Front trunk. It’s aggravating slang, but it’s been in use for decades, well before Tesla.
Other accounts:
Front trunk. It’s aggravating slang, but it’s been in use for decades, well before Tesla.
To add to this, a new type of brain cell was discovered just last year. (I would have linked directly to the study but there was a server error when I followed the cite.)
I was gonna make a dark joke about a silver lining, but I don’t think losing Starlink would be worth losing GPS.
This is why we need a corporate death penalty.
I hardly dream so I guess I would say “it’s a dream when I wake up afterwards”
There are already plenty of companies that sell managed data removal like this, Mozilla claims to be doing it better and perhaps they are incrementally more trustworthy than the smaller no name ones
What a detailed post, that was a fun read. You clearly live a much more interesting life than some of us
For accuracy, it should be updated to read “Snitches will need stitches.”
… :(
I got this super cheap camera off Amazon a while ago, it doesn’t have software or any special drivers. You just plug it in and Windows sees it as a generic video device.
What are you talking about? There are endless services where you can get a free email address without spending a cent. Verifying that an email is genuine is a much harder ask than you might think.
I believe they said “eat the rich”
I am also using Firefox on Android so it’s a mystery to me why the link doesn’t work for you. Maybe it markdown will let me send it as plain text:
https://www.cdc.gov/foodsafety/communication/salmonella-and-eggs.html
Removing the bloom, as Americans do, increases porousness and makes it more likely for the internal part of the egg to become contaminated with bacteria, specifically salmonella.
But this would only apply when an external contaminant is introduced between packaging and consumption, since the sanitization process should eliminate any bacteria that was not already inside the egg, I think.
I suppose if poor food handling practices are involved, cross contamination is more likely in a restaurant cooler or something. I was mainly considering the case of home cooks in my earlier replies.
I’m not saying you’re wrong. I’m just saying everything I’ve ever heard and read about says that you should avoid raw American eggs in particular.
That’s fair enough. I should note that the CDC link explicitly recommends the use of pasteurized egg products for raw and lightly cooked applications like this.
The first link works fine for me on mobile web. We are on the same instance so that may be the fault of the app you are using to browse Kbin.
And I included the second link because it’s a nice fact sheet of egg myths, I’m aware that eggs are handled differently there
Do you have any sources for this claim?
The way they are chemically treated makes them more likely to carry salmonella.
My understanding is that while removing the bloom does make it easier for bacteria to penetrate the shell, because that’s done just before packaging, the overall risk of contamination is lower. It’s important to note that if the hen is infected there’s a possibility for salmonella to be inside the egg regardless.
I don’t believe that’s true. You are probably thinking of the fact that egg shell becomes more porous when washed - if an egg is dirty or contaminated, washing it increases the chance for bacteria to get inside. I personally try when cracking eggs to minimize the amount of exterior shell that the egg touches, but I’m not sure how much that matters.
Eating raw or undercooked eggs will always be a higher risk. Further reading:
https://www.cdc.gov/foodsafety/communication/salmonella-and-eggs.html
https://www.foodauthority.nsw.gov.au/consumer/special-care-foods/eggs-enjoy-safely/myths-and-facts
Your reading comprehension needs work. Have a nice day.
I’m not arguing that? I’m acknowledging that learning any new software takes some level of effort. Nice straw man though!
Is not looking bad more valuable than the effort involved in one or both of you learning iOS?
Compared to more traditional messaging protocols it could seem that way depending on various factors like time zone differences and how often devices can be online.
It seems like in general, 1:1 conversations will require both participants to be online simultaneously to communicate. Group conversations can have any online participant act as a relay for new messages to offline participants, more or less.
Check out their documentation, particularly the article on how the distributed network works. Also the FAQ is massive! I wish I had the time to read about this in more detail right now
Don’t you have some kid’s birthday party to be at, you fucking clown?