

Physicist: “assuming a spherical year …”
Physicist: “assuming a spherical year …”
Can’t spell “functional” without “fun”!
Oh no! How’s the Queen holding up?
Whichever version it is, I hope that one day I can delete a mail, change my mind, press ctrl-z and it will actually undo the last delete and not some random one from earlier in the day.
Some of the American English words used by young people sounds confusing, but are just abbreviations: “riz” for charisma.
Others, I don’t know where they came from: “yeet” to mean throw.
Why isn’t step 1 disconnecting them from the electricity?
Skeptoid.
For many people, it wasn’t.
Oh, and Harold Halibut. It’s stop-motion and heavy on character interaction, with a story that keeps the action mild (on a level with a kid’s TV show). A very calm protagonist. Aside from the visual style, all those things are reasons that it got mixed reviews, but could fit what you want.
I had trouble with very long loading times on the deck sometimes, but it’s a slow-paced game, so I didn’t even mind too much.
I’ve only played the demo, but Caravan SandWitch has a cozy vibe and seems very chill.
Bikeshedding.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Law_of_triviality
People feel uncomfortable making big decisions, so spend longer on the trivial ones.
This was explained in Roger Rabbit:
Eddie Valiant: You mean you could’ve taken your hand out of that handcuff at any time? Roger Rabbit: No, NOT at any time, only when it was funny.
Well if the record label was still around they could make ownership details public, or let you download the signed file again.
A digital signature from the label would be created with their private key.
What would they be signing? Your public key plus the ID of the song? They can’t sign your private key, it’s private.
What stops you sharing your private key and a song with a friend. Then when either of you need to provide proof, you can both show that you have the private key that matches the signed file?
The first time I tried steering-assist on a car felt like a significant transition.
Even though it was a simple "stay in lane"feature, feeling the car moving the wheel took a bit of getting used to.
I know that there are lots of other replies about the Internet and phones, but I’ve always liked maps so as a specific example that’s an area that has transformed astoundingly. I have a map in my pocket that can show me anywhere in the world, give me directions, monitor traffic levels, show aerial photographs and street-level photographs of many areas of the world. I can fly around a 3D view of a city’s buildings, and even see where my family members are.
Oh, and you can buy vacuum cleaners that don’t need bags, now.
States probably require liability insurance, but don’t care if you can’t pay for damage to your own vehicles.
No.
Can’t they just decorate them with fridge magnets?
I have an exercise app that occasionally asks my overall mood, like “Have you recently felt overwhelmed?” Do you feel anxious a lot?"
I sent them feedback explaining that they never ask if there’s a good reason that I might be feeling down: I’ve variously had reason to think I might lose my job, nearly lost sight in one eye, nearly evacuated from wildfires, etc. Yes, I’ve felt “anxious a lot”!
Yeah, he should have stuck to inventing steam engines, not identities.
The smart thing would have been to use his own name on all the IDs he made, turn it into an inadvertant “no, he’s Spartacus” situation.
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