

If it paid $30/hr a lot of people would be able to overlook the downsides.
The business was only viable because it could get people to break their backs for peanuts.
If it paid $30/hr a lot of people would be able to overlook the downsides.
The business was only viable because it could get people to break their backs for peanuts.
First quote is the old lie:
“Most Americans don’t want to do this work“ ( at the wages we want to pay)
Experts will tell you they drink Paul Masson Pinot Chardonnay because of its full varietal aroma, brilliant color and long pleasant finish. What they mean is…it tastes good. Paul Masson will sell no wine before its time.
What is the future of X.org if all the mainstream distros drop X11 for Wayland?
Any other projects we should know about?
I absolutely do not want Amazon or any parts of the surveillance state learning anything about the privacy of my home.
Losing your sanity is much worse than losing your money.
I know Edison loves to steal credit but lamps existed for thousands of years before Joseph Swan made a workable electric version.
MIMO will solve lensing issues but not internal reflection or absorbance.
So like OP says, it’s a signal strength issue.
Duo doesn’t mess around.
Why not just dump the Sound Fonts and use them in modern multitrack MIDI software?
You could have deleted that. There are enough pics of wrinkly buttholes on the internet.
That is true, but I bet they’re not doing it with a 30 year old ISA card.
SoundBlaster AWE32/64 was the bees knees before the invention of MP3s.
Today nobody uses MIDI, but how else are you going to play music with 8MB of RAM?
Screws in masonry probably act as a poor Ufer ground. The current is minuscule.
You forgot the BBQ lube.
The mesh is not dense enough to be a true Faraday cage for 2.4GHz, but is dense enough to hurt signal strength.
The bar spacing is smaller than 2.4GHz radio waves. It absolutely will affect signal. Should have used a plastic cage.
We all have a reality translator in our heads.
It’s called our own perception and biases.