Connect every home to a super-sized pneumatic tube system, and you could get everything delivered easily and quickly. I, for one, welcome the tubes. They've already dug up our yards and streets for water, sewer, electric, gas, telephone, cable, fiber optic, etc.
I'm surprised that Republicans haven't yet suggested killing two birds with one stone by having everyone they kick off Medicaid be used as human batteries for the AI data centers.
I, for one, welcome my AI overlords.
Although worker productivity has steadily increased, I don't see anyone getting good pay or even a living wage for a few hours of work per week. AI, robotics, and technology is not giving us a life of leisure. This fantasy will only happen if legislation is passed for a basic income by taxing the rich. Is that happening? Are we anywhere near that? If anything, we're going in the opposite direction. We will have the top 1% having all the wealth, and everyone else will be poor. There might be a small number in the middle to quell the masses, and at least give a glimmer of hope that you just might make it. Quite the dystopian future we are headed towards.
when you grind the gears? Does it kill the engine when you shift at the wrong time? Roll backward on a hill if you don't do it, right? It needs to be realistic.
I walk to work at the university, about a mile depending on the building I need to go to that day. I so want an EV, but it's hard to justify when my paid off ICEV is mostly used to go grocery shopping. I don't need nor want an expensive luxury EV, but instead an affordable used compact EV. Yes, charging is a huge factor in adoption of EVs, but so is cost at point of sale.
Because when you hit the submit button it prints out a paper copy directly to you which you can then look over and ensure it is accurate. There is then a lock box overseen by a poll worker that you feed your paper copy into before you leave. You have both electronic voting and paper back up and everything should match 100% in a recount.
Can your votes be identified? I don't know that one. I don't know if there is any other information or numbering.
I do know you can't vote twice. Our state requires picture ID (voter ID card is not enough) and they have a printed listing of all registered voters in the county. When you check in they compare your ID, name, address, etc. to the voter roll and they check off that you are voting. You have to also sign your name in their log book before they let you go to the machines. You can't go back later that day and vote again, and no one with your ID could try and vote for you.
Electronic voting is also optional. You can choose between printed ballot and electronic ballet. I believe the printed ballot still gets scanned in when you are done (fill in the bubbles), so one way or another it is a digital and a paper copy. The question is really how you want to fill out your vote. I think people with disabilities or physical limitations actually have an easier time with the touch screen instead of trying to fill in that little bubble on paper.
And we do the opposite. Vote electronically (which makes voting and tallying fast) and then it prints out a paper copy that can later be used as a backup or recount if needed. I feel confident in this system.
"You have to remember that you can get breakfast, lunch, and dinner at work at many places, for free..."
Wow, where is that? We get nothing. Well, there is a water fountain down the hall.
The OS means nothing to me. It's just a way to launch my web browser. Literally 99.9% of what I do today is web sites and web services. I have two or three other programs that I have installed that I use on occasion, but that's it. Just stop with the new versions of Windows and maintain the security updates.