
I’m sorry, but what you’re saying doesn’t sound accurate. It would be a lot easier to believe you of you had evidence. Not that I think you’re lying, but you could be mistaken.
I’m sorry, but what you’re saying doesn’t sound accurate. It would be a lot easier to believe you of you had evidence. Not that I think you’re lying, but you could be mistaken.
Do you have a link to a news article or court records for that case?
Based on this research paper, washing with soap and warm water is enough to remove harmful bacteria.
That depends… I watched a video where a guy spent hours casting and machining a small part out of aluminum in his garage to avoid paying the manufacturer $30.
Probably TPU (thermo polyurethane), at least that’s what I’ve used.
You could print a mold and cast it out of food grade silicone.
Just curious, does the same apply to “theft?” The article says someone also took the deceased’s belongings, should we use a different word for that too?
That’s a good way to keep filament dry, but it takes a very long time to remove moisture from filament that way. It’s a lot faster to use a dryer/dehydrator before putting it in the dry box.
Hydo power can be used as storage, and can generate power on-demand. I’d recommend avoiding YouTube if you want reliable information.
No, this is fake. You can put whatever you want in the envelope and send it back, but they won’t deliver a whole package. They only prepaid postage for a letter.
Of course if you send something dangerous/threatening you might get arrested.
(6) Try buying a toilet that uses more than 1.6 gallons per flush in the US. Oh wait, you can’t, it’s banned.
Not the best example since they’re trying to reverse all of these environmental protections.
HOAs get a lot of hate, but the last one I lived in actually recommended mowing the leaves instead of bagging them.
Oh, he did it to another cop. Now I see why he was fired.
I live in America and haven’t noticed this as a man, I assume the misogynists have enough self awareness to keep it somewhat out of sight. The last time I noticed something inappropriate, the person quietly left the company a few weeks later. I have no idea if it was related to what I saw, but I wouldn’t be surprised.
I 100% believe that it happens, it’s just not visible to me.
That still seems a little hyperbolic, but I see your point.
Using your analogy, this is more like telling someone there’s an unlocked door and asking them to find it on their own using blueprints.
Not a prefect analogy, but they didn’t tell the AI where the vulnerability was in the code. They just gave it the CVE description (which is intentionally vague) and a set of patches from that time period that included a lot of irrelevant changes.
Is there any other plausible explanation? I don’t understand what you were referring to here:
How could a vehicle that may not disengage the accelerator when the brake is applied be allowed on the road???
Do you know of any vehicles that do automatically disengage the accelerator for you when you press the brakes? It sounds like the driver was pushing both the brake and accelerator pedals at the same time. Not to defend Tesla, but this one seems like it could be the owner’s fault
The Leidenfrost effect might just keep them apart and prevent heat transfer.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leidenfrost_effect