As mentioned, you need the pad to be hot for the solder to wick onto it. There is missing info in step 1. Step 1 should say to have a slightly wet iron (solder on the iron). You used this molten solder as the heat transfer medium. Hold the iron so the wet solder on it is touching the pad and lead. This gives more surface area for the heat to travel from the iron to the pad. A dry iron touching a pad will have poor thermal connection, so the pad will take a long time to heat up.
JamesNZ
Small claim to fame, but the model was my great uncles wife.
Yes, but even better known for the reading of this classic Oscar Wilde children's book. I had this on tape as a kid, and his voice is so soothing. https://youtu.be/du3L7iSEbI4?si=HYHXonpaL11juHIf
Wtf are you on about? Proof of work is to keep the distributed ledgers honest. You need it if you are running a trustless system. If it is a central ledger, which it will be if a government is running it, then there is no need for proof of work.
If he first serves +75% again he will have a good shot.
First two sets he seemed off, but I expected him to still win after the third. Glad he didn't though.
And my guess is he will, so fun, fun. Sinner for the title IMO.
If only there was an app that can change my leafs odometer....
Love how two of them picked under the mountain. One of my favourites.
We only know ftx was stealing due to a run on the exchange. Binance could also easily be in the same boat, we just don't know, as they have not been tested for there liquidity. Also it turns out ftx pretty much had the money, but it just was not liquid.
Is Sascha can keep his first serve % at around 80, then no one is beating him.