Grew up in a Christian household, but grew out of that kind of superstition around high school or a bit younger. My parents never did, so that and politics caused a bit of tension, but never enough to keep us from talking to each other, visiting, etc.
Why not just use the stored charge multiplied by the average cell discharge voltage at max load for Watt-hours? This may even encourage them not to go overboard on max load ratings.
Sure it could be a bit higher than what the user gets after voltage conversion, but if they are not maxing it they may get better?
I'm no electrical engineer, so this question isn't actually rhetorical - I'm wondering if this would work.
I just looked it up, and a few banks I've heard of do seem to be international (HSBC, Chase, etc), but it doesn't seem to be the default case for US banks.
If you are assuming we live in a simulation, then you have to assume everything else about it too - there is no evidence to point in any direction about anything higher than our own layer, so ours is the only one we can do science on. All else would be imagination, so make up whatever you like.
I do agree though that a simulator can't fully simulate itself, so yeah, it would have to be bigger and more complex in at least some way, which could simply be runtime.
And they aren't (for now) changing the license of future work either - just not releasing source until the same time they release binaries, which is totally allowed in the open source licenses.
Trump was explicitly the inspiration for rich-Biff in Back to the Future part 2, so if you've seen that, you'll have some idea of how people thought of him.
I'm surprised it got the right picture (and spelling) for Argon - which is in fact used in incandescent bulbs to reduce the filament's evaporation. Got a few obvious ones correct also. (Love the Hindenburg)
I'm pretty sure they were asking how we can instantly tell that it's AI generated.
The answer is unfortunately not easy to describe and comes down to "I can tell from some of the pixels and from seeing quite a few slops in my time."