Same. I just kept diluting the liquid with 0% nicotine until, months later, I realized I didn't even want to vape any more.
The enshittification of streaming has pushed me towards watching old series like this on DVD, and I've been enjoying it.
Holy crap that newspaper's site is a dumpster fire of popups and ads.
Meanwhile when I turn off Bluetooth on my iPhone it says "for the next y hours" and there's no option to turn it off permanently.
Let's prompt inject a Sovereign Citizen lawyer
Yep. My fam does the same thing.
Yes and then they used a very misleading non-zero axis. More truthful would be to show this as the percent that it is, and sex scenes went from being in 40% to 26% of the top 250 movies. So now I wonder how else they biased this, maybe in selecting the sample size...
I wish work profiles were more separate. My company's work profile ended up locking me out of my phone (including the personal profile) and forced me to wipe and start over with it. They disabled fingerprint unlock and required my unlock password to change monthly, and I got the periodic "you have to change your password NOW" notice while plugged into my car with Android Auto. I couldn't enter a new password and the phone never unlocked again.
I know, probably a super rare set of circumstances, but I'm not going to allow my work to root my phone again. They can buy me a phone if they need so much control.
Yes. Most people stop making more when they have enough.
People who don't stop are already broken and corrupted. They have nothing better to do. No better idea. No other desire. Than to accumulate more. It's degenerate, sad, to keep wanting more, to feel that hunger when it is already satiated. Like a rat addicted to cocaine, still pushing itself to push the button for more and more.
So Alaskans count ~3x as much as Californians.
They don't care. They're just turning around and repeating your lies to whatever advertiser is so stupid as to believe their demographic sales pitch.
Hurt them by not using it. That's the biggest number that feeds their machine.
I'm somewhere else but have kept Amazon in the back of my mind as a possible next place, partly out of curiosity to see what it's like from the inside. The culture has some fun elements. No longer. This moves them out of the 2nd tier and into the 3rd, and honestly I'd wonder about anyone there who's not chained to a visa.
Testing a used AVR (Yamaha A2A)
I bought a used Yamaha A2A and can return it for 30 days.
Do you have any advice to check that it's fine? What have you seen go wrong with these things?
I'm watching a DVD piped through it and it's working. It turns on. The knobs rotate. The remote remotes...?
Thank you, that seems a lot more likely than either one of us being secretly adopted by our aunt and uncle.
23 and Me says my cousin is my sister...?
Phones ruined Burning Man. Their cameras make people tourists, and their onsite social media precludes immediacy.
My company is all in on GitHub Copilot. They have very unrealistic expectations for how much it will increase productivity. I suspect they were sold on data from junior developers, who I think it helps the most. Anyways, now they are measuring how much engineers use it, so there is some amount of pressure to use it more often.
The training was a little worrisome and disingenuous. The internal team advocating for it aren't strong coders and kept showing examples of it automating antipatterns, like writing useless tests that duplicate an if statement in the tested function, writing very verbose and vague comments (meaningless), or taking an example function and making a new one in a boiler plate way (that cut/pastes common code rather than extracting it into a shared function).
Really, I think it's helpful -- sometimes. Especially to new engineers or when dealing with an unfamiliar library. But I do worry it will lower the bar, and feel over using it can be a waste of time.
Utilize. So many people misuse it that I should probably accept that the definition has changed. Instead of thinking they are a bit dumb.
I'll add that even when you're an expert in both languages, it's common to see WTF's in the original and not be sure if something is a bug or just weird behavior that's now expected. Especially when going from a looser to a more strict language.
I've translated huge projects and most of the risk is in "you know the original would do the wrong thing in these x circumstances -- I'm pretty sure that's not on purpose but.... Maybe? Or maybe now someone depends on it being wrong like this?"
I found HAM folks super welcoming. I came to take the entry level test and they encouraged me to take the next level one at the same time, and generously offered to help me pass it.