The good old days when you had just two choices and were either in the Riva TNT or the Voodoo club for a graphics card.
The good old days when you had just two choices and were either in the Riva TNT or the Voodoo club for a graphics card.
Except the joke is that the kit came only with four nails instead of five as listed, so they had to improvise.
An unusual positive stance for me - all bricks in the wall are still important even if they are but one in a thousand. Remove a few bricks and the wall begins to weaken. Etc.
This would most likely be in its own turn lane, as you don’t want turning traffic that has to sometimes yield for oncoming to block others going straight. The lights give two different conditions, one where the driver has right-of-way (the arrow), and the other where it’s up to the driver to determine conditions before proceeding.
In my area instead of this setup we now have two lights - one is a green arrow alone for right to turn, and the other is a yellow flashing arrow meaning to turn with caution only when it’s clear. And while that may sound more obvious, when they were initially put up people had a lot of trouble with it. Just like when the first roundabouts started popping up. Now both are common and part of normal driving.
one trip in typical traffic
Nobody understands a lot of basic rules.
Proper mirrors would allow the driver to see most of those side blind spots, or at least tell something is there. A fish eye mirror at the bottom would catch anything missed by a flat mirror. The important thing is to not hang out in those areas when you can go ahead and pass. And don’t try to squeeze through when a truck is swinging out to make a wide turn, because at some point he definitely can’t see you, and may not even feel you get run over.
Black Mirror’s San Junipero was an example of an opt-in and a rare good ending.
I know it opens doors we probably shouldn’t, but I’d have trouble declining a memory assistance implant.
Wouldn’t be surprised if there’s some restrictive laws in place to protect the power industry from the competition, like other places have done.
Not to say it’s exactly the same plot, but Brave New World was published in 1932. Seems that writing too close to the near future is not great for sales, but far enough out and you’ve got a great novel, and readers will appreciate the vision and warnings it gives.
And then fall for the trap anyway.
It’s satire at the moment, but look at so many scifi works that have mega-corporate states ruling the world. They’re fiction now, but often times scifi is a bit of a look into a potential future ending up partially coming true. There’s no doubt that big corporations do have political influence already for a while now, so it’s just a step up to having them fully in charge, and no one will blink.
It’s okay, it’s now copied to a better place. Richard Scarry is always wholesome. Grew up with a few of the books as a kid that I would ponder over the details again and again.
1980s: You could flip burgers to help pay for the college and not be thousands in debt at graduation.
The two biggest topics I keep seeing are questions on how a redditor can transition to this different format, and how reddit keeps setting fire to itself as it pretends everything is fine. I see no reason to stop talking about either. We can’t pretend Reddit never existed and how its content that we provided is important to the internet. I’m all about moving on to the next adventure and trying to do it better, but we do have to remember examples of the past that both did and didn’t do things well.
Yes, I tended to stay in the niche places I had found, only going out to the big ones during major events or news because of the same reasons. Smaller crowds feels like a discussion, big ones is a shouting match with only a few hearing you. I come from the days of BBSes, and this right now is exactly the same feel, only not just local people. Now we just have to figure out how it works, and how it can be improved.
I get it. The reason will be community and common bonds, it’s just finding each other that is the struggle right now, and how to bets build things anew and to last. Lots of development and growing pains to come, but it’s a nice change I think, even if it takes a bit to get mature and pull more people.
I disagree a little. I get your point that /all is not the best of Reddit, it’s everything at once. But that’s sort of what is missing at the moment in other places, a mass aggregate of things to pick from. Also missing is a default collection of the “best” of /all, the home or popular lists, because when you start out at one of the fediverse places you have to build your own from scratch/almost scratch. Perhaps that’s better in the long run, but it is a bit overwhelming and I’ve seen posts already asking where to find lists of communities to join.
As a Gen-X parent, I’ve abhorred the look and feel of Facebook even from the beginning. When I first made an account I got connected with old high school people and thought it was pretty neat. But then I tried to share some thoughts for discussion like one would do on a BBS/forum/Reddit, and realized that wasn’t what it was for. That was the last I posted. I know I’m in a minority and people who love it have a need for sharing everything they do, but that isn’t me.
There’s a saying I like: “Great minds discuss ideas. Average minds discuss events. Small minds discuss people.” I don’t think this means that a person can only be one of those, but that in discussions there is a level of thinking going on with the category. I prefer the first one more, and even Reddit had places where you aren’t going to find that…but it had some, and I enjoyed my time there.
Oh, and get off my lawn. You too, boomers. Everyone get off the damn lawn!
I imagine there’s other connections not shown near the Great Lakes since this is just showing the dominant south paths, but for the most part it does seem that the inner continent is higher north than south. Which given the geological history also makes sense, with the Canadian shield.