Doubtful, given that Dendi is Ukrainian…
But now that I think of it, he’s a Russian speaking Ukranian so maybe he WOULD be their first choice…
Doubtful, given that Dendi is Ukrainian…
But now that I think of it, he’s a Russian speaking Ukranian so maybe he WOULD be their first choice…
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
Ceeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeb
I had these during kindergarten (in the 90s) in the US, but they replaced them with cartons by the time I got to first grade.
Which is good because none of us 5 year Olds could operate them
It has it’s own challenges, sure… but english isn’t even remotely close to being the hardest language to learn
The spelling is messed up, it has (like virtually every language) a bunch of exceptions to rules, but the grammar has been hugely simplified over the past 1000 years.
Not to mention that the biggest advantage to learning languages is familiarity and the fact that English is, well, everywhere makes it easier.
Sure Esperanto is easier, but for most of the world something like Japanese would be muuuuuch harder
Good point, it did mention US in the title
I’m going to guess you mean New Hampshire in the USA?
Where I live (London) things are virtually cashless. Nearly everything is just paid for be contactless. I basically never have coins and it would be a huge hassle to get them.
I love it, honestly.
Depends on the country though as well. Its probably pretty easy to figure out for big ones like the USA, but in smaller countries its often a mess…
It’s a classic example of the Paradox of Tolerance…
I’m not Italian, but I am moving back to the EU in the next few months.
Life isn’t perfect anywhere, but (at least for my wife and I) we decided that it’s much better for us elsewhere.
Biggest things are the cost of living and the unwillingness for anyone in politics to talk constructively about solutions.
We basically realised that we could be paid similarly but have our CoL cut in half, while living somewhere we find nicer than London. It shouldn’t have to be this way, but the current situation is outrageous.
I use it to run the Sky App to stream football.
The only options are a windows app or an android app (since you can’t watch in the browser) and I couldn’t get the windows app to work with WINE.
The android app runs fairly well with waydroid, although it occasionally runs into some hiccups.
I think they mean “reign supreme” in the sense that, given the choice, most people these days would choose the bluetooth anyways.
Its just so nice to not have a cord…
My most recent issue with Bluez is that it’s been very inconsistent about letting me disable auto-switching to HSP/HFP (headset mode) when joining any sort of call.
It’s working now, but it feels like every few months I need to try a different solution.
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
This just seems like more work for him!
You’ve basically just described golf’s superior cousin: disc golf
Everywhere I worked in North America (USA and Canada) paid bi-weekly.
Everywhere I’ve worked in Europe (Germany and UK) paid monthly.
I would guess that this is just a difference in norms