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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)L
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2 yr. ago

  • It also suggests you might be willing to walk away from an incompatible work situation, whether due to workplace toxicity or your own outside priorities, which can be scary to the person you'll be reporting to.

  • How have these answers been working out so far?

  • If you used =sum(the fields) wouldn't it ignore any string cells and (in this case if the 1 is "1) return 5? Not that it's any less wrong, of course

  • That sounds like it probably has a lot to do with your problem! Does it happen regardless of how you drink? Straw, cup, bottle, etc.?

  • This is a great start. You can even fill a glass before bed so it's waiting on your nightstand when you open your eyes, like sizzling bacon on a bedroom Foreman grill.

    (This should be fine as long as you're not immunocompromised, in which case you may need to stick to temperature-controlled water.)

  • That's such a widely accepted and familiar way of expressing this that I can't even see the poor and bad parts. What do you mean?

  • Future

    Jump
  • Looking closer at the plant and random background object (door? cabinet? bulletin board?) it seems you're probably right, well spotted :(

  • That's the line they feed us, for sure. But if you ever actually added up federal income tax, state income tax, state and local sales tax, Social Security tax, property tax and assorted taxes for any instance in which you might come into additional money (capital gains, interest, prize winnings, inheritance, etc. etc. etc.) most Americans would probably be shocked to learn what real percentage of our income we actually pay to the government.

  • I wonder what that kind of quick response from Uber ends up costing restaurants and drivers in the long run. There are fraudulent claims to consider, but even when real mistakes are made, Uber has no way of knowing whether the order was complete when it was picked up. Probably makes it hard for restaurants to troubleshoot if there's been a real error, because they don't know that driver, so they can assume the driver is at fault and move on. I wonder jf Uber takes the refund out of its own slice or punishes both the restaurant and the driver?

    (This is in no way about you and your refund, I'm just interested in how the policy ultimately affects quality in restaurant delivery.)

  • Isn't that because of customers choosing to rely on third party apps instead of taking advantage of local delivery? This seems like it requires a conscious resistance on our part. If everyone keeps doordashing everything, local restaurants have no choice but to get on board, fire their drivers, and let us pay more for app delivery via underpaid gig workers.

  • 1947 was a long time ago, so I think they consider themselves Pakistani.

  • Most of the United States is designed to be so hostile to alternative transportation that scooters and bikes are mainly reserved for trail exercise and suicidal thrill seeking. It's simply not a practical recommendation, unfortunately; neither is public transit outside of a select few city centers. Many of us wish we had a way to ditch cars, but we don't.

  • In the United States (which I'm mentioning because that's the location of the survey we're discussing), something like 85%–90% of people live in places that are car-dependent. It's closer to 100% outside of cities. So a vehicle is an expense that can't be avoided. We're looking at loan payments (probably), insurance (definitely), gas, and repairs. The lower your income, the better the odds that all four of those expenses go up, as you're less likely to have a good down payment or buy in cash, and more likely to have your options reduced to older and lower-end vehicles. That typically means lower gas mileage and guarantees more frequent repairs. You're also likely to live in a lower income area with higher insurance premium rates.

    Of course, despite the rate of car dependence, about a third of Americans do not have reliable access to a dependable vehicle. That's some very unfortunate math.

    It's hard to be poor in the U.S.

  • And the "conservatives" are liberal as hell. The only thing they "conserve" is value for the ultra rich and some cherry-picked Biblical social order. Restrictions on capitalism? Let freedom ring.

  • Imagine how many times you'd have to do it to elicit that much blood