This is definitely something that I want to do, I just need to stop moving. I'm moving In one month and in one year, and in 3 years then I'll be able to do this project!
Yeah I fully know a lot of people are on 64gb. My colleges at work are on 64gb, I am not writing this to trash at all on people with 64gb. It's just that storage price go down with time. We can buy 1tb for SSD for 77€, I know you've got miniaturization but 100€ for 124 extra gb seems a lot
On the photo side I definitely need to work on it I'm certain there is so much I could delete and things I could move to my drives I fully agree on that
Since making my post I've also deleted 5gb of apps
No it's 44gb of apps! 8 of them is Signal discussions for me (I've converted all the people I talk to the most) then it's 2.6 gb WeChat, 1.5 TikTok, 1.2 Reddit, 1.1 Google then all are under 1gb
But that would signify there is an impact? And that you are crashing at 1m/s, if you don't enter in contact?
If I'm in my house, I am not moving at 130km/h from the highway near my house?
Gleason devised the Wug Test as part of her earliest research (1958), which used nonsense words to gauge children's acquisition of morphological rules—for example, the "default" rule that most English plurals are formed by adding an /s/, /z/, or /ɪz/ sound depending on the final consonant, e.g. hat–hats, eye–eyes, witch–witches. A child is shown simple pictures of a fanciful creature or activity, with a nonsense name, and prompted to complete a statement about it:
This is a WUG. Now there is another one. There are two of them. There are two ________.
Each "target" word was a made-up (but plausible-sounding) pseudoword, so that the child cannot have heard it before. A child who knows that the plural of witch is witches may have heard and memorized that pair, but a child responding that the plural of wug (which the child presumably has never heard) is wugs (/wʌgz/, using the /z/ allomorph since "wug" ends in a voiced consonant) has apparently inferred (perhaps unconsciously) the basic rule for forming plurals.
he is the object of its often-repeated question "Who is John Galt?" and of the quest to discover the answer. Also, in the later part it becomes clear that Galt had been present in the book's plot all along, playing several important roles though not identified by name.
Seems like the guy was written to be cool but isn't
This is definitely something that I want to do, I just need to stop moving. I'm moving In one month and in one year, and in 3 years then I'll be able to do this project!