For awareness when reading the article: the source is The Sunday Times, owned by News Corp.
Does this mean fewer duplicate white label items?
Very cozy watch
TIL Samsung has a Galaxy Store.
All part of Project 2025!
This is a series where you can
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Have a chicken be your employee at a successful business venture alongside an oversided-roomba and a former wrestler.
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Pursue the reason why your crime boss/father-figure let you take the fall for a murder and then sell out the entire organization while you did time
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Have a hobo wizard as an ally who becomes like a brother to you
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Get caught up in a national political conspiracy
Just...roll with it and have fun.
Looks good graphically. Movement looked a bit sluggish and enemies seemed like they had too much health. Hopefully they can still tune that.
Yeah I wish I could share a link to the article/podcast, but I'm having trouble finding it right now.
Edit: Found it! It was from On the Media, WNYC. September 13th, 2024 episode around 27m:47s. Here's the link: https://pca.st/episode/3f8ff092-92b9-4767-9725-6dbe3af715be?t=1667
I was recently listening to NPR/public radio discuss the margin of error. There are 4 types, and only one of those are used when reporting poll numbers.
The recommendation was to double the reported number to get a better idea of the true margin of error.
Edit: Found it! It was from On the Media, WNYC. September 13th, 2024 episode around 27m:47s. Here's the link: https://pca.st/episode/3f8ff092-92b9-4767-9725-6dbe3af715be?t=1667
I'm sure they still need to hustle to make that bank.
I'm sure Automotive OEMs will love that after investing all the engineering and hardware needed.
What @Skanky@lemmy.world recommended is a good starter collection. Figure out your pallette preferences. Basically avoid the big name labels like Makers (same rule as for beer). If you have a Costco membership, you can get a good price.
It's so confusing that people mix the infotainment OS with the Android connectivity app. Both have their use cases, but Google really needs to rebrand one of these.
Collapse theory is fundamentally a privileged take
It's definitely a white-male-privileged take in the US.
It also just doesn't make sense from a logistics sense -- You want to address the current set of big problems by ... creating more big problems to address with the same/less resources and organizations? Some that are more time sensitive than others?
And the amazing thing is you don't need to pay a premium for the good stuff compared to Scotch.