But I'll lose so much money needing to refill the blinker fluid! :P Seems like it's not produced anymore though. Maybe I'll test-drive the i4, though it's a different class than the i3...
I've only tried Model 3 and Y out of the Tesla line, but yeah, I'd pick something else if I wanted a "city car" here in Europe. I'm spoiled, so it feels nice having a "police car" as my daily driver, especially when the price classes here are so comparable. Even the brands that are usually much cheaper when picking an ICE car, are barely cheaper than the more luxurious EV models. (And the used market here is awful, thanks in part to how weak SEK is -- most just get exported to the rest of Europe)
Yeah, I've driven probably the majority of EVs on the market, and it's hard to match how enjoyable it is to drive a Tesla. It's like driving a spaceship. I probably would have leased one just a couple years ago, but my next car will almost certainly be a Polestar instead.
So you mean they have an entirely different "base" coffee when making a normal latte vs an ice latte? A latte should just be espresso and milk, and an iced latte is just that + ice...?
So it sends data to/from a remote place? A place that's probably far away, kinda like those fluffy-looking things in the sky? May I suggest that you name your idea "cloud computing"?
I assume the people in the picture were "melanin enriched"? There you have your answer.
It's a shame that you can't know when seeing such posts if the person resharing it has good intentions or not. "Don't open your door for strangers" is often good advice after all.
Because they're saying that people are afraid of AI taking their job, as if the majority of people enjoy their jobs? People don't want to be without an income. As if our benevolent oligarchs will suddenly give us even the smallest chance of getting some kind of basic income?
Unwashed eggs have a shelf life of like 3 weeks. If I put them into the refrigerator, they're still good for at least 2 months. I've eaten eggs that sat in my fridge for almost 3 months, and there was absolutely nothing wrong with them; float test, inside visuals, and taste was perfect.
We don't usually sell washed eggs, so I don't know what their shelf life usually is, but a search shows that it's like 5 weeks at the most? So an extra couple weeks? That doesn't seem like a huge difference especially when considering the negatives.
before the salmonella gets through the porous shell.
We don't even have salmonella in our egg production lines due to better rules and quality controls, but even if we did, how would removing the cuticle reduce bacteria risks? The cuticle is surprisingly resilient; bacteria doesn't just "get through" it that quickly or easily.
Also consider that the egg's cuticle doesn't just hold out bacteria... it also holds in moisture etc. And when moisture leaves the egg, what happens with the displacement? It sucks in air from outside, which may contain contamination, or any salmonella that wasn't fully removed. I hope your refrigerator (and all the cooling rooms the eggs have been in prior to you buying it) have cleanroom standards and humidity control!
The EU sells unrefrigerated eggs because they're fresher - they spoil significantly faster than American eggs.
Why would we sell something that expires quicker, if it'd reduce food waste by having a longer shelf life? Stores here don't like to throw away expired products instead of selling them.
Consider that the more reasonable answer is cultural differences. Many Americans have an extremely naïve view of agriculture. They would see their eggs with some dirt on it, and would flip out instead of Googling "wtf is a cloaca?"... it's a similar reason why Americans put tons of unnecessary additives and coloring into their foodstuffs.
(And yes, of course the EU's rules are far from being perfect, but my common sense and science shows that unwashed eggs should be superior. I like eggs btw.)
Always have. The article is from 2016 btw.