Yeah, but I still feel like the majority of people are stupid. That's kind of how apple got such a huge market share to begin with. People just happily locked themselves in to a closed garden with shit for options.
Can confirm. Done it for years and it adds a ton of time to your strawberries. Doesn't even take a lot of vinegar. Like a 1 to 6 ratio. Let em soak for like 5 minutes and you're gtg.
I should have taken pictures I guess, but I watched an Amish family take their horse and buggy down to the lake. The buggy had a boat trailer attached with an old ski boat (gas motor and all) being pulled. They went out cruising on the lake.
The costs of running an oven for an hour is probably costing you like 40 cents and most of that is pre heating. Buy a bread maker or a toaster oven to make your loaves in and it will be less than half that. For most cooking, the electricity used is a rounding error.
Yeah, but back then there wasn't "artisan bread" since it all was. Also no middle men or board members and ceo's and property costs and such. You were just one or two guys buying flour and salt and wood, making bread every day, that you sold every day.
No. If you're lucky, you could take the phone apart and reconnect the ribbon connector that goes from the display to the board and it will be fixed. More likely the display is damaged and would need replaced. No chance a lighter will fix it.
I do all my own maintenance\repairs of all my appliances, cars, electronics, etc. As well as helping out family, friends, and where I work. I've dealt with a lot of dishwashers and I agree with you. If you aren't buying commercial, just get a whirlpool (or one of the rebranded whirlpools like Maytag, KitchenAid, JennAir, and Amana). GE is pretty good as well. I've had a GE for the past decade and I bought it used for $25.
For most families, just get a simple one that plums in through the hot water side instead of cold and skips the water heating issue, and has a drying element, and is quiet. Noisy dishwashers are annoying.
"This was partly the result of strength in numbers. Chenoweth argues that nonviolent campaigns are more likely to succeed because they can recruit many more participants from a much broader demographic, which can cause severe disruption that paralyses normal urban life and the functioning of society."
In other words, violent protests work better, but they lack the amount of people.
So the guy who discovered it published a book and named his discovery in his book "aluminum"?
Well case closed. It's aluminum.