Anecdotally, I've noticed that I very consistently (as in, nearly 100% of the time) get hiccups while shaving, almost always whenever I get to the parts under my chin or the sides of my neck, with the severity getting worse the longer it takes me to do those areas. I'm kinda curious why that might happen, especially if hiccups have to do with food (I obviously don't eat anything while shaving). Every time I've asked someone about this when the topic of hiccups comes up somewhere, they've told me this doesn't happen to them and have never heard of it being a thing, so maybe I'm just weird that way? Kinda frustrating tbh as I've yet to find a way to prevent it.
CarbonIceDragon
In the relatively rare cases that I watch stuff on twitch, I usually watch the VODs. Don't have the time or energy to sit though hours of a stream in one sitting, nor am I usually able to catch one live, nor do I like feeling like I'll miss something if I have to leave early, so I prefer to just watch the recordings of them at my own pace over multiple sessions.
Personally I don't think I've noticed this. Things devolving into political discussions, sure, but that's par for the course with social media I imagine. I had assumed you meant the prevalence of Linux stuff on the all feed.
There are plenty of other communities people made, just most didn't become very active. If the Linux memes are everywhere, it's because those are the people actually active here
I mean, no one instance is really going to be that viable a competitor on its own, isn't the entire point of fedi platforms that what you get is an amalgamation of all (or at least most, after considering defederation) of them?
Kinda curious why the company doesn't raise their prices to fit demand then, since clearly, demand exists that allows those products to be sold for more (else the scalpers couldn't profit). Not saying they should charge more, I'm just curious why an entirely profit-driven entity like a company wouldn't charge as much for something as demand would allow for, it seems out of character?
I feel like the Destroyermen series would fit a tv show format pretty well.
A rocket design simulator in the same sort of vein as kerbal space program or juno new origins/simplerockets, but as realistic as reasonably possible and with as many options as can reasonably be programmed in (so for example, rather than just placing an engine or getting to specify a couple parameters like nozzle size, you'd have to specify the power cycle and number of combustion chambers per turbopump, size and construction material of various major components, fuel and oxidizer type, etc)
Would geothermal work? I can't think of any particular reason that the heat of the earth should vary much with time (feel free to correct me if I'm wrong in this assumption), and energy production should be more controllable because to my understanding it generally just makes steam for a turbine like more traditional power sources.
I mean, don't airships also have the advantage of not needing to expend energy for lift, just forward motion? A solar plane doesn't have to worry about this either I suppose, but an airship is much easier to make have useful cargo capacity than a solar plane.
I think people that dismiss hydrogen airships as impossible to make safe because of the Hindenburg miss that planes of that era weren't super safe either, but have been made quite safe today, and that planes are filled with large amounts of flammable fuel. I personally think we should give them another shot.
I've always used electric shavers, as I greatly prefer not having to deal with constantly buying replacement blades for the more traditional kind. I've had my suspicions that maybe the vibration has something to do with it, but I've no idea how it would do so.