Playing the first mission a bunch of times was a bit of a chore but I did like the multiple endings and branching story. I've played around half of the endings many years ago. The "I'm an Android now, I guess?" ending is my favourite.
Since the correct mathematical answer isn't one of the options, the people picking the other options are representing a real resistance to the order of mathematical logic that binds us.
The real answer is 14 because I'm 14 and this is deep.
This is a good idea for long routes with medium to high demand that have a portion through major construction/traffic causing buses to bunch up. Then buses can be placed in and out of service at the terminals as needed.
You should do what you need to do to make your work environment more enjoyable for you.
Talk more or talk less about non-work stuff with your co-workers, depending on if you like chatting and if your co-workers like chatting.
Request a new/better chair, or get a new chair and expense it if you can. The right chair can make a real difference in how comfortable you feel at work.
Stand up and take 1 minute breaks on the half hour to hour, to clear/refresh your head and stretch. People in decades prior took smoke breaks all the freaking time.
Wear comfier clothes within the dress code: Stretchier stuff, comfortable belts, womens fashion I don't have experience with so I can't offer anything helpful.
If it's too cold, wear another t-shirt or under garment (or 2 if it's freezing) under your shirt/dress. If it's too hot get a fan and/or short sleeve dress shirt.
Request another monitor from IT. For me, it makes work a lot easier because going between screen was extremely annoying to me.
Bring your own keyboard, mouse and earbuds (with your manager's permission). Maybe try to avoid clicky (blue) switches, but more focus on what's ergonomic and comfortable for you.
Add a tasteful trinket or two of stuff you find interesting to your desk. Like photos or mini figurines.
Get permission to WFH for a portion of the week.
If your manager is annoying, try to negotiate, otherwise move to another division or get a new job. That can't be fixed easily.
Although there are a lot more liberals than there are conservatives in this site and much of Lemmy, reasonable people making disagreeable opinions in good faith is allowed here. However, a conservative argument often gets replied to by several people so I can totally understand that it takes patience for a conservative to reply to everything calmly.
In any discussion, it's important to know where the boundaries are. When things get too far out of hand or away from the initial topic, it's time to drop it before getting too heated.
20 years ago, give or take 10, VHS video tapes were a major form factor for films and entertainment at home. Of course you could record for 8 hours at trash quality but you could get 2 hours at better quality. So to best accommodate films for VHS they cut them down to 2 hours max (118 mins was a frequent runtime for adult movies and 88 mins for kids movies).
You have a point. It's also clear that the Ford pickup in OP's picture hasn't done anything remotely close to any of the things you mentioned and likely won't be, even once a year.
Frequent campers, contractors, farmers, builders/carpenters, junk and scrap haulers, landscapers all have a use for a pickup truck. Most others don't.
Coin Wallet on Linux repositories have worked fine for me.
Honestly though, crypto isn't worth your time. And half of the USB flash drives I had 10 years ago have failed, so don't rely on them for a long time, or keep at least 2 other backup copies elsewhere.
"Extrinsically motivated" games I like: I'll play it once, beat it, play a bit of post game, drop it.
"Intrinsically motivated" games I like: make my own stupid-ass goal, spend dozens and dozens of hours on it, finally do the stupid thing, progressed 1% further through the game, get bored, drop it, but then I pick it up again thinking about doing another stupid-ass thing.
I love transit and I live less than 15-minutes from a bus stop, but last night it took 2 hours and 15 minutes to get home by the bus that would have been around 30 minutes of a drive. Just having a bus stop isn't enough to make people consider switching. It needs to be at least reasonably competitive in time or price.
Also car advocates always are sure to bring up their disgust with sharing their commute with nasty people or the homeless. That's a tried and true method to drum up fear against a working, affordable transportation system.
Monaco: What's Yours is Mine is a really fun stealthy top-down 2D story game. It support 4P coop. There are several characters with very different abilities allowing for unique ways to tackle the map's challenges. There is also a scenario editor to create custom challenges.
Even slightly older styles like Liquipedia and Wikidot have far superior interfaces to fandom wikis. Every year they seem to get slower and more bloated with additional popups. Like wth is the purpose of the "Are you a kid?" question.
Playing the first mission a bunch of times was a bit of a chore but I did like the multiple endings and branching story. I've played around half of the endings many years ago. The "I'm an Android now, I guess?" ending is my favourite.