

It seems like it had to charge multiple times?
On a single charge, it can travel up to 40 nautical miles at cruising speed.


It seems like it had to charge multiple times?
On a single charge, it can travel up to 40 nautical miles at cruising speed.


It’s a capitalist hellscape, so probably barely edible but so cheap it doesn’t matter (I’m sure the company will say it’s delicious).


Like… $450-500? It’s a pretty big difference.


Two adults, one small child: About $400 on just groceries in a high CoL area.
Eating out is expensive, maybe another $400 a month.
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.


But there’s really not that much debris. Certain orbits can get packed but there’s plenty of availability. Also stuff in LEO deorbits pretty fast.
It’s the best way to carry laptops which a lot of workers need to use these days.


It’s for the secret boss!


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.


I just tell everyone where all the mistakes were.


You need to conjure the ancient dark magics of woodworkers long past.


Definitely applies to climbing. Technically more expensive shoes may help with certain climbs, it certainly won’t help a beginner.
The main issue with the Linux CLI specifically is that all the tools have antiquated APIs. Inputs and outputs are all strings.
A modern CLI would be designed to take structured input and emit structured output. This would also provide better discoverability and reduce the chances of typos.


This seems impractical to do over the whole country, perhaps viable over a small area.
The fastest sailboat is kind of the offset rig:



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.
Pretty sure hat guy predates Walter White.