- 3 Posts
- 76 Comments
These are actually real, for those who care: https://www.accuweather.com/en/weather-news/mist-cannon-leaves-rainbow-trail-floating-over-city-avenue/1195796
That would mean the coffee supports Unicode better than my Lemmy client. (The “i” is broken for me.)
ǝᴉp oʇ ʇuɐʍ I
Brosnan was great but Sean Connery was impossible to beat.
• Carry electrical current
They could have thought of a better sales point than that.
As a side thought, while ground shouldn’t normally carry current, it’s probably the most important prong when it actually needs to.
I am 46 and was in the ICU a couple months ago with super high blood pressure and a false alarm for a stroke. Up until last week, I hadn’t ran for proper exercise in 20 years:

I can push myself to two miles, but it hurts. It only took a couple of months to work up to this point, so that was cool.
But still, if he wants to show off that he is doing just a little better than a 46 year old with cardiovascular issues he can go right ahead. I ain’t going to yuck anyone else’s yum, but a comparison needed to be made.
Edit: Fitbit doesn’t separate workout types that well without planning ahead and configuring a workout routine. “Lap 2” was a running mile, and the rest of the laps are walking.
I gave this some thought and I still can’t decide what is the best option.
From one perspective, not binding the bundle to the spine follows a clean horizontal/vertical layout and isn’t tightly bound to the movement of the spine. This may be “shortest path” and save on cable cost. However, there could be conditions that would stretch the cable if it were only tied to the neck and hips.
If the bundle was tied closely to the spine, the cable would be stretched less when the spine moves, but it would be moving and bending more. Cable cost could be a bit more as the total path is longer.
Installing something similar to a cable chain on the spine to let the bundle float (while still being contained) is probably a decent meet-in-the-middle solution between the above two options.
(In hindsight, me giving this any serious thought was bizarre.)
If we really want to get to the basics…
In chemistry, a salt or ionic compound is a chemical compound consisting of an assembly of positively charged ions and negatively charged ions, which results in a compound with no net electric charge
LPT: You can usually search the barcodes online and get an answer. Not always, but sometimes.
Allergies are a very real thing but so are Facebook hypochondriacs. Some marketing departments have little regard for either and will gladly label their products gluten free if it turns a higher profit. I had an online gaming companion that bought into the bullshit so hard, he was convinced a gluten free diet was curing his sons severe autism. Sigh.
I am bitching because the people that actually have issues always get left behind.
After digging a little, I think I found the start of an answer to this. It shouldn’t come as a surprise that saline solution contains sodium chloride. (Basically table salt.) In some cases, there is a small risk of gluten cross-contamination in that salt which may lead to some irritation for people who are extremely gluten intolerant.
This research path immediately opened up a mess of search results that I have no interest in digging through and fact checking.
Based on some of those search results though, I would speculate that there may have been some kind of overblown social media scare about gluten in salt and some companies just started categorizing eyedrops as gluten free.
Then, most importantly, I lost interest in this topic. Cheers!
In the original script, using human brains for compute almost destroyed the machines. The short-lived attempt caused an almost unstoppable infection of machines mindlessly watching reruns of the Kardashians and simplifying their language in the laziest ways possible by using words like “ur” and “rizz”. One was even heard trying to leave earth, thinking that it has become the brain it was trying to assimilate: “The big brain am winning again! I am the greetest! Now I am leaving Earth for no raisin!”
Do not stick this bottle in your anus.
Thanks! That worked as expected. Odd. I’ll just point the dev to this and a couple of other threads I have seen this happen. Cheers!
Unrelated question: Is the markdown above broken for anyone else? There are random cases where it’s broken for my client and am trying to to nail down the conditions better for the dev. (I am on Connect)







Genetically-optimal? How in the fuck do they determine that? What happens if their spawn is not genetically-optimal? Recycling bin?
Geezus fuck people are dumb sometimes.