> As a person who study UX for living So a student?
Would such a move be enough to not be under the jurisdiction of the Eastern District? Google doesn't have any store there yet that doesn't stop any patent troll.
I think a better example would be losing a partner vs losing a distant relative, snapping a nail sounds like apple and oranges.
Your link doesn't support your thesis, and I don't know of any place that have such policy, except probably shitty places that didn't have good services in the first place.
> but lets not pretend like a more objective version of this study would have ever happened Precisely, because a more objective version would have found no effect whatsoever.
On the flip side, if it wasn't Amazon mentioned but pets.com, they were entirely right.
Is there actually any reason why we should allow pet stores to sell animals at all? Even outside of radical animal rights, it seems like a breeding ground for terrible conditions for the animals.
Just a correction, but it's a project of the European Space Agency, not NASA.
Well, if they haven't included any connection to other books, people could complain that it's too self-contained, there is no way to win.
This is something you hear all the time, why?
What is inconsistent here? Apart from the fact we don't know how truthful his friends are, the numbers don't seem out of whack.
If there is one comment that embodies the HN spirit, it's this one...
Not his first rodeo either, see his talk page at Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_talk:Rawjapan
There'd still be a mental overhead though, and it's notwithstanding the fact that the euro is more than twenty years old, at a time where paying by credit card often meant someone was physically copying your card number…
An often overlooked point is that euro is not just an economic tool but also a social one, as being able to travel and pay freely in the whole continent is an important unifying point.
> “You’ve seen a bifurcation internally at many larger houses where senior managers are very skeptical about crypto, while graduates and younger team members are very positive,” said Grimsley. “The youngsters may have…
Well, if it's their data, shouldn't they be able to delete it at will?
He was specifically talking about proof of work though, which indeed is inherently wasteful. And seeing the whole block size issue, it seems impossible bitcoin would ever move away from proof of work.
This is the important question, why is this feature even on by default? Why is it an option to NOT have that feature?
> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WmwEB4DY_jc&t=169s Going on a tangent here, but are miners not supposed to wear any kind of breathing protection?!
I think you what you are seeing is just pushback from years of Tesla Hype, just a couple of years ago it wasn't rare to read almost messianic message on how Musk was going to save the world. That being said, I think you…
> As a person who study UX for living So a student?
Would such a move be enough to not be under the jurisdiction of the Eastern District? Google doesn't have any store there yet that doesn't stop any patent troll.
I think a better example would be losing a partner vs losing a distant relative, snapping a nail sounds like apple and oranges.
Your link doesn't support your thesis, and I don't know of any place that have such policy, except probably shitty places that didn't have good services in the first place.
> but lets not pretend like a more objective version of this study would have ever happened Precisely, because a more objective version would have found no effect whatsoever.
On the flip side, if it wasn't Amazon mentioned but pets.com, they were entirely right.
Is there actually any reason why we should allow pet stores to sell animals at all? Even outside of radical animal rights, it seems like a breeding ground for terrible conditions for the animals.
Just a correction, but it's a project of the European Space Agency, not NASA.
Well, if they haven't included any connection to other books, people could complain that it's too self-contained, there is no way to win.
This is something you hear all the time, why?
What is inconsistent here? Apart from the fact we don't know how truthful his friends are, the numbers don't seem out of whack.
If there is one comment that embodies the HN spirit, it's this one...
Not his first rodeo either, see his talk page at Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_talk:Rawjapan
There'd still be a mental overhead though, and it's notwithstanding the fact that the euro is more than twenty years old, at a time where paying by credit card often meant someone was physically copying your card number…
An often overlooked point is that euro is not just an economic tool but also a social one, as being able to travel and pay freely in the whole continent is an important unifying point.
> “You’ve seen a bifurcation internally at many larger houses where senior managers are very skeptical about crypto, while graduates and younger team members are very positive,” said Grimsley. “The youngsters may have…
Well, if it's their data, shouldn't they be able to delete it at will?
He was specifically talking about proof of work though, which indeed is inherently wasteful. And seeing the whole block size issue, it seems impossible bitcoin would ever move away from proof of work.
This is the important question, why is this feature even on by default? Why is it an option to NOT have that feature?
> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WmwEB4DY_jc&t=169s Going on a tangent here, but are miners not supposed to wear any kind of breathing protection?!
I think you what you are seeing is just pushback from years of Tesla Hype, just a couple of years ago it wasn't rare to read almost messianic message on how Musk was going to save the world. That being said, I think you…