

Tankless heater; this will never happen.
Tankless heater; this will never happen.
I’m 40ish. Hasn’t happened yet outside of the cashiers at my home grocery who know me.
Unpopular opinion time:
I loved the Last Jedi and Ryan Johnson pretty much made Luke as great/powerful of a Jedi as he could while still fitting the plot in with existing canon and what was setup in ep VII.
We already knew Luke had disappeared, so it was already canon that he had essentially abandoned the cause for some reason, that was done by Abrams. Luke had struggled with fear and anger the entire original trilogy, so the cause in TLJ fit in well with his past, as did his reaction.
His force projection to save the day was probably the single strongest and most impactful single act of the force displayed across all the films and was just badass.
Chairs are overrated. I pretty much always choose the floor. Even the couch tends to be used mostly as a backrest for sitting on the floor
My friend got a dozen or more marriage proposals in Egypt, some including pretty sizable dowries—which really did not help as much as the people offering the proposals wanted. I’m guessing the only reason she wasn’t followed like this was due to the presence of her family
AIDS has killed many more than COVID-19, albeit slower. Gingrich and Justice Thomas are responsible for a lot of the degradation of our institutions that allowed for trump and his ilk. Gay and Trans rights were essentially non-existent compared to today.
We are worse off in many many ways, but for me personally that last one means I am much better off at this moment (this may not last).
I’m in the Andromeda galaxy? Neato.
The volume to cover one acre with one foot (ie: of water). Cubic volume measurements are for metric.
You are correct. Still miss my old shop99 though. https://youtu.be/mzscKUOn_vM?si=bQ0eUuMkKyN1Apsg
To add onto this. I did a rough estimate (hopefully I did it correctly) and assuming one billion ice vehicles as OP stated, if you scattered them evenly across the surface of the earth there would be about 25 miles separating each car. While I believe ice cars are quite damaging, it’s not hard to think it would be okay with that in mind.
Jealous. I have a 2011 prht and it’s amazing and a much better car in a lot of respects, but NA Miatas are just the best.
Yeah, that’s about right from my experience
I would say learning to write is important. Stroke order is standardized and because of that (and just culture in general), there are specific normal ways people take shortcuts when writing quickly. Knowing how to write makes these intuitive and makes reading handwritten and stylized kanji easier.
It was not officially released. It’s available in some libraries locally as I’m on the big island
I watch the Hawaiian language version every now and again to practice. They did a great job!
I mostly agree with you but not entirely. I do think there’s a feasible path to hydrogen being useful in several applications. I don’t think cars are good, but airplanes, trains, and trucks are bigger possibilities.
I do think to make sense we would have to do thermochemical cogeneration with nuclear power plants. This has the nice benefit of significantly increasing the overall efficiency of the nuclear power plants, increasing overall efficiency from the 33% realm to around 50% with cogeneration seems possible, and that use of waste energy helps to offset the worse efficiency downstream. Combined with applications where the weight of batteries is problematic, and you have some potential for success
Swift also handles everything at compile time, using automatic reference counting. It is also in general faster then c++ in the benchmarking I’ve done for work where we are considering incrementally replacing c++ with it. (Benchmarking was focused on very language-standard code, NOT hand-optimized code focusing on getting every last ounce of speed out).
For me the production was unlike anything I had seen to that point. Just incredible. Gameplay, however, did little for me. Perfect game to watch someone else play in my book