Naturally. If you don't have enough water to sweat then you're in trouble at pretty low temperatures in relative terms.
GissaMittJobb
You have to have wet bulb temperatures approaching body temperature for it to actually become lethal - you can still lose heat through perspiration if the humidity is not high enough.
Ambient temperatures of 36-37 C don't immediately mean game over.
There are a few reasons for this, some of the most important being:
- The languages were not designed with speed primarily in mind and as such made some design decisions that fundamentally cannot be optimized around
- Authors of programs in these languages prioritize things other than performance when writing the programs.
Speed is not just about processors becoming faster - this is a large part of why DSA is important to learn as a programmer.
I mean, don't leave half your meal lying around on the plate, for sure. Dispose of your food in the manner most appropriate if you're not going to eat it, and then allow the dishwasher to deal with whatever is stuck to the plate.
Pods leave the first cycle without any detergent. Having powder allows you to provide detergent for both cycles - as intended - your dishwasher will work even better.
Properly used dishwashers do not require pre-rinsing. It's a waste to do so.
I believe TC made a video calling out the inadequacy of liquid dishwasher detergent, and having made the switch to powder I have to say that I agree. I used to get discoloration building up on coffee mugs with the liquid stuff, this went away right away when switching to powder.
McKenzie
Do you mean McKinsey?
There's not going to be one single number for this - you're most likely looking at views/production costs or effect on retention/production costs.
32% coal vs 39% renewables, with natural gas making up the majority of the remainder - https://www.eia.gov/state/?sid=CO#tabs-4
What a terrible take.
First off, unironically yes on account of higher efficiency in electric engines over combustion engines.
Second, what grids still run on 100% coal? And why would they keep doing that long-term, given that coal is just shit on its own merits?
Bitwarden is probably a more pragmatic choice for most users, given that it's free and without having to manage the syncing yourself.
Any password manager is better than the alternative, though.