Good Mathematics doesn't use the axiom of choice.
> Amusingly just an hour ago I did a variation of 'pasta with sauce' what would be heart-attack inducing to anyone snobby enough about Italian cuisine: two big onions, chopped, steamed, fried, a bit of soy sauce,…
Most of those are not standardized according to any proper standard. They are intentionally obfuscated to make access and repairs difficult.
What an incredibly elaborate argument.
Some parts of the market need to be killed, and quickly. Wasteful economy is killing the planet, and we need to dial down the produce-buy-throwaway-buy cycle.
There are standards for sizes of screws, washers, motors, cables, plugs, sockets, ... Just create a bunch more of those standards, e.g. for batteries, legislate their use, done. As a side effect, products become cheaper…
For kids, there is the necessity to learn to socially interact with other kids. Adults either do not have to learn that anymore, or are hopeless anyways and won't learn it ever.
> > The worst part is nobody in charge really cares. > _Much_ of government spending I've seen in recent years has been towards climate. Much of the spending of a few western governments. The majority of the world's…
There are flat-ish contact surfaces on the bottom of the module that are compressed by a bracket onto the corresponding contact surfaces of the motherboard.
Cork is oak, which is carcinogenic (in different amounts in different parts of the plant). Of course for some things one doesn't usually care about that because drinks such as wine are also stored in carcinogenic oak…
> At the very least, if a fixed ratio of coin:gold were actually maintained these failings wouldn't have happened It could still have happened, the mechanism is basically the same as in a bank run. If there isn't enough…
The EU isn't democratic in that basically every official function is only through multiple indirections dependent on the voters. So the will of the people and the sovereignty of the voters is diluted through a multitude…
Glass is usually harmless, if you don't use lead or uranium glass. But breakage will lead to harmful shards, which is why many locations such as some schools or party places ban glass bottles. For storage, use glass…
"metal" is too unspecific. You usually want stainless steel, preferrably CrNiMo steel (V4A, 1.4401 or similar). Aluminium bottles are always coated with plastic in the factory, which flakes off and usually isn't really…
Also, politicians can get more and more creative at excessive spending, at some point even outspending any kind of economic growth. And even if they don't outspend, at some point inflation comes along and kicks things…
The failing of the gold standard was that it never limited money in circulation. Gold standards in practically all economies allowed for unlimited amounts of money to be printed at the whim of the central banks. Just…
Limiting the money supply plus price controls plus deregulation of imports and production.
There are cats the size of dogs, and they are usually outlawed as pets. Look at cougars, lynx, panthers, tigers, etc.
> Dependabot, and code scanning that you won't find anywhere else. Gitlab has equivalents you can enable as CI pipelines.
Provide drivers using the old model and a set of instructions to enable that. Edit: I guess instructions won't even be necessary, as far as I've understood, there will just be a warning. And users are already trained to…
As long as you can send PS, PCL or PDF to the printer via some "standard" network protocol (IPP, LPD, LPR, JetDirect), the "driver" will just be a PDL file and won't need any special privileges.
You just need to buy network-ready printers with native PostScript or PDF support. Then it has always worked. But most "cheap" (if not accounting for consumables) inkjet crap isn't like that.
You very often also need some backchannel from the printer, e.g. for toner levels, available paper sizes, installed options. But there is a more important point: Printer manufacturers also don't think like this. They…
Dangers from PFAS are mostly speculative and inferred. Silicosis is proven and real. Totally different things.
Yes. They should have just banned or limited dry cutting. Cutting stone wet, with running water, produces practically no dust whatsoever.
Good Mathematics doesn't use the axiom of choice.
> Amusingly just an hour ago I did a variation of 'pasta with sauce' what would be heart-attack inducing to anyone snobby enough about Italian cuisine: two big onions, chopped, steamed, fried, a bit of soy sauce,…
Most of those are not standardized according to any proper standard. They are intentionally obfuscated to make access and repairs difficult.
What an incredibly elaborate argument.
Some parts of the market need to be killed, and quickly. Wasteful economy is killing the planet, and we need to dial down the produce-buy-throwaway-buy cycle.
There are standards for sizes of screws, washers, motors, cables, plugs, sockets, ... Just create a bunch more of those standards, e.g. for batteries, legislate their use, done. As a side effect, products become cheaper…
For kids, there is the necessity to learn to socially interact with other kids. Adults either do not have to learn that anymore, or are hopeless anyways and won't learn it ever.
> > The worst part is nobody in charge really cares. > _Much_ of government spending I've seen in recent years has been towards climate. Much of the spending of a few western governments. The majority of the world's…
There are flat-ish contact surfaces on the bottom of the module that are compressed by a bracket onto the corresponding contact surfaces of the motherboard.
Cork is oak, which is carcinogenic (in different amounts in different parts of the plant). Of course for some things one doesn't usually care about that because drinks such as wine are also stored in carcinogenic oak…
> At the very least, if a fixed ratio of coin:gold were actually maintained these failings wouldn't have happened It could still have happened, the mechanism is basically the same as in a bank run. If there isn't enough…
The EU isn't democratic in that basically every official function is only through multiple indirections dependent on the voters. So the will of the people and the sovereignty of the voters is diluted through a multitude…
Glass is usually harmless, if you don't use lead or uranium glass. But breakage will lead to harmful shards, which is why many locations such as some schools or party places ban glass bottles. For storage, use glass…
"metal" is too unspecific. You usually want stainless steel, preferrably CrNiMo steel (V4A, 1.4401 or similar). Aluminium bottles are always coated with plastic in the factory, which flakes off and usually isn't really…
Also, politicians can get more and more creative at excessive spending, at some point even outspending any kind of economic growth. And even if they don't outspend, at some point inflation comes along and kicks things…
The failing of the gold standard was that it never limited money in circulation. Gold standards in practically all economies allowed for unlimited amounts of money to be printed at the whim of the central banks. Just…
Limiting the money supply plus price controls plus deregulation of imports and production.
There are cats the size of dogs, and they are usually outlawed as pets. Look at cougars, lynx, panthers, tigers, etc.
> Dependabot, and code scanning that you won't find anywhere else. Gitlab has equivalents you can enable as CI pipelines.
Provide drivers using the old model and a set of instructions to enable that. Edit: I guess instructions won't even be necessary, as far as I've understood, there will just be a warning. And users are already trained to…
As long as you can send PS, PCL or PDF to the printer via some "standard" network protocol (IPP, LPD, LPR, JetDirect), the "driver" will just be a PDL file and won't need any special privileges.
You just need to buy network-ready printers with native PostScript or PDF support. Then it has always worked. But most "cheap" (if not accounting for consumables) inkjet crap isn't like that.
You very often also need some backchannel from the printer, e.g. for toner levels, available paper sizes, installed options. But there is a more important point: Printer manufacturers also don't think like this. They…
Dangers from PFAS are mostly speculative and inferred. Silicosis is proven and real. Totally different things.
Yes. They should have just banned or limited dry cutting. Cutting stone wet, with running water, produces practically no dust whatsoever.