

Ah, thanks for jogging my memory
Ah, thanks for jogging my memory
On a quick read, I didn’t see the struck motorcycles listed. Last I heard, a few years ago, was that this mainly affected motorcycles with two rear lights that are spaced apart and fairly low to the ground. I believe this is mostly true for Harleys.
The theory I recall was that this rear light configuration made the Tesla assume it was looking (remember, only cameras without depth data) at a car that was further down the road - and acceleration was safe as a result. It miscategorised the motorcycle so badly that it misjudged it’s position entirely.
I don’t know where they’re made, but I’ve had good experiences with the Decathlon 15-20 euro sunglasses. Polarised at that price is a rarity! (I tend to lose/scratch/run into something with my sunnies on a yearly basis)
Thanks for the link! Too bad they’re stupid expensive in comparison to my old CCAs ;(
While as a Dutchman i find your statement hilarious, they’re talking about Danish here ;)
It might be a positive to a lot of people, but I don’t think it belongs in uplifting news. It’s a place (at least for me) to get away from all the news about death and terror across the globe
Regardless of their opinions, I don’t think a person’s death should be considered uplifting news
“Huge row erupts” […] “However, this is no surprise as we knew they had XY chromosomes already” is quite a 180, especially for such a short text. Also, is their body really our collective business?
I am surprised it’s called “America’s celebrated work ethic” - from my (Dutch) perspective, it’s notoriously terribly exploitative and bordering on dystopian for many. Is it true that people celebrate American work practices?!
Thank you kind person!
The article did mention them as “registered”, so I don’t think this applies.
According to Wikipedia it’s not, so you’re safe
I’m loving the puns quoted in the article haha
“Setting up a base in Vietnam” for a US company sounds like slightly painful wording to me…
I’m wondering if it’s tied to how status symbols differ per culture. Its been 20 years, but I don’t remember status symbols mattering much to my environment when I was a teenager in the Netherlands. I wonder how that is now.
I find their statements a bit on the sweeping side.
Out of more than 1.8 million administrator credentials analyzed, over 40,000 entries were “admin,” showing that the default password is widely accepted by IT administrators.
That’s just over 2 percent. “Widely accepted” in my book is a much larger percentage…
That makes sense, thanks
I wonder what would happen to the works were the museum to go bankrupt instead - then they would be sold for their “monetary value” as well, right? Then this seems more like protest for protest sake, as it’s a last resort damage control measure that can hardly be avoided from the sound of it.
Elton John had one of those. I think it even blew smoke for some reason!