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It looks like there'd be room to stick one to the right of the screen, above the main board. I'd prefer a minidisc drive, though, to bring it into the 21st century.

Maybe you could ask an LLM to build a campaign then ask another one to run it.

Cross your fingers and hope there's less than $300 worth of food in there.

I think in this case many of these people are "useful idiots" in the sense that they lack a strong technical understanding of how the internet and www are architected. This can cause them to accept erroneous concepts like "tracking the identity of all internet users is the only way to protect the children" while alternatives like the one proposed at the beginning of this thread can be easily glossed over as some techno mumble jumble.

In my experience ever since the coke started coming out of the same nozzle as every other soda it has tasted like ass.

I have a couple old radios from the 1940s/1950s. They come apart with a handful of screws and on the inside of the case there is a full schematic. I'd argue that it is perhaps not PCs that have changed but rather the rest of the universe of household appliances.

The first home computers were sold as kits and put together by fervent hobbyists. The original PCs relied on many iterations of standardization and competition amongst clones to become cheap enough to hit peak household adoption. Now PC use is waning in favor of tablets, phones, and smart TVs. As before, the pool of PC users includes a higher-than-average concentration of enthusiasts who enjoy to tinker, thus sustaining a market.


Often an article posted to hn will cause a mini-trend as users who are engaging with the subject discover and share more related resources.

These sorts of schools already make kids pass through metal detectors on their way in so phones can just be confiscated at that point.

If you have a map of all utility poles you could probably just avoid every straight line between any of them within some reasonable distance of eachother.

Most "utility pole maps" only show poles with power lines on them.

A ton of telco cables are on telco-only poles (basically just a really straight tree trunk shoved in the ground, no cross-arms at all).


OpenPoleMap is achievable. Just don't expect local governments to subsidise the mapping of obstacles to drones of the likes of Amazon.

it's an approximation of dangerous areas, catenary curves are more accurate than straight lines but you don't know the length of the cable so you don't know the droop height.

Do mortgages in Australia not have interest?

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