Maybe this video is talking more about suburban areas, but I find non-touristy portions of many urban US cities very interesting to walk through. I've walked aimlessly through NYC, Boston, New Orleans, SF, Chicago, St. Louis, and Portland and I've thought they all had cool interesting things to see.
However, I would agree with the video for some cities like LA (although there are many smaller areas within LA that are interesting), Dallas, and Phoenix. They tend to have a lot of uninteresting urban sprawl.
I use the Schlage Encode and have no issues with it. I don't know how it plays with a self hosted home automation though. I usually just punch in a code or use the app to open.
Sorry I didn't realize you weren't OP. But, I'm not sure whyyou're bringing up something irrelevant to the comment I was responding to. OP was talking about booby traps not meeting the "intent to kill" standard. I was providing a case where it met that standard.
Talking about the law in Texas isn't particularly beneficial anyway because there very likely isn't a booby trap case from Texas, these cases aren't particularly common (and based on my cursory research I haven't been able to find one). The Illinois case would be of use in a Texas case because it would be persuasive authority for Texas to interpret the law the same way. The equivalent to the Illinois first degree murder statue in Texas appears to be capital murder and second degree murder. Both have the intent requirement (Texas actually doesn't have something called first degree murder). So, if Texas follows Illinois's interpretation then one would similarly face murder charges in Texas.
You said it doesn't meet the "intent to kill" element. The Illinois first degree murder statute has an intent to kill element. He was not convicted of second degree murder which is a different charge.
I was like you and the I hit 35 and things started getting weird down there when letting one rip. Not sure if this is a normal part of getting old or if something is wrong with me.
The Twitter bird is hands down one of the best corporate logos. It's simple and recognizable without any accompanying text. I'd put it at the S-tier with Apple, Nike, and NBC.
I'm having trouble conceptualizing what this would look like. Is it a giant monitor that can also be a laptop? Aren't all laptops/notebooks by definition foldable anyway?
This article is only talking about one of the 10 metrics that CNBC ranked (Life, Health, and Inclusion). For this metric Mississippi ranked 11th. Overall they ranked 3rd worst after Alaska and Louisiana.