All the Warhammer 40k guns are pretty thick.
bstix
I wonder how many people are needed to operate the system, and if the camera detection is really just an employee in an Asian call center.
How are they tracking? I know it can easily be done with NFC tags, but I doubt they tag fresh produce like that?
Self-checkout systems are already old fashioned. Most stores in my town have apps for that now, where customers scan items as they bag them in their own bags while walking through the store and then just beep out. This removes the need for a queue, the payment terminal, the receipt and the stupid exit gate. Customers are allegedly randomly checked, but I've never seen that.
I'm so done with "browsing" YouTube. I also hardly ever click the links anymore when people post them here, and that is because of the ads.
There are some good channels that I occasionally checkout whenever I'm really bored, and I absolutely don't mind them getting the ad revenue like any other free tv show, but it's nothing that I can't do without.
In my opinion, good YT channels who make quality content ought to apply for other mean of distribution that doesn't scare away viewers. Let's say that f.i. Numberphile, Veritasium or Primitive Technology were on Netflix or even Disney+, I'd prefer to watch it there. That's how bad YouTube is.
If YouTube managed to get part of the all-in deals that I have on the other "real" streaming services, then they'd get some fraction of whatever my cellphone carrier pays to those. Right now I just don't want to bother with it.
Honestly, I just use the internet less. I'm never going to pay. I can't be bothered with the loopholes anymore. If it bugs me to pay or subscribe, I leave. I'm fine with them not wanting me as a user, and I hope they're fine with me not wanting them as a supplier. They don't have anything that I actually need that badly.
Oddly enough I probably use the internet more than ever. It's just not that internet.
Notepad is used by anyone who wants to see what is actually in a text file.
It's used a lot for stuff where data is transferred in a text format. Comma separated files etc. are still widely used for transferring data flawlessly without having to convert types or mapping a document standard or whatever method that could potentially fuck up or just take more time. It's simple and it works.
F.i if you open a file in excel or word, change one character and then save, you can bet that the entire file is fucked up afterwards, because those programs don't show the data directly. The moment you open it, it might very well be fucked up just from that. If you transfer a file by some kind of JSON format, which is all the rage currently you'll have to map it from both ends, and it also begs the question: Why are we doing running all this code just to transfer one byte?
The beauty of text files is that it's (almost) raw data. (Only "almost" because there are still different localization standards that can fuck up even a text file.)
Notepad covers that. Of course we could use other apps for viewing data, but most of the time, it actually is text and not hexidemal codes or whatever you can save in bytes.
Programming wise, the only thing I use notepad for is making DOS batch files. Again, because it's raw text and should be created and read as such. No parsing, no compiling. Just text. I'll also use it for storing data for programs, because it's easy and raw.
For actual programs, it'd be better to get Notepad++ or MS visual studio code, which at least will highlight commands and collapse functions etc. And still, these also aren't actually IDEs, because they don't compile the code (unless you get those add-ins).
We could also use those for text files as well, but it's overkill. I don't really want to open an app to view data. Notepad is small and quick and not bloated with features, which is ideal for whenever I only want to see what's in the file.
The original MS Paint was similar for pictures. They fucked that up real good. Its been..14 years and I haven't really gotten over how bad it is. It used to be pixel perfect and logical, but now you can't even save a file with transparency, but hey here's s brush with stroke width and blur that'll make sure you can't edit a single pixel. Way to go Microsoft.
If they do the same to Notepad, I'll have to resign my job, because it's not going to work like that.
He tried to "starve the beast". https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Starve_the_beast
The beast being the government itself. The idea is that the government is somehow overspending in comparison to the tasks carried out and it needs to be fixed by cutting funding.
The result is obviously that the government will function even worse, so it's a self fulfilling prophecy.
Why would EU even consider the Brexit standard?
Yeah well, technically all EVs before the invention of lithium batteries were without lithium batteries, but are there currently any worth mentioning in this context?
My first conscious memory is of me gaining consciousness at age 3 or so. Everything before that are visual or tactile memories that are difficult to describe.
Anyway, when I had children myself, I suddenly remembered a lot more of those. Things that I never knew that I remembered somehow got recalled by watching my own child do the same things. So at age 40 I vividly and weirdly remembered what it's like to be standing in a crib, holding and twisting the bannisters.
Tactile memories are weird. I've always enjoyed coming to my grandparents house later in life, because of the way the handles on the cupboards feel just the way they're supposed to.
Crazy idea here: How about not monitoring the ink at all?
Why does the printer need to know? It's not like it's going to explode from not having fresh ink anyway. Just put the ink in a visible container where the user can look and see if it being empty is the cause of a shitty print.
I'd buy any printer that doesn't attempt to monitor the ink.