What… uhh what are you doing with that toothpick?
What… uhh what are you doing with that toothpick?
Yeah, I’ve never needed to add a phone number.
Does Fortnite have any original content at all? Everything I’ve seen looked like licensed stuff.
The movie was even surprisingly great, despite, or possibly because of diverging from the books so much.
Also step 2. $4MM is not enough to run the kind of vessel needed to go to the poles for the length of time needed.
I’d be satisfied with replacing the ad segment with some other video temporarily.
That’s something like a cleaver, so it’s got a blunt tip that looks like it’s going through her blouse.
And so we’ll remain until we can also get rid of the two party system. This would be a good start, but we also need to change our voting system to anything but this awful first-past-the-post system.
Okay, that was hilarious; thanks for that.
The great thing is, if everyone’s on the list, no one is!
I’m voting for this guy in November.
The lowest tip value should be higher to reflect current tip pressuring tactics.
A buddy has been testing whether his LLMs he puts together are properly jailbroken by asking them to explain how to build the silliest bomb possible. I find that terribly amusing. Unfortunately they don’t usually come up with anything particularly silly.
Let’s not forget about HotHardware. They’re still carrying the torch of detailed hardware analysis as well my beloved NotebookCheck.
I’ve found that’s because their mice will go to sleep and upon first waking they’ll briefly use an onboard profile before switching to the G Hub profile. This is also why it might feel like it has a different DPI briefly or different light settings for just a flash. The only way to fix this is to use their totally separate OnboardMemoryManager software to change the onboard settings while running G Hub. It solved this issue for me and it’s infuriating that this isn’t built into G Hub…
According to the description, it’s just the sensor, not the latch. The microswitch has a lever like many do and that lever can become bent if damaged which would prevent it from warning the user if they failed to latch the hood. Most older cars just had a secondary latch so if you failed to latch it completely, at least the secondary one would catch it…
Microswitch lever fatigue is what this sounds like and it’s really not the kind of thing that a QA team could ever detect without years of testing. This is just how it’ll go as we add more bells and whistles to all our cars. More obscure new issues will be identified years down the line and added to institutional knowledge for future use.
The only way the hood can pop open on the highway is if it was open before you departed, so the warning would alert the user just like the switch did before they can drive to a dangerous speed.
Although the problem is with the hood latch, as with many Tesla safety recalls, the problem can be fixed with an over-the-air software patch.
It’s called the Q-spot.