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alamortsubite

1,888 karmajoined 7 years ago

Submissions

How rain fences are making Dutch homes more climate resilient

theguardian.com
3 points·by alamortsubite·3 months ago·0 comments

Trump's ballroom fight sheds new light on an underground White House bunker

npr.org
16 points·by alamortsubite·3 months ago·0 comments

Where Christian nationalism is most dominant in the U.S.

axios.com
10 points·by alamortsubite·5 months ago·4 comments

Unix v4 program found cleaning out an office at the University of Utah [video]

youtube.com
2 points·by alamortsubite·6 months ago·2 comments

Chinese app 'Are You Dead' sparks debate on social isolation – DW News [video]

youtube.com
3 points·by alamortsubite·6 months ago·0 comments

When a Crackdown Involving the IRA Backfired, Comically Doc [video]

youtube.com
3 points·by alamortsubite·9 months ago·0 comments

comments

alamortsubite
·4 hours ago·discuss
If you DM your provider through their health portal it's likely they'll write an order without requiring an office visit.
alamortsubite
·16 days ago·discuss
As opposed to a moisture farmer, presumably: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aran_Islands#History

If you're never seen Man of Aran, you're in for a treat! Far more thought provoking than the fluff Lucas made, but by which I always assumed his fictional homestead on Tatooine was inspired.
alamortsubite
·18 days ago·discuss
It's not that complicated. When you buckle your unibody, you'll understand.
alamortsubite
·18 days ago·discuss
Obviously, but the question I was responding to was, "Why buy a sleek phone made of premium materials just to bury it in the cheapest, ugliest, chunkiest plastic case you can find?"
alamortsubite
·18 days ago·discuss
In an ICE pickup, maybe, but assuming the Slate has an EV weight distribution advantage, RWD is probably better. To each their own, but I much prefer my driven wheels not to be my turning wheels.

That said, lack of 4WD is really a bummer.
alamortsubite
·18 days ago·discuss
A 4x8 trailer is also a great option, if you have a place to keep one, and super cheap. I have a Thule that stands on end in the garage. Trailers are a lot easier to load and unload than an American pickup, too. It seems like every time I take mine to the Home Despot I see someone struggling to get materials into their SUV or short-bed pickup, and I'm in and out in a flash. Just don't expect to win any races driving in reverse.
alamortsubite
·18 days ago·discuss
Size has nothing to do with it. The Rangers were body on frame.
alamortsubite
·18 days ago·discuss
Entertainment, telemetry, weapons systems?
alamortsubite
·18 days ago·discuss
Plenty of people buy expensive phones for the specs and features, yet either have no interest in jewelry or see it as a negative status symbol.
alamortsubite
·18 days ago·discuss
Or clothes, if you really want to do it right, like Madeline Khan's character in High Anxiety.
alamortsubite
·18 days ago·discuss
If you've lived in Australia, I'm back to thinking you're being wholly disingenuous, and certainly evasive. I'll steer clear of engaging with you in the future.
alamortsubite
·18 days ago·discuss
I don't know why you were down-voted, but I agree.

It's also alarming how often you see people towing trailers that aren't even close to being level here. It almost seems like SOP.
alamortsubite
·18 days ago·discuss
You wrote that Australia has plenty of brodozers. Crossovers are not brodozers, nor is it possible to operate a brodozer on public roads in Australia. Clearly, you're misinformed, if not entirely disingenuous, but your commitment to stay the course is admirable.

> Vehicles with 40s on them and a 6” lift are so rare in America they have no statistical significance in regard to accidents.

Do you have a source for this? Asking as someone who recently narrowly escaped death with a loved one as victims in a highway rollover crash caused by a dimwit operating a brodozer with 40" mud tires and a 6" lift in America.
alamortsubite
·18 days ago·discuss
Well, in his case he has full technical competency but he's missing a leg, but I agree with the point you're making.
alamortsubite
·19 days ago·discuss
Kafka was way ahead of his time when he wrote Der Bau!
alamortsubite
·19 days ago·discuss
Sorry, I'm just trying to understand your point of view. I live in the US and spend a lot of time in the EU. I'm a citizen of both. It couldn't be more obvious to me that our street designs differ (as implied by my previous comment). I'd genuinely like to know where you're coming from, but your responses so far are shallow tautologies. I initially responded to your comment, "Fixing on the pedestrian safety yields higher death counts overall" (I assumed you meant "fixating on pedestrian safety," but perhaps this was a mistake). I'm curious how you came to that conclusion. Can you please elaborate, and what was my stupid "jump and conclusion," precisely?
alamortsubite
·19 days ago·discuss
Those really only work in very dry climates. So some of Europe, but not places like the UK where the conference was cancelled.
alamortsubite
·19 days ago·discuss
Maybe I misinterpreted, but I think they meant that if the American market didn't exist, neither would most of those models.
alamortsubite
·19 days ago·discuss
I guess I'm old fashioned but I just can't imagine removing the cab to change my uncle's battery.
alamortsubite
·19 days ago·discuss
I see. So you believe that if Europeans designed their streets to be less safe for pedestrians, like they are in the U.S., then their overall vehicular death rate would go down. Is that right?