Ceeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeb
Ceeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeb
Good point, it did mention US in the title
I’m going to guess you mean New Hampshire in the USA?
Depends heavily on the disability. For, for instance, blind people, the day cars were banned would be the best day of their lives!
I loved the books and found the netflix series to be a pretty enjoyable westernization of them.
There were a few changes/choices that were a bit strange or missed the point, but overall it’s worth watching
When they say something like “60 days battery life” what they mean is using the device for half an hour everyday for 60 days.
OP is arguing that it would make more sense to just say the continuous use battery life, which in the above example would be 30 hours (60 × 0.5)
That’s true for the US but not everywhere else
Ah, no in europe where I live is fairly normal for rail service to small villages even.
Unless you are near a train stop when it skyrockets
Small towns built around a train station are absolutely lovely though
Basically just further proof that car traffic doesn’t scale well. It’s just an incredibly space inefficient way to get around.
They use different sweeteners which have different calorie densities.
As a fan of both tofu and basically anything fermented…this sounds great!
My current place is super quiet. I essentially never hear anyone and it’s quite relaxing.
I’m on the sixth floor in a building with 100 units, it’s just built well.
They did, but sadly only for non-residents.
That’s just saying “people who are in a social community are happier and more engaged than those that aren’t” because most social communities are currently religious focused.
Or, arguably even more importantly, conservatives argue that this is actually about ‘mental health issues’ but then subsequently refuse to do anything to improve mental health. So they don’t even bother trying their own proposed solution.
You would think at this point that the US would have the most robust mental-healthcare system on the planet!
This is about Singapore though?
Interestingly, in europe this seems to vary by country!
I was just thinking that I wasn’t sure which was correct, but it seems both are actually acceptable in Germany although after the number is preferred