923 pts ยท February 28, 2014
The cat on the can is a calico, the cat in the picture is a tabby. They're different cats.Regardless, the only reason a picture of the same cat couldn't be used is if the company violated IP rights in doing so.
Growth rate depends heavily on the species. You're thinking of saguaros, which grow very slowly. This looks more like a fencepost cactus, which can reach this height in <10 years. If it were an organ pipe (it's not), this height might take a few decades.
McMurdo station isn't far enough south to get true polar night. The winter sky there goes through a twilight cycle because It's only around 77 degrees south. I've only been to 72 degrees, where it's bright enough to do things outside without artificial light in winter.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/White_RoseThey were arrested by the Gestapo and executed.
China has spent around $900 billion on their HSR. If all US roads cost the same as the cheapest rural roads to build, the US road network costs 30x more. I'm fine trading <3% of the least useful roads for HSR.
The shire isn't the size of a modern country. The parts of the shire we see are the main population corridor, the rest mostly being even more sparsely populated villages of a few burrow-holes surrounded by fields.The book areas fit into a single valley, about the size of a US county, or a modern shire in the UK. You could cross it in a few hours on bike at a leisurely pace.
He's *currently* freelance according to his linkedin, but as expected the vast majority of his IMDB credits are for media that premiered on Netflix. They're also pretty badly rated, but maybe that's because his boss was Adam Sandler.
The festival won't be open until Christmas at the earliest. These are videos from prior years. Harbin's quite a bit farther south than Canada though. It's 46N, same latitude as the Washington/Oregon border.
You're just straight up wrong. It's a real festival. The photo with the multicolor tower is from the 2023 festival. The daytime photos are from 2024.
The interior trunk release has been mandatory in the US since 2001. Any car without it is 25+ years old or doesn't have a trunk (e.g. hatchbacks, which have "doors" instead). That's roughly double the expected vehicle lifespan of a sedan from 2000. Better hope your kidnapper isn't a classic car aficionado.
Is the purpose of a map to represent land area accurately? I can't think of many situations that's useful. Mercator preserves north being up, has correct angles, and has equally spaced meridians. Population weighted is neat and at least marginally useful: https://www.visualcapitalist.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/world-map.png
To ruin the joke by explaining it, but if your vision needs to be as good as possible, you want overlapping fields of view for binocular vision. That leads to forward facing eyes. If you want to see as much as possible in every direction, you can't afford visual overlap.Primates all rely on incredibly good vision, even at the cost of making other senses like smell less effective. Thus, forward facing eyes. Water is not great for vision, so binocular vision is less important for fish.
I'm not sure that anyone unfamiliar with vibe coding will know how an agent differs from other LLM usages. A simpler definition is that vibe coding is letting LLMs generate code, using only high level descriptions to guide them and without carefully reviewing the output.
Your comment iterally says "it doesn't need controllers". I pointed out that it *does* need controllers, they're just called CTC operators instead of ATC operators. They do the same job, which is to keep things from being in the same place at the same time.
Train systems still have controllers. They're called CTC operators instead of ATCs and they're placed in nondescript office buildings instead of large, visible towers, but they do a very similar job. Here's a picture of the Tokaido control center:https://web-japan.org/niponica/images/en/niponica10/feature03-02.jpg
This dude is a "Distinguished Engineer", which is a title that usually translates to an expectation to go around solving the problems you feel like solving for lots of money. It keeps you entertained, the company gets the benefit of your name, and maybe your skill rubs off on other employees.Hamilton in particular likes digital infrastructure (think databases), not menus.
You're entitled to feel however you wish, I'm not dismissing that. The indigenous people of the Americas are still around though, and their distant ancestors left ruins just as old.
The part of the US that's "young" is the system of government. There are 4k+ year old archaeological sites in the Southwest you can visit.
Not sure what "better museums" you have in mind than the British Museum, but no. They don't have replicas for all of the millions of items in their collection. This particular artifact *does* have replicas, but the british museum prefers to display originals, especially when the artifact will return shortly.
Depends on where you are. If you're in Hawaii, you'll be hard-pressed to find anything older than a million years.
The salt range is part of the Himalayan zone geologically. It's only isolated on the surface, and even then it's only about 100km away.
They're basically mountain raccoons. Extremely sociable, smart, and also willing to knife you in an alley for trash.
This is Kvernufoss. Registered drones are allowed here, though banned at literally the next stream over because it's a bird sanctuary. This video is a great example of why they're likely to expand that ban. You're not allowed to fly drones near birds, cliffs with birds, or people. They managed to break all three.
Some trails in Nepal have 20k+ stairs on a single day's segment. The same elevation difference without stairs at the same speed is practically begging for falls and sprained ankles.
To give you the benefit of the doubt, near-polar landscapes like the nordics are have fragile, slow-growing vegetation. This area obviously doesn't have enough rocks for hikers to avoid the vegetation and it's steep enough that a trail worn into the vegetation would create a fast wash and increase the erosion problem. It's also safer.Go find a scree trail if that's what you want.
Hibernating marmots survive perfectly well with plague. Their body temp drops low enough to keep it under control. That's also a common time to hunt them in Asia because Asian marmots are sneaky little buggers. The bacterium spreads when they wake up (or they're eaten) and they can probably transmit it the same way humans do.
Let's say it lasts 2000 folds, the minimum to say "thousands". If you use it daily, it will survive 5.5 years. An inflatable kayak is expected to last 5. A plastic kayak might average 10, so maybe buy that instead if you're going to spend every day in it or just spend a few days indoors every so often.
And governments in the US existed before 1776 and even 1492. We go by founding dates of modern forms of top level government, not unbounded continuity. Otherwise you get oddities like Turkey being founded in 753 BCE (or whatever date you prefer), because there's a claimed lineage from Rome->ERE->Ottomans->Turkey.
It was probably older than Croatia (1990) too.
Many public events in the the PNW begin with a land acknowledgement, usually something similar to "We gather on indigenous land that is the traditional territory of the tribe". They're posted on websites, painted on the sides of buildings, part of church services, etc.
The cat on the can is a calico, the cat in the picture is a tabby. They're different cats.
Regardless, the only reason a picture of the same cat couldn't be used is if the company violated IP rights in doing so.
Growth rate depends heavily on the species. You're thinking of saguaros, which grow very slowly. This looks more like a fencepost cactus, which can reach this height in <10 years. If it were an organ pipe (it's not), this height might take a few decades.
McMurdo station isn't far enough south to get true polar night. The winter sky there goes through a twilight cycle because It's only around 77 degrees south. I've only been to 72 degrees, where it's bright enough to do things outside without artificial light in winter.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/White_Rose
They were arrested by the Gestapo and executed.
China has spent around $900 billion on their HSR. If all US roads cost the same as the cheapest rural roads to build, the US road network costs 30x more. I'm fine trading <3% of the least useful roads for HSR.
The shire isn't the size of a modern country. The parts of the shire we see are the main population corridor, the rest mostly being even more sparsely populated villages of a few burrow-holes surrounded by fields.
The book areas fit into a single valley, about the size of a US county, or a modern shire in the UK. You could cross it in a few hours on bike at a leisurely pace.
He's *currently* freelance according to his linkedin, but as expected the vast majority of his IMDB credits are for media that premiered on Netflix. They're also pretty badly rated, but maybe that's because his boss was Adam Sandler.
The festival won't be open until Christmas at the earliest. These are videos from prior years. Harbin's quite a bit farther south than Canada though. It's 46N, same latitude as the Washington/Oregon border.
You're just straight up wrong. It's a real festival. The photo with the multicolor tower is from the 2023 festival. The daytime photos are from 2024.
The interior trunk release has been mandatory in the US since 2001. Any car without it is 25+ years old or doesn't have a trunk (e.g. hatchbacks, which have "doors" instead). That's roughly double the expected vehicle lifespan of a sedan from 2000. Better hope your kidnapper isn't a classic car aficionado.
Is the purpose of a map to represent land area accurately? I can't think of many situations that's useful. Mercator preserves north being up, has correct angles, and has equally spaced meridians. Population weighted is neat and at least marginally useful: https://www.visualcapitalist.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/world-map.png
To ruin the joke by explaining it, but if your vision needs to be as good as possible, you want overlapping fields of view for binocular vision. That leads to forward facing eyes. If you want to see as much as possible in every direction, you can't afford visual overlap.
Primates all rely on incredibly good vision, even at the cost of making other senses like smell less effective. Thus, forward facing eyes. Water is not great for vision, so binocular vision is less important for fish.
I'm not sure that anyone unfamiliar with vibe coding will know how an agent differs from other LLM usages. A simpler definition is that vibe coding is letting LLMs generate code, using only high level descriptions to guide them and without carefully reviewing the output.
Your comment iterally says "it doesn't need controllers". I pointed out that it *does* need controllers, they're just called CTC operators instead of ATC operators. They do the same job, which is to keep things from being in the same place at the same time.
Train systems still have controllers. They're called CTC operators instead of ATCs and they're placed in nondescript office buildings instead of large, visible towers, but they do a very similar job. Here's a picture of the Tokaido control center:
https://web-japan.org/niponica/images/en/niponica10/feature03-02.jpg
This dude is a "Distinguished Engineer", which is a title that usually translates to an expectation to go around solving the problems you feel like solving for lots of money. It keeps you entertained, the company gets the benefit of your name, and maybe your skill rubs off on other employees.
Hamilton in particular likes digital infrastructure (think databases), not menus.
You're entitled to feel however you wish, I'm not dismissing that. The indigenous people of the Americas are still around though, and their distant ancestors left ruins just as old.
The part of the US that's "young" is the system of government. There are 4k+ year old archaeological sites in the Southwest you can visit.
Not sure what "better museums" you have in mind than the British Museum, but no. They don't have replicas for all of the millions of items in their collection. This particular artifact *does* have replicas, but the british museum prefers to display originals, especially when the artifact will return shortly.
Depends on where you are. If you're in Hawaii, you'll be hard-pressed to find anything older than a million years.
The salt range is part of the Himalayan zone geologically. It's only isolated on the surface, and even then it's only about 100km away.
They're basically mountain raccoons. Extremely sociable, smart, and also willing to knife you in an alley for trash.
This is Kvernufoss. Registered drones are allowed here, though banned at literally the next stream over because it's a bird sanctuary. This video is a great example of why they're likely to expand that ban. You're not allowed to fly drones near birds, cliffs with birds, or people. They managed to break all three.
Some trails in Nepal have 20k+ stairs on a single day's segment. The same elevation difference without stairs at the same speed is practically begging for falls and sprained ankles.
To give you the benefit of the doubt, near-polar landscapes like the nordics are have fragile, slow-growing vegetation. This area obviously doesn't have enough rocks for hikers to avoid the vegetation and it's steep enough that a trail worn into the vegetation would create a fast wash and increase the erosion problem. It's also safer.
Go find a scree trail if that's what you want.
Hibernating marmots survive perfectly well with plague. Their body temp drops low enough to keep it under control. That's also a common time to hunt them in Asia because Asian marmots are sneaky little buggers. The bacterium spreads when they wake up (or they're eaten) and they can probably transmit it the same way humans do.
Let's say it lasts 2000 folds, the minimum to say "thousands". If you use it daily, it will survive 5.5 years. An inflatable kayak is expected to last 5. A plastic kayak might average 10, so maybe buy that instead if you're going to spend every day in it or just spend a few days indoors every so often.
And governments in the US existed before 1776 and even 1492. We go by founding dates of modern forms of top level government, not unbounded continuity. Otherwise you get oddities like Turkey being founded in 753 BCE (or whatever date you prefer), because there's a claimed lineage from Rome->ERE->Ottomans->Turkey.
It was probably older than Croatia (1990) too.
Many public events in the the PNW begin with a land acknowledgement, usually something similar to "We gather on indigenous land that is the traditional territory of the tribe". They're posted on websites, painted on the sides of buildings, part of church services, etc.