If you ask, some places can do early check-in. You might have to pay for it, because it disrupts their routine
If you ask, some places can do early check-in. You might have to pay for it, because it disrupts their routine
Thanks. I’ve never blocked anyone, so it won’t be that. Could be the other thing
It’s not just Sync, I find. I’ve had this issue with other Lemmy apps yoo
I’ve just tested this and it didn’t work. I think this issue, of posts saying there is 1 comment when there are none, is some sort of Lemmy-wide issue. It drives me crazy, as it’s impossible to know whether posts have a comment or not without looking at each individually.
I wonder if my colleagues have picked up on the fact that when I start an email “Dear-” rather than “Hi-”, it means I’m annoyed with them
There’s a fair bit of published work on this. 33 senses is a common number but there are others who’ve claimed up to 53
You can buy very convincing stickers that make your frame look rusty
Don’t ask online strangers for medical advice. Go to a doctor if you’re worried
Comparison with current excitement about AI is interesting. Look at the language people use to describe the behaviour of LLMs
Flipboard sounds a lot like what you’re looking for
Because we have a lot of history. If we’re doing an historic festival it would be more specific about the period, not just some homogeneous “past”. But that said, such festivals are quite rare anyway
This is not good news. Cramming more cars onto the road means more emissions and more collisions
I’m a professional researcher and we all use Google Scholar. I’ve never seen Captchas on there. Are you on Scholar itself, or standard Google?
Another factor to add to these answers: if the water has been treated (if it’s mains water), then a not inconsiderable amount of electricity (and so carbon emissions) will have been used to treat it, and probably quite a lot more electricity will have been used to pump it around the country. So using water is also burning energy
“can be” is doing some heavy lifting here. I confidently predict the amount actually recycled is a fraction of one percent