What is this used for?
What is this used for?
Is there a bad taxidermy community?
They were asking for a ride. She speaks Ukrainian. I’m guessing she wasn’t bothered by it.
Me writing my resume in third person
Is this comparing total number of visitors per year to inhabitants?
If so, it’s a misleading graphic because visitors only stay for a week or two.
A blessing! Free credit monitoring! All is well
Free solo*
But with a harness full of gear for extra weight reasons
And gloves because less grip == good?
Me, spending hours on Age of Empires 2 and loving it
We water by soaking the plants in the tub, then letting them sit on towels before going back on the shelf. A bit tedious but only has to be done every 1-2 months.
True with crimps, not as important with pinches, which is what this mug is
This is how I did it with my old board. My new board has a jumper to toggle between powering via USB and not.
When the only tool you have is a deep lifelong understanding of computational language, everything starts to look like a hypergraph.
Cisco Webex.
You think teams or zoom are annoying? This is much worse. The worst part is with some default meeting settings, a loud chime would play every time someone joined. People kept this on for meetings of 300+ people, then they started talking over the beeps once “the popcorn slowed down.”
Extraction is heavily controlled by amount of water, temperature, grind size, and time.
To get an under extracted brew, you would use more water with a shorter brew time with a course grind at a lower temperature. This should give you something that’s sour, weak, watery, with a thin mouthfeel.
Overextraction would be the opposite. Boiling water in a preheated brewing device, fine grind, less water, steeped for a longer time. This should taste dark, bitter, burnt, strong, with a soupy grimy mouthfeel.
You can make one cup of each at the extremes to taste the difference, and then use that information to tweak your regular brew one variable at a time. Look up the coffee compass to help understand what you’re tasting and which direction to move.
As opposed to Cole’s law, which is a finely shredded cabbage salad
It’s a joke about software development tools breaking in dumb ways, and that it’s not a problem with saws
I’m a software engineer who does woodworking, and I approve this message.
But my favorite explanation: you grab your hand saw, and it works. You don’t find out that the latest npm japanese-hand-saw-tooth package is incompatible with plywood, and you need to downgrade the package or buy new plywood to make a cut.
Okay but how? What does the proposed ammendment attempt to change?
Why can’t they use the excess energy to make the train go again?