Actually, real answer is that fears of that are already lowering oil prices. That and OPEC manipulating it again. It's not so much the ships but the transit after; also less people buying things, typical recession stuff.
Lower prices on gas tends to be seen as a win, although ironically the US is the biggest oil supplier so it hurts the economy here too.
At this point I want Switch 2 to flop so hard they go the way of the Sega and start licensing their IPs on other platforms, giving up on consoles. A shame, too, since their tech is little kid hand friendly and the PC market doesn't seem keen on tiny screen handhelds.
No, it makes very very little difference, I graduated late by about two years and took a gap year after that, too (most people getting PhDs take a gap). People getting into the workforce immediately usually don't have a huge advantage, either, although they go get a little more pay since they work slightly longer in their lifetime.
What's generally more important is how you position yourself after graduation. Internships if business, lab if grad school, etc. It's very easy to shoot ahead or fall very behind, though, as life after graduation is pretty much a matter of luck.
My brain did a weird thing reading this headline: "Michael J. Fox is confirming Marty McFly and Alex P. Keaton are the same character because of time travel?"
Yes, as absurd as that is that's how I read it initially.
Always have been, as I've seen during my UCLA days of people buying exam answers from previous weekends and paying for papers, etc.. I'm glad I never bothered, mostly because of dignity but what because I was poor (although those correlate). Rich people have plenty of ways to game the system, though.
Let's not spread incorrect numbers, our hmo made the cost of labor about $100 (maybe because of California). Childcare, formula, etc is still way more than $5k but labor is only expensive with bad insurance or no insurance, which is actually kind of more ironic since that applies more to MAGA than the rest of us.
I find it funny Microsoft gave me a survey on my work PC asking about how I'm enjoying its products (I laughed in Linux, "how do you like windows customizablity" let me go off about KDE lol)
But back to the subject. Literally everything they work on seems to turn to shit --- I wonder what kind of survey feedback are they usually getting? "Oh, Skypes cool but I really like Teams"
Funny how, despite corporate trying it's hardest to kill it, we've only managed to get better, more organized and safer with file sharing (and perhaps because of them, in many ways).
That sounds like a fun time. In modern day though I'd hope the selected representatives would have professional aides, especially where I am given your average American is practically illiterate. (It'd probably work better in Japan, lol.)
Reminds me that Nintendo had help lines you could call for stuff like Zelda secrets, and they may have intentionally added things like secret caves to incentivize that lucrative service.
Idk how to interpret this when I read it while laying on my right side. What's on my left... the sun?