Stocks, bonds, annuities
Stocks, bonds, annuities
Post of info on Tiblur by a now 3 hour old lemmy account
Ah, yes, oh so reliable
Don’t worry. The good folks at Boeing have assured us that it is all perfectly safe.
And while I broadly agree with your point, it is far too easy for law enforcement to tack on additional charges like resisting arrest. And, yes, in most states resisting arrest is also a misdemeanor, but incidents can be raised to felony resisting arrest if they involve assault on an officer. Unfortunately, it is easy for any innocent physical contact with police to be interpreted as assault, if an officer decides to portray it that way. The truth matters, but so does ACAB
We need a hero - a hero with a garden hose. While Trump always looks foolish, making him look the right kind of foolish might just shake a few of his cult away from him
Shaft
Name has its own theme song
I agree that all this needs to be examined, and some new laws and regulations should be developed. But, for good or ill, teaching is a covered use as written in the section of the law quoted above, and teaching is part of the process of training.
If anything, laws will likely have to be rewritten to adress changing technologies, but it seems disingenuous to quote a section of the law and then ignore the most relevant word in the entire text
Not teaching with AI
Teaching AI
You skipped right over “teaching”.
Why is that?
No, I’m not surprised at all that Trump is a disappointing candidate
It was the maiden flight. First flights don’t always go so well, so it is not at all surprising that it wasn’t carrying a space telescope, or the like.
Still, the next flight will be carrying the first flight of a vehicle designed to resupply the space station, if that makes you feel any better
China had a successful methane powered rocket launch in 2023
No, no. The Timex Sinclair was my first. The sealed keyboard design was perfect for the occasional milk spills
Well, yeah, and boy did the other kids let me know it
The instructions were probably more helpful for someone who knew what these tubes were. I was probably about 6 at this point, hadn"t been actively involved in much TV repair by this time, and I guess I somehow didn’t pick up enough clues from the context of the instructions to put it all together before just leaping into playing with the dials and switches. You know, like a kid
I remember one of these being at the grocery store as a kid. I didn’t know at the time what it was for, but it had knobs and switches to play with.
Hope. Maybe mix in a little hope
I am currently wearing a pair of shorts that I bought sometime in the late '80s. The top blanket currently on my bed was made by my grandmother in the '70s. The clock right in front of me was made during WW2, but I’ve only had it for a couple of decades. I guess I just don’t throw shit away
Edit: now that I think of it, my bed is probably from the '30s or '40s.
I can’t imagine that 3 years of data is even remotely enough for this. I have articles of clothing that are decades old (3+ decades old), but I have never bought any piece of clothing expecting it to last that long, and the clothing that lasts isn’t always the type that I’d expect. At best, 3 years is enough for a “snapshot” of the life of most clothing, I would think.
Then again, I’ve owned the same car for the last 21 years, so maybe I am not a typical consumer.