Videogaming, porn and gambling gave boys such dopamine hits that anything else they did felt boring.
Kids these days don't understand the rush of dumping their entire allowance into 15 minutes of Street Fighter, comitting borderline felonies while riding bicycles around the neighborhood, and then going into the woods to jerk it to that one Playboy before going over Steve's house to worship the devil.
Scotty uses the Nexus to return to the Enterprise B, replaces himself at that point in time, and then messes with the navigation system of the shuttle he's on to avoid the Dyson Sphere entirely (saving his friend).
Minification isn't the same as obfuscation, though. The only way I can think to obfuscate HTML would be to replace every element with a custom element.
Thank you for this list. We are aware of quite a few, but for reasons of backwards compatibility they've never been fixed. We'd definitely like to but doing so in a non-disruptive way is the hard part.
(I assume this thing is opposite the hole water comes out of. Sometimes emitters look like rigatoni pasta inside a hose, sometimes they look like stapled-on Band-Aids, but they always cover the hole from the inside. I'm assuming yours is the latter. If there's no hole on the other side of that, then I don't know what that is.)
Basically, if a clump of not-water enters the hose from the source, this thing will stop it from trying to squeeze through the hole and instead loop back around to the source or kinda spread out along the entire run.
From the other direction, if a plant sticks its roots in the hole, it'll feel the plastic and try to take root somewhere else. Most plants don't like to work that hard to root into stuff, so basically anything will dissuade them from entering the hole. (There are some exceptions, and those exceptions are total asshole plants who will root through anything anyway, like bricks and shit. You have to nuke those plants back to the source before you even start laying tube.)
That's the emitter. It's a piece of plastic designed to prevent clogs and to impede roots growing into the tube. Drip tubes are more than just hoses with holes punched in them. (Hoses with holes punched in them are called soaker tubes.)
Source: I used to install and service septic tanks.
The man who killed Google search is required reading at this point.