Comment Re:For those getting pitchforks ready (Score 3, Insightful) 75
I love my induction too, but you need an externally-venting range hood anyway.
Take your cheap air quality detector and sear a steak on your induction without the fan on.
I love my induction too, but you need an externally-venting range hood anyway.
Take your cheap air quality detector and sear a steak on your induction without the fan on.
This page claims over 400,000 recordings but links to a listing of only 187,034 audio files. I'm guessing the discrepancy is the girth of the suit: IA agreed to take down the files that the plaintiffs could prove were theirs and no money changed hands.
There's a rule: secrecy in negotiations always benefit the few.
The reason is that if you're a negotiator representing few people (such as say a CEO or a board of directors) then secrecy won't stop you from keeping your bosses informed about what you and your fellow negotiators are doing. You can't sell out your bosses, they'll find out through the other negotiators. You're on a tight leash.
But if you represent a large group of people, such as the rank and file members of a union, or the public at large, then secrecy prevents you from keeping them in the loop. If you're offered a deal which benefits you but screws over the people you represent, secrecy ensures you can safely take it.
Doesn't help for adding ports.
Actually, it does. USB-C ports are smaller, and more of them can fit in the same space.
More ports is what he's looking for.
That's a different issue and has little to do with USB-A vs C.
Oregon isn't a red state overall. Almost all states, whether red, blue, or purple, allow felons to vote at some point.
Class 1 and 2 e-bikes limit assist to 20 mph, not 15. You can ride them faster than that, but you have to provide the power. 20 mph is well above what most recreational cyclists can maintain on a flat course, so if these classes arenâ(TM)t fast enough to be safe, neither is a regular bike. The performance is well within what is possible for a fit cyclist for short times , so their performance envelope is suitable for sharing bike and mixed use infrastructure like rail trails.
Class 3 bikes can assist riders to 28 mph. This is elite rider territory. There is no regulatory requirement ti equip the bike to handle those speeds safely, eg hydraulic brakes with adequate size rotors. E-bikes in this class are far more likely to pose injury risks to others. I think it makes a lot of sense to treat them as mopeds, requiring a drivers license for example.
Scriveners guild opposes printing press
Weavers guild opposes powered loom
Farriers guild opposes automobile
Tellers guild opposes ATM
Water still wet
Democrats sure don't. They want them to vote and everything.
The following red states allow felons to vote after completing their sentences (carceral sentences in some cases, or complete sentences and fines in others):
Alaska, Arkansas, Florida (1), Georgia, Idaho, Indiana, Iowa (2), Kansas, Kentucky (3), Louisiana, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, North Carolina, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, and West Virginia.
That's the overwhelming majority of them. A couple of them have exceptions for certain crimes like rape and murder, but for the rest, if you can finish your sentence, you can probably vote.
(1) Sort of -- the state government has intentionally made a mess of the initiative that passed 65-35.
(2) While the Iowa constitution bars felons from voting unless they have applied to the governor to have voting rights reinstated, Gov. Reynolds (a Republican) has a standing executive order automatically reinstating voting rights of felons upon completing their sentences unless they were convicted of murder.
(3) Similar to (2), except that Gov. Beshear's executive order applies only to those convicted of non-violent offenses.
Would treating them as mopeds be so bad?
What weâ(TM)re looking at is exactly what happened when gasoline cars started to become popular and created problems with deaths, injuries, and property damage. The answer to managing those problems and providing accountability was to make the vehicles display registration plates, require licensing of drivers, and enforcing minimum safety standards on cars. Iâ(TM)m not necessarily suggesting all these things should be done to e-bikes, but I donâ(TM)t see why they shouldnâ(TM)t be on the table.
I am a lifelong cyclist , over fifty years now, and in general I welcome e-bikes getting more people into light two wheel vehicles. But I see serious danger to both e-bike riders and the people around them. There are regulatory classes which limit the performance envelope of the vehicle, but class 3, allowing assist up to 28 mph, is far too powerful for a novice cyclist. Only the most athletic cyclists, like professional tour racers, can sustain speeds like that, but they have advanced bike handling skills and theyâ(TM)re doing it on bikes that weigh 1/5 of what complete novice novice e-bike riders are on. Plus the pros are on the best bikes money can buy. If you pay $1500 for an e-bike, youâ(TM)re getting about $1200 of battery and motor bolted onto $300 of bike.
Whatâ(TM)s worse, many e-bikes which have e-bike class stickers can be configured to ignore class performance restrictions, and you can have someone with no bike handling skills riding what in effect is an electric motorcycle with terrible brakes.
E-bike classification notwithstanding, thereâ(TM)s a continuum from electrified bicycles with performance roughly what is achievable by a casi recreational rider on one end, running all the way up to electric motorcycles. If there were only such a thing as a class 1 e-bike thereâ(TM)d be little need to build a regulatory system with registration and operator licensing. But you canâ(TM)t tell by glancing at a two wheel electric vehicle exactly where on the bike to motorcycle spectrum it falls; that depends on the motor specification and software settings. So as these things become more popular, I donâ(TM)t see any alternative to having a registration and inspection system for all of them, with regulatory categories and restrictions based on the weight and hardware performance limitations of the vehicle. Otherwise youâ(TM)ll have more of the worst case weâ(TM)re already seeing: preteen kids riding what are essentially electric motorcycles that weigh as much as they do because the parents think those things are âoebikesâ and therefore appropriate toys.
Curse slashdot and their lack of editing functionality. I meant of course to GDPR their ass.
Spotify honors our users' privacy rights, including the right of portability
You do now, all right. But I had to DMCA your ass to make you implement data takeout, after being told (after waiting for a year and more) that giving users access to their own listening history was "not a priority".
Yes, the one you run yourself.
That doesn't work, even if nominally email still works across providers and is all standard and everything you have nearly no chance to escape being blacklisted, no matter if you're coming from your ISP, or some hosted server basically anywhere.
Plus, given that nearly nobody does it it's a chicken and egg problem, even if there is free software for everything it's absolutely daunting to have a complete working system. One would think these days you'd have a simple package running on a Raspberry Pi, heck even your router and give you all services with some minimal configuration like the DNS and similar. Nope, just the opposite, it's tricky and a big headache even for people that did it from scratch more than 25 years ago. Never mind for some journalist that doesn't even understand how email works beside being able to use some webmail from a provider.
Socialism with American Characteristics
Iowa's rolling farm fields of coffee
Are you having fun yet?