Overmorrow refers to the day after tomorrow
Figured the other way around might be as obscure…
nudiustertian: relating to the day before yesterday
Yikes
Overmorrow refers to the day after tomorrow
Figured the other way around might be as obscure…
nudiustertian: relating to the day before yesterday
Yikes
Leeks and carrots potage from raiding the garden
Phone books had your name and phone number. Some had your street address too.
Before that, there were books that even had your occupation.
Random directory example from 1886:
Last name, first name, occupation, street name, number.
1790…
Browser add-ons would be better suited for this.
Those uninterested don’t get spammed and it’d work on all websites for those who want it.
For mammal, if you wanna dig deeper into the orders… again, non-exhaustive, non-reviewed GPT stuff:
Here’s a list of some of the major orders within the class Mammalia (mammals):
Monotremata: Egg-laying mammals, such as the platypus and echidnas.
Marsupialia: Marsupials, which give birth to underdeveloped young that typically continue to develop in a pouch, including kangaroos, koalas, and opossums.
Eulipotyphla: Insectivores, including shrews, moles, and hedgehogs.
Chiroptera: Bats, the only mammals capable of sustained flight.
Primates: Includes lemurs, monkeys, apes, and humans.
Rodentia: Rodents, characterized by continuously growing incisors, including mice, rats, squirrels, and beavers.
Lagomorpha: Rabbits, hares, and pikas.
Carnivora: Carnivorous mammals, including dogs, cats, bears, and seals.
Perissodactyla: Odd-toed ungulates, such as horses, zebras, and rhinoceroses.
Artiodactyla: Even-toed ungulates, including pigs, deer, giraffes, and cattle.
Cetacea: Whales, dolphins, and porpoises.
Sirenia: Manatees and dugongs, also known as sea cows.
Proboscidea: Elephants, characterized by their long trunks.
Hyracoidea: Hyraxes, small, herbivorous mammals that resemble rodents.
Scandentia: Tree shrews, small mammals that are somewhat similar to squirrels.
Dermoptera: Colugos or flying lemurs, gliding mammals found in Southeast Asia.
Xenarthra: Includes anteaters, sloths, and armadillos, primarily found in the Americas.
Non-exhaustive, non-reviewed, GPT-generated list of classes:
Mammals (Class Mammalia): Warm-blooded animals with hair or fur; most give live birth and produce milk for their young.
Birds (Class Aves): Warm-blooded vertebrates with feathers, beaks, and typically the ability to fly.
Reptiles (Class Reptilia): Cold-blooded vertebrates with scales, including snakes, lizards, turtles, and crocodiles.
Amphibians (Class Amphibia): Cold-blooded vertebrates that typically begin life in water and undergo metamorphosis, including frogs, toads, and salamanders.
Fish (Class Pisces): Cold-blooded aquatic vertebrates with gills, fins, and scales, including bony fish (Osteichthyes) and cartilaginous fish (Chondrichthyes).
Arachnids (Class Arachnida): Invertebrates characterized by having eight legs and two main body segments, including spiders, scorpions, ticks, and mites.
Insects (Class Insecta): The largest class of animals, characterized by having three main body segments, six legs, and typically one or two pairs of wings.
Crustaceans (Class Crustacea): A diverse group of aquatic invertebrates with exoskeletons, including crabs, lobsters, shrimp, and barnacles.
Invertebrates: While not a formal class, this group includes various animals without a backbone, such as:
Ask an LLM about animal classes.
It’s the taxonomic rank you’d be interested in.
Also depends at what detail you wanna go.
Things like rodents are at the order level under mammals.
Arachnid aren’t insects, they’re their own thing, etc.
guns from vending machines.
So my first reaction is scoffing at how ridiculous of an idea that is, but then I think about the US and it’s not as unlikely anymore.
I love mine, it’s so gentle and civilized.
I wish they made a modern version with the adjustable slice width thing, it’d be perfect.
Search for your username in the modlog
This toaster:
Might as well link the Technology Connections video already.
Yes, it’s an 18 minutes video on a 1950s toaster, you can thank me later.
Even if it was, employers have all kinds of software running on employee workstations, some including keyloggers and screenshots, etc
Nothing is private on a device you don’t own.
Probably something for @[email protected]
Thanks, that’s an interesting read.
I know that’s one person’s opinion and not a thorough research, but that’s still plenty of red flags.
I’ve used the 100 searches in the free trial, thought the search was fine, better than Google’s these days. The subscription is a bit steep so I held off, kinda glad I did after digging more into this.
Having what little employees they have also make a mac-only browser, AI stuff and email that their user base doesn’t seem to want is all a bit weird.
Buying a t-shirt factory (wtf) with the money they could have used to potentially lower the subscription, but decided to burn through it to give out free t-shirts. That just screams narcissism-driven to me.
Their vague statements on privacy isn’t convincing at all.
Some variation of “we don’t care about your data” isn’t in any way compelling evidence that you care about protecting the privacy of said collected data.
In my opinion they lack focus, commitment and conviction into what I thought was their primary mission at first glance: being a privacy-focused no nonsense search engine.
Although that’s probably on me for reading what I wanted to see between the lines and that never was their stated mission, which would explain a lot.
First glance of the thumbnail had me thinking this was a D&D sourcebook.
My guess is there’s drugs in OP’s shower.
The PSU is sketch but likely fine. I’m more worried about the expansion slot cover that’s barely hanging.
I have an old pic somewhere of an old Frankenstein PC with the case cut with tin snips to fit a bigger GPU. It also had an external PSU for a while, although I did add a ground wire between the PSU and case. I’ll see if I can find it.
Xitter (pronounced shitter)