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I am buying an impact driver for someone for christmas. Any recommendations on a fastner/drill bit set?


I use the Milwaukee Shockwave bit sets almost exclusively, they’ve never let me down.


If you seriously think that's realistic I guess I don't know what to tell you.


Pizza chains have delivery fees that aren't paid to delivery drivers. Restaurants have service fees for cooking food and convenience fees for placing orders (even if paying, in cash, when you pick up), on top of the sticker price of the food itself, which used to just be the price.

Some people in this thread have talked about stores having signs saying they'll round change up to the dollar if you pay in cash, and advising to pay by card if you want exact change. I've personally seen businesses have signs on their cash registers that say "our cash register is easily hacked, we strongly recommend paying by cash instead instead of card" (I'm assuming so they can cheat on their taxes).

Businesses will do anything they can get away with to make more money, and they can usually get away with tiny fees like this. It's only a few cents, right? Except for them, it adds up.


#1 Is MAU. I wouldn't find it out of the realm of possibility that only 25% of owners played in the prior month. I wonder what this is for other consoles. I personally contribute to bursts of playing then months of not even touching some of my consoles.


That's honestly be a better time to have it. Most white collar employees are off work or things are at least quiet those weeks.


> Something along the lines of arbitrary subdomains which represent the request payload, and a custom nameserver that returns responses via the TXT record or something. Anyway…).

This is iodine. https://github.com/yarrick/iodine


I did something similar ~12 years ago, albeit it was just http(a) over UDP tunneling, and not DNS specifically.

I had to spend 8 hours in Stansted airport, and I managed to setup the tunnel while in the time limit of the free WiFi (I think it was 30'). It felt good, haha.


It takes processing power to scan the photos.


then it should say "this setting can only be turned back on three times a year"


Does it take processing power to NOT scan photos?


No, but the scanning is happening on Microsoft servers, not locally, I am guessing.

So if you enable the feature, it sends your photos to MS to scan... If you turn it off, they delete that data, meaning if you turn it on again, they have to process the photos again. Every time you enable it, you are using server resources.

However, this should mean that they don't let you re-enable it after you turn it off 3 times, not that you can't turn it off if you have enabled it 3 times.


where does it say turning it off deletes the data? it doesn't even say that turning it off stops them scanning your photos. the option is "do you want to see the AI tags" Google search history is the same. Turning off or deleting history only affects your copy of the data.



how sure are you that facial grouping data means the same thing to you as to MS lawyers?

all facial grouping data will be permanently removed within 30 days


What is that?


What was the discussion like around passengers controlling the UI?


Passengers can just grab the phone and do whatever they want.


Except apps like Waze will show you "this app is being controlled by Android Auto" and won't let you do anything on the phone's screen, you have to use the Android Auto display to interact with it.


Which is something the driver can do too, which is why this stupid restriction is making the system less safe.


If they do, it’s not on Apple or the car manufacturer for making it unsafe. There are a laws all over the world about having an infotainment system and distractions.


This trashes my confidence in 1Password. What a horrible look for a company I need to trust more than any other.


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