Comment Screentime (Score 1) 17
See, you do this thing.
Sometimes you stop looking at your phone. I know, food, peeing, mouth noises at other people who aren't looking at their phones, either.
That's why we need you to put this on your face.
See, you do this thing.
Sometimes you stop looking at your phone. I know, food, peeing, mouth noises at other people who aren't looking at their phones, either.
That's why we need you to put this on your face.
It's okay if you live in an area where tips are decent, or if you are an attractive young woman/twink, but generally speaking having to rely on tips to earn a decent amount is discriminatory and works greatly in the employer's favour.
I worked in smallish cities in the southeast of the US...so, no major tipping capitals....and I"m an average looking guy I guess....
I found that a sense of humors and being outgoing and friendly did more than anything for tips...
Hell, there were a couple of times I dropped a whole large tray of food....everything..gone....and well, I just made a joke and everyone laughed...etc.
I ended up making a HUGE tip on that one....
I did well as well as my co-workers...and there was nothing discriminatory about it.
Is it sad or "fucked up"? I suppose, compared to some imaginary ideal that never existed in reality. But at some point it's like getting angry with dandelions for trying to grow in your lawn. We were never not this and neither was anything else.
https://taskandpurpose.com/new...
This isnâ(TM)t new, itâ(TM)s in the sales material and on the dash warnings. The average daily commute is 42 miles (66 for me). I have never needed to drive gas because the temp dropped for my daily commute, ever.
Sure, you might need to take occasional road trips of over 200 miles and want gas, but then you make the rent vs buy decision based on your situation.
The national inquiry was launched after the remains of Sogen Koto, believed to be the oldest man in Tokyo at 111, were found in his family home 32 years after his death.
Wow, they did get greedy didn't they - trying to push it to 110+, as if that wouldn't draw scrutiny. Per wikipedia:
Two of his relatives were arrested in August 2010, and subsequently charged with fraud.[10] Prosecutors alleged that Michiko Kato, 81, Kato's daughter, and Tokimi Kato, 53, his granddaughter, fraudulently received about ¥9,500,000 ($117,939; £72,030) of pension money.
We went 2 years working from home, did the same work, hit the same deadlines, delivered the same products. If they're measuring a decline in productivity WFH vs. WFW, they're clearly making a mistake.
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.
Seems to me that "poorly optimized code" is a bit of an oxymoron.
How is that an oxymoron? Code that works does not always mean it works well or reliably. For example, some AAA game titles in the last several years have launched and ran poorly on the hardware. It sometimes takes a few patches before those games are playable. In the realm of video games one legendary code optimization is Carmack's Reverse which was used to generate realistic shadows. id software's John Carmack discovered the technique independently of William Bilodeau and Michael Songy from Creative Labs. Before that time shadows under players and objects were generic ovals.
Counting in octal is just like counting in decimal--if you don't use your thumbs. -- Tom Lehrer