Does anyone use a phone without a protective case?
XeroxCool @ XeroxCool @lemmy.world Posts 2Comments 952Joined 2 yr. ago
Small screws, unsure c-clip nuts, plastic/plastic panels that flex away, mystery grime, and too many screws. I'd have no qualms if the nuts were rigid in the body and used machine threads.
I did at least eventually have an epiphany and realize that it's not a 5.5mm hex on my strictly-metric Fords, but rather a 7/32in or some bullshit.
You make good points. Truthfully, I only got back into doing it myself within the last 2 years. I haven't done any vehicle more than twice. Somehow I always think I'm too good for the gloves and today will be the day I do it cleanly - only to use the same value in paper towels. Unfortunately, I know at least 3 filters are bottom-mount vertical. They have oil sitting in the galleys above it and spill more as they wobble off. I'll have to check the drain plug sizes and see. I'm sure there's repeat sizes, all being metric. I do use brake clean for the final spray since I'm not aware of any other nogrinse degreasers (also haven't looked)
I do kind of enjoy my 300cc motorcycle. The drain plug is on the kickstand side (good with the lean) and the filter is a cartridge type that lives high on the block and on the not-kickstand side. Basically all the drip is from playing operation with the cartridge on the way out. And it only takes 1.4qt.
My driveway is uphill to the garage. I point up hill, use ramps, chock the rear tires, and only slide in from the front.
But I do hate doing oil changes. Oil gets everywhere on the tools, everywhere on my hand when I get the filter, everywhere on the ground when it splashes, and everywhere on the outside of the containers. Then it lightly oils everything between my garage on the disposal site. But, once I stopped getting $45 employee pricing on dealership synth blend changes and started getting $120+ normie pricing, I got fed up. I liked having a professional, trusted mechanic have eyes under a lifted car rather than my casual eyes laying under ramps, but shit, prices are absurd. Hello Kirkland oil.
I also hate splash shields. They're mildly infuriating. I got the harbor freight Maddox oil filter socket set and now can generally avoid removing splash shields on my fleet
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I wouldn't find it creepy, though I probably wouldn't mask my surprise well if I heard about it. My parents are 18 years apart. There are some social differences but at some point, they must have liked each other enough. They also have differing interests. They're free to do their own thing (my dad stays home my mom travels the world). But, they're not a great match anymore (I have to believe they used to be). All of this has combined into a strenuous situation where my mom is planning for her retirement freedom while my dad is probably headed to some kind of assisted living because she's not going to stay home as a servant. I hate to be a downer about a relationship that hasn't even started, but I think it's important to consider this aspect before things get serious
Alright, I'm fascinated. Ironically, all the villages I know are in NY, but more so NYC/Long Island and the immediate area. I don't read many signs north of there because the trees look too damn pretty when I visit. I assumed they were legacy names but I'm probably standing corrected
(edit: I was unaware of how prevalent legal village usage is in NY, but here's my original comment)
I don't think anyone really uses the term "village" in the NE unless it already exists as the specific name of the municipality or neighborhood (or they're being cheeky). Maybe I'm too far into the metro-area suburbs, but not one village I know would classify as a village by OP's definition. I don't think Americans believe they have villages because they picture 3rd world huts, medieval towns, or eastern European towns with dirt roads.
You'll trip a gfi breaker, but probably won't breaker a standard 15a breaker unless you're quite wet and very touchy-freely with the ground.
Maybe it's the emojiis. It's hard to tell if they're sarcastic or the author genuinely thinks ❤️📈🏆
I always had the impression that the advanced tech takes a large amount of resources not readily available everywhere. The rebels are scrounging for resources from any place that defects or will trade with them, while the empire is free to demand, raid, and liberate whatever supplies they needed. Part interchange is going to be more important to rebels strapped for material, so they use all similar, basic, reliable stuff. We see lots of shinier, smoother equipment in the cities where luxury is accessible and full of variation. Meanwhile, the vast shiny imperial hangars are comfortably stocked with lots of clean ships for all different roles.
The shitty robots never feel that far off from the US military. There's all kinds of should-be-obsolete equipment that sticks around just because it fills a role (usually one role) and it still works. Regarding the low quality of their performance and capabilities, I'd imagine microprocessor manufacturing is still hard without perfect conditions. Clean rooms, electron microscopes, and general precision well beyond human visual capability. In our world now, if China were to try to take Taiwan by force and the chip manufacturers really do blow up the facilities, we're screwed. Globally. It'll set us back decades because that'll reset chip size and density. Even if we magically restart facilities that used to be around, they'll be on the older, larger architectures we can't fit in ourr pockets
So, basically, what we've seen coming from most of the wartime interactions the US has had with most of the receiving countries. HMMV vs Hilux. 15 different standard guns vs AK-47. Unstoppable convoys vs IEDs. Satellite comms vs horseback messengers. And then the USA still roots for Luke & crew...
Just wanna point out that dietary fat is not the same as body fat. You aren't made of walnuts, so walnut fat doesn't go straight to your belly. Just about all fat gets digested and converted into sugar, put in your bloodstream, and then, if there's excess, converted into body fat. To leave your body, it then gets converted back into sugar, gets used as energy, and then the CO2 goes back into your blood and exhaled. Sweating more doesn't cause fat loss, just water weight loss, and people losing weight aren't expelling it out by ass.
Solid waste volume has surprisingly little to do with the actual food you eat. It's primarily dead bacteria, 50-70% by volume. While some food makes it through, it's mostly the nondigestable things full of fiber. And capsaicin.
I was asking into the void, didn't mean to single you out. The restaraunt is owned by Mr Krabs, so, presumably, not krab unless krab is to crab like chik'n is to chicken (tofu alternative). Main reason I asked is because I think it was just a fan theory that the secret ingredient is plankton, making Plankton's goal to plunder the formula a horror plot.
The slow, painful death of technological privacy - brought not by war, not by scarcity, but by convenience of another app that saves you 3 clicks per transaction paired with the forced usage of certain functions within an existing environment
I didn't know they were illegal to use as a human. I use them often to tack on a related sentence fragment when a technical description is getting too long for the common smartphone user - at least, what I perceive to be too long
Under the cheese? I think that's just light on flat top of the patty rather than a patty-equivalent layer. Unless you mean the sauce.
Is it even beef? I can't remember if there's a canon source of the meat
Chad walks into a committee meeting to explain why we should end the production of our copper familiar. "LOOK AT THIS PENNY GRAPH, every time I do it makes me laugh"
YSK how to slice an Avocado
I just grip the put with a lipless bite looking like squidward trying a krabby patty. The pit isn't that hard, it's just mounted in a mush
I'm aware of the illusion, but very few topics feel as meta as this one
My understanding is that it solidified some rules and introduced rules and assumptions about interactions and capabilities.
BRB gonna throw that initial description somewhere on a LinkedIn post for a remote job
Pixel 7 here as well. I tried going ceaseless for the first time since I had a Casio Gz'One and dear dog, it's too damn slippery with the glass back. Regrettably, despite having a case, I managed to crack the screen anyway. It fell face down onto a pointy rock. My first broken screen, ever.