Just measure it as a percentage of their market cap/gross profit (yes gross, not net) rather than an absolute dollar amount, problem solved.
Just measure it as a percentage of their market cap/gross profit (yes gross, not net) rather than an absolute dollar amount, problem solved.
Everyone is a bot except you.
The not-Austin part?
Technically all the dopamine you need is there, it’s just that there aren’t enough receptors to receive it. Hardly more than a semantic difference though, besides being even more frustrating knowing it’s literally all up there but there aren’t enough doors for it to squeeze in to the party bus fast enough.
I guess I’ll keep the trolling going then, because I’ve been switched to plant milk for a couple years—mostly oat, but I’ll mix in some soy for protein, or coconut because yum. I don’t drink it straight, it’s mostly for cereal. I usually have a regular and a vanilla because each is good with different cereals. If you want the closest to “real” milk, about 80% (regular) oat and 20% coconut I think is pretty close. Silk makes what they call “One” milk that’s pretty much that, but I like to experiment with the ratio myself. 😄
Regular milk tastes… weird now. Slightly acidic almost? I can also feel that my gut doesn’t like trying to digest it. (Almost like milk is supposed to be for infants, who’d’ve thunk? 😅)
Almond milk though… BLECK. I can’t stand it. Often watery, acidy, weird aftertaste, just like you said.
You can change that in the nanorc
along with changing key binds, colors, and the like.
To be fair, you can easily rebind all the keys to be more normal by adding a .nanorc
. Though, Ctrl-Z conflicts with suspend in many terminals, so I keep that one as Ctrl-U. A .nanorc
also allows turning on mouse support, changing the color scheme, etc.
I think Bottles has a ready-made profile for installing FL, last I saw it was marked as silver quality. Might be worth a try? I’m a Bitwig user so I haven’t needed to try it. :p (Though I have heard tales of FL’s magnificent piano roll.)
Except in very rare configurations (i.e. not 99.9% of residential), you do not want to have multiple paths to ground within a system. All grounds should go to the tied ground/neutral bus in the main breaker panel, which then goes to earth via a ground rod or a clamp to a copper gas/water line, etc. Otherwise you can have current flowing in ways that the system isn’t designed for, which at the least can trip breakers and GFCIs, and at worst exceed the rating of the wires in a short condition and cause a fire.
Except in very rare configurations (i.e. not 99.9% of residential), you do not want to have multiple paths to ground within a system. All grounds should go to the tied ground/neutral bus in the main breaker panel, which then goes to earth via a ground rod or a clamp to a copper gas/water line, etc. Otherwise you can have current flowing in ways that the system isn’t designed for, which at the least can trip breakers and GFCIs, and at worst exceed the rating of the wires in a short condition and cause a fire.
I use a fork from F-Droid called Fennec. I’m not sure off the top of my head how closely it tracks with upstream feature-wise but I know it strips out all of Mozilla’s tracking components and it’s always updated within a couple days of the upstream release.
I don’t feel like you can rank all of these on the same level, they aim to solve different problems in different contexts.
I’m not going to walk across the country, I’m going to take a train if possible, or a plane if the trains don’t exist or I’m on a really tight schedule. But I won’t take a train, a plane, or even a bus to go a couple blocks to the corner store, I’ll walk. If it’s storming, however, I might take the bus or a tram despite the short distance and the wait for it to show up.
If I’m going eight blocks to a doctor’s appointment and it’s nice out, I might bike, unless it’s raining literal cats and dogs, because then I’ll absolutely leave super extra early and walk so I can pet each and every one of them on the way (and still be late, because priorities).
If I’m going to visit a nearby city, I might take a train or a bus, but if I’m moving to a nearby city, I’m going to rent a moving truck and drive. It’s all contextual.