Do they break fast charging?
AlpacaChariot
The sharp end of a safety pin did it for me
A... slab? Of wine?
Is that a whole pallet or something?
Was it that the PDF produced by latex was less OCR friendly than the word one, or just that you didn't submit the PDF at all most of the time?
I guess if you trained a program to OCR PDFs that are produced by word it might get really good at that and less good at PDFs from other sources.
I'm curious if your CV font was computer modern?
People are mostly talking about what a bunch of idiots they are though.
This lot look like they were cast by the daily mail, they couldn't be more of a caricature. It is absolutely not effective communication.
Haha I have similar tastes, love a kebab.
Maybe those foods seem overrated because they are so accessible and easy to cook (few ingredients)? Easy things to start with if you're learning to cook.
Are you someone who likes sweet stuff more than savoury? I'm not into sweet stuff and don't get the fuss about chocolate, but a nice savoury salty or spicy thing does it for me.
I guess everyone has different tastes.
I get your point but hydrogen isn't just sea water, you've got an awful lot more energy to put in after the "tank is full so wrap up the hose and drive off" stage to separate the hydrogen from oxygen to get the fuel. The difficult bit comes after "get water".
On the one hand, this is embarrassing for Russia, but on the other hand the UK's Trident nuclear deterrent failed a couple of times in a row over the last few years, so I'm not going to get too excited about it.
It could go that way, but on the other hand they could be more like MorningLightMountain in Peter Hamilton's Pandora's Star, i.e. fascists who exterminate every other organism that competes with them for resources.
Great book if you haven't read it!
Those are also good reasons, i.e. more than just "I disagree"
Yep, we have the same system in the UK. In fact, the envelope looks almost exactly the same so they might even be printed by the same company.
You get two envelopes (one big, one small), a postal voting statement, and a ballot paper.
The actual ballot paper just has a list of options for you to put your X against; there's no personally identifiable information on it. Once you've filled it out you seal it in the small envelope.
You then fill in the voting statement (it has your name and address on it so they can cross your name off as voted, and you sign it so they can check your signature matches the one on file) and both that and the sealed ballot go in the big envelope. That way your vote is still private because they check the vote is valid in one step and then add your ballot to a pile to be counted with the others in a second step, at which point it's anonymous.
https://www.electoralcommission.org.uk/voting-and-elections/ways-vote/how-vote-post