Oh, OK, I think I get it, we have a place like that in jokes over here as well, except it's made up 😂.
0x4E4F
Lol 🤣🤣🤣
What's the deal with Nebraska? Are people from there like really polite and helpful?
Android warns you every step of the way if you do stuff the manufacturer and Google don't advise (basically, anything that doesn't come from the PlayStore or messing with services and permissions). If you're an average Joe, certainly you're not gonna do those things. Manually installing apps not in the PlayStore requires you to first find those apps, which is not something your average Joe will do. Messing with permissons or services, again, regular users wouldn't even know where to find those settings or what they mean, let alone know what bypassing those will do... and you get warned all the way through the process. Even if you accidentaly tap on something, if it's an advanced setting, it will awarn you, and you have a countdown before you can tap Yes or tick the "I agree" box or whatever. Certainly a regular user will understand that this is not something to be messed with, so it will not choose to bypass those settings.
I know what you mean... I've made shitty choices most of my life... but, things are what they are, have a family now as well and you can't just give up on that.
But, still... as you I sometimes wonder what things would have been like if I didn't make my current life choices.
Yeah, I know, that's why the kernel with the drivers is not more than 150MB. Otherwise, you'd have the Windows situation where driverpacks compressed with 7z (LZMA2, solid archive, 273 word dictionary size and 2GB decompression memory, which requires about 128GB of RAM to compress) take about 30GB.
You have to pack the driver from each manufacturer because of signatures, even though they might even be the same with other drivers in the pack... but, REV differs and oh well, the driver installer doesn't recognize that driver as a valid one for that device.
Tell him what I proposed in the comment above. It's not expensive at all and works great (have done it in a few houses).
This is what was told to me by an old-timer electrician.
You dig a hole, 2m x 2m x 1.5m (or as deep as you can dig with a shovel). You take the load cylinder from an old washing machine. Weld a rod to that thing (on the side of the cylinder, not the middle). Make the welds good cuz that thing will go under ground and the elements will eat through it in a matter of years if it's not welded correctly. Put the cylinder with the rod in the ground. Make a mixture of about 3 to 5kg of salt with soil (depending on the size of the cylinder and the type of soil) and fill the cylinder up with that. Put the rest of the dirt in the hole. Voila, a grounding solution that will last at least 50 years (or at least that's what he told me).
not allowed to drive a grounding rod into the ground, etc...
What 🤨... how so?
It's mind boggling just thinking that things like this depend on the effort of one or two guys... while on the other hand, it's not so uncommon that a team of engineers and developers fails to deliver a working (mostly) bugfree product.
I think management is who is responsible for the shitty decisions, as always... and, in general, just holding the team back.
Damn... now that's a wholesome moment 🥹.
More active surface in touch with the soil, better conductivity. The salt increases conductivity. Once it starts transferring some of it to the sourrounding soil, the conductivity will be even better.
I was talking about a permanent solution, not a temporary one.