

The thing is they DID test it! And they even had a working failure detection mechanism with the microphones. They had seen the signs of failure from previous dives. And then just ignored all of that.


The thing is they DID test it! And they even had a working failure detection mechanism with the microphones. They had seen the signs of failure from previous dives. And then just ignored all of that.


If only they’d have gotten advice from [REDACTED], the director of Titanic.


There’s less brake dust as well.


Is this in Welsh? Walsh? Welch? Does that building still exist?


It seems like it had to charge multiple times?
On a single charge, it can travel up to 40 nautical miles at cruising speed.
That’s the first time I’ve heard a positive review of Cider. Compared to IntelliJ it was really lacking.
The largest repos in the world are monorepos (the major tech companies). IDEs can handle those codebases just fine (might be modified).


I thought so too originally but I ended up enjoy the co-op missions for a while. I’ve moved on since then but it’s been worthwhile for me.
Note that you can play those missions solo, but the game difficulty doesn’t adjust based on number is human players so it’s less efficient.


Unfortunately most of the game mechanics occur in multiplayer. There’s no classes or upgrades available in the campaign.


Like are similarly sized atoms more stable in a lattice?
Actually yes. That’s why you can’t arbitrarily add random elements into a crystal (well you can a little bit). If the geometries vary too greatly you introduce stresses into the lattice.


This seems impractical to do over the whole country, perhaps viable over a small area.


I’d be curious what the values are. There’s a lot of variation based on how the plastic is formed and treated. E.g. abrasion causes a lot of shedding. It’s possible that heading and washing can also cause degradation.


It seems it’s more like cells can naturally produce substances that are detected as microplastics.
Also things like shredding from pipettes would almost certainly have been detected earlier given how ubiquitous they are in research.


They have access to tech about where to build dams.


Like how they built a dam over a salt deposit and contaminated their water? How is this the western imperialists fault? I guess in the sense that the US allowed the current regime to rise to power.


I think there’s usually going to be more bouldering gyms just because they’re easier to build.
In general over here in the western US we’ll use rock climbing to refer to both. Usually we’ll just say sport climbing, top rope, lead, to refer to rope climbs.


What region of the world are you in if you don’t mind me asking? I’ve noticed that some people refer to bouldering as separate from rock climbing rather than as a subcategory.


The .0 here just seems incorrect. They only appear have the first significant digit.


There are some sensors that have each color stacked vertically instead of using a Bayer filter. Don’t think they’re popular because the low light performance is worse.
I don’t think it would’ve mattered because they had all the evidence they needed and just ignored it regardless.