You're supposed to take a break every two hours anyways, that can include a meal, snack, and hydration.
If you stock up and have a case of drinks, that is why I suggested a walk as an alternative.
Components are just as crazily marked up in the U.S. I wouldn't be at all surprised that the Chinese manufacturers can get even better pricing then an individual could from a Chinese supplier due to volume.
You cannot imagine the amount of rail they have built.
If this is true for you, you need a better imagination.
They work for the occasional "blue moon" charging, I think. It'd be like having a house that is solar + battery also having a generator for "just in case", allowing the house to still have power during that week long storm front, an inverter failure, or even just the annual family visit where the place has 10X the normal people there.
Especially if the genset is already there for things like transmission line failures.
IE use the genset to allow EVs to get there to begin with, then upgrade to solar one they're a regular enough occurrence for that to make sense.
Sheep are being used specifically for solar systems
They keep the vegetation down while producing marketable products themselves.
I don't generally consider bathroom breaks, basic food and drinks to be entertainment myself. If you consider modern 70% charging times (From ~15% to ~85%), that's about the mandatory 15 minutes break period mandated in various places for continued good performance.
By the time somebody has plugged in their car, walked to and finished visiting the restroom including washing hands, gotten a drink and a snack, and walked back (actual order optional), it's quite likely that around 15 minutes has passed.
Maybe include a walking path or something around these stations, get a little exercise in? I know I feel better about long drives with regular walking breaks.
LLM crawlers are understandable these days, but who on earth is actively trying to take the FSF down?
A bunch of heathen VIM users trying to stop people from accessing EMACS? What the heck?
Let's say you actually managed to take down the FSF website. Who would even notice or care? How would that help your hacker rep in any way? You'd be a laughingstock for making the attempt.
That was phrased badly. What I meant is that you can keep multiple versions of a photo, used for different purposes.
If you're doing things right, watermarking/editing a photo doesn't destroy the original. The original goes into evidence, the watermarked is posted to the public. That way, there's evidence of the source of the picture, even if it is scraped and separated from the website/page.
In physical terms, it'd be like writing the details of the photograph on the back, like what we used to do with traditional developed photographs.
I think that you're mixing up that a photo can be used for multiple purposes.
Basically, the original unedited photo goes into the police report/file for evidentiary purposes.
The altered photo - probably also resized and compressed to be easier on bandwidth, is what is posted for publicity purposes, where there isn't a police report also attached, where there's a high probability of it becoming disconnected from the website.
The version of the photo intended for facebook or whatever shouldn't ever be presented in court.
I can see plenty of reasons to add the department logo, to remind people of where that particular bust came from.
What it doesn't need to be, what it shouldn't be, is something that is trying to look like an actual part of the original image. It should look like a computer logo on a photo, not an actual fabric badge pasted to the wall.
The original photo is evidence; it was still intact. The edited photo with the police badge watermark was to be a publicity tool, not evidence.
Though I'll state that you don't even need layers for this - just open the
Not this simulation crap again. Jesus, learn some physics and math. The "simulation" idea is merely a mathematical relationship between a conformal field theory on a boundary and a gravitational theory on the bulk. That's it. It is nothing more than a mathematical isomorphism.
For a simple example, take the non-negative even natural numbers, There is an isomorphism between those and the non-negative odd natural numbers. That does not mean they are the same goddamn numbers. An isomorphism only is relative to the mathematical context on either side of the isomorphism.
Then there is the stupidity of confusing physics with mathematics. Go learn some of you cannot perceive the difference.
We will have solar energy as soon as the utility companies solve one technical problem -- how to run a sunbeam through a meter.