That's really the foundational problem. If you could exist without bugging or being bugged by the neighbors dense housing would be so much more appealing
0x01
Llama3 local is pretty good
If they are failing to debunk a known fact, perhaps a conspiracy theorist?
If they are going against the grain, the devil's advocate?
Is this just a stub for later tonight?
Looks cool, when was the last time Zelda was a playable character in a mainline Zelda game?
No I mean how is trump involved with this post?
What am I missing here
Perovskite isn't new in the solar world but considering it a coating seems to be, it's not used today primarily because it degrades much quicker than silicon based cells, as of 2022:
the maximum lifetime attained by perovskite solar cells is just a year while it is about 25 years for the Silicon solar cells
For the sake of external consistency, seeking a problem to fit the solution:
It seems like there's relatively little on the ship in the way of rotational mechanics, doors make a pneumatic sound, etc. Perhaps the equipment is highly EM sensitive? Like the electromagnetic waves from a motor could screw then up somehow kinda like electrostatic issues in a computer?
The real example of a health check trait really brings this issue to life, it's linked within op's article as well
Is this a reasonable summary?
Say you want a trait where a method returns a task that you would like to sometimes run within your own thread and sometimes move it to a separate thread to be executed, that means the Send constraint isn't necessary to add to your trait but it would be nice to add that constraint within another method's parameter definition so that it can accept structs that implement the trait and further constrain that implementation to be Send'able. That's now possible with this new rust language feature, though it was previously possible through a crate, now it's no longer needed.