Would love something like this for field notes, though for my uses a eink screen would be preferable. Hopefully this or the equivalent takes off and we can start getting fun variables in the future!
niucllos
Doesn't the congestion revenue explicitly help fund public transportation? Which would help mitigate a lot of the issues you bring up, there will for sure be growing pains but with smart decisions should adapt to the needs of traffic
I'm not sure how you're doing it but using more teabags for less time in hot water will give you better flavor intensity without the more bitter tannins leeching out.
Try boiling your water, add an extra teabag from your normal amount, and then only steep the tea in it for like 3-4 minutes and see how you like that. I like both liptons or roses tea (just normal versions), neither of which are high quality but are widely available and cheap, with this method.
They just released a gatcha-style pokemon TCG for mobile a month ago, and they've released a bunch of them previously based on most of their big IPs. They focus those on mobile instead of their consoles is the only difference.
Yes, I 100% do. If R or D was arbitrarily assigned to everyone at birth, then no it wouldn't make sense, but this isn't a double-blind control study. Roughly 2/3 of those who never attended college--which for many reasons (reading comprehension, exposure to new ideas, exposure to media literacy training) probably correlates pretty strongly with ability to spot misinformation--voted R in the last election. 2/3 of those with advanced degrees--the other end of that spectrum--voted D.
I think you probably got down voted by Canadians who don't want to be associated with the US fwiw
First pass I read as Mangione played the CEO in among us and they were in a discord group together, and admitted that that was a very eerie circumstance. But nope, Mangione is just a normal 20 something.
This isn't a young person problem and it isn't new, it's just getting worse. See Fox news on Trump 8 years ago or more through now
Other people have talked about them but I have a 13 and love it. It's not perfect by a long stretch but it's very repairable, they've done well with their commitment to upgradability, and it's by far the best Linux support I've ever had, not that I have tons of experience with that
The smaller one, and am very happy with the decision. The selling point on the EUV is really more rear legroom, but it has a more sloped hood to look sportier so you actually have less trunk space and a smaller opening unfortunately. It also gets less range by a bit, and has a longer hood so harder to park in a dense city if that's a concern.
That being said, neither are fantastic road trip cars. I've taken it ~4 hours away, but you have to stop for about an hour on both outbound and return legs to comfortably make it and be able to drive around your destination. And I wish the trunk was ~1 inch longer or a bit flatter, you can only fit a normal rolling suitcase in the center, so it's almost a 3-suitcase trunk with room on top but is actually only 2 without some significant Tetris.
Smaller EVs like the nissan leaf or the Chevy bolt (rip) can be had for less than most lightly used cars with the tax credit, my 2023 new bolt was 22k with tax etc., whereas comparable small hatchback/sedans from e.g. Honda were 25k+ for a 2020 model. The median income for Californians is ~$45k, so as long as the credit isn't used for things like the hummer or Porsche evs this is probably helping a lot of middle- and middle-low income people, though not lower income unfortunately
My cat did this in many cars until I got an EV. No idea what's different, but I've tested it in a relative's series hybrid and he gets a bit annoyed for a few minutes and then settles in electric, but still complains for hours in gas or parallel hybrids