rice and refried beans are likewise cheap and delicious, but they too take time.
And of course, if you’re spending bare minimum on rent you’re probably sharing a kitchen with a handful of other folks (or you only have a personal hotplate), which also sucks for cooking.
So if you live in a nice house with a nice kitchen and aren’t overworked, yeah…food can be pretty cheap.
Looks like you edited but kept the “th” suffix instead of “nd” :)
California has some good rules on the book about this: https://www.scu.edu/library/policies/confidentiality/
AFAIK this applies to minors with a card, too. I have heard that in my city when a librarian gives a minor (I think over age 13?) a card, they make a point of saying, “we will never tell your parents what books you check out” (or something like thay). Obviously federal law trumps this (looking at you, Patriot Act…) but there are some places in this country sorta doing the right thing, which is heartening!
For a while Intel’s QuickSync was I think one of the better for transcoding (e.g., for Jellyfin). Didn’t see mention of this in the article, I wonder if AMD is on par now?
My carrier is Google Fi — one perk is that they will give you free data-only sims (up to 10 I think?) and you just pay for the data you use like any other data. I have used old Android phones in USB tether mode this way, and it works just fine. So, rpi+old/cheap phone should do the trick.
One fun bonus is that if you tether over USB it will work as a WiFi dongle, too — the failover from WiFi to cell should happen on the phone, transparently iirc. Not sure if that affects you.
Caveat is that I did this a while ago, and their pricing structure may have changed. Finished to be a great deal but has slowly become another carrier with not much to differentiate it…
It’s also somewhat unique as a state (maybe?) in that it has a ton of corporate exports (namely, tech), as well as gigantic agricultural output. Illinois comes to mind as a similar situation. Contrast to Alaska (oil) or NY (NYC finance/corporate).