Having two sets of wrenches and sockets is absolute worst. Especially when it seems like 10mm does 80% of the work but is missing 100% of the time
Having two sets of wrenches and sockets is absolute worst. Especially when it seems like 10mm does 80% of the work but is missing 100% of the time
Surely you mean hard cheese
I suppose it depends on whether you are talking about African or European woodchucks.
How about another tongue twister?
This is what I got
Then you’ll love the List of tautological place names
Assuming you mean viral load referring to mucuses or blood of the infected. Given that the human influenza virus’ entry requires the viral surface proteins (hemagglutinin (HA)) to bind to acids present on respiratory epithelial cells along with cleavage of HA by host cell proteases (enzymes that breakdown proteins) to facilitate membrane fusion. These trypsin-like proteases are mainly expressed in airway tissues, restricting influenza viral tissue response to the respiratory tract. I would say it would be highly unlikely for influenza viral replication existing in an environment lacking this crucial interaction let alone a low-pH environment like the GI tract
I have been living in Vancouver’s downtown east side (de facto epicentre of drug use) for nearly a decade and this is the first I’ve heard of the programme. If it’s been on for a while there’s been no change. If it get reversed there will still be no change
CTRL-C – SIGINT
CTRL-\ – SIGQUIT
CTRL-Z + kill -9 %1
– SIGTSTP + SIGKILL
Props on the nature subscription, I had a subscription with physical copies that were fun to thumb through to really get a scope on my lack of understanding of everything in the world.
Why acedemic journals? Each article are all bleeding edge experimentation and theory that only the authors a handful of people really understand.
O’Reilly has a great subscription option and their books are very comprehensive and easy to read.
Tbf you are supposed use the signal before turning wheel
Otherwise I’d have to install a gui
Respectfully, that’s not true. GDPR Article 2(2)©:
- This Regulation does not apply to the processing of personal data: © by a natural person in the course of a purely personal or household activity;
Excuse my ignorance but what chapter / section of the GDPR deals with end users downloading pdfs?
If you’re already using an esp32 why not just get a simple ultrasonic sensor and measure flow on an indoor inlet pipe? You may need to know the pressure (probably 1.7 kPa) and temperature but that should be possible to calibrate against your meter readings
Then your project just becomes a simple pipe clamp that can be indoors
This just seems to be detecting if the browser is Firefox. The function is even named isGecko which is Mozilla’s browser engine used by Firefox. Edge, IE (Trident) don’t return true from isGecko
Unless I’m missing something I don’t see where the delay is added
You hardline republicans sure are a contentious people
It’s not really like they are storing DNA sequences anyways. They use a genotyping array which just reads ~650k single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs).
An analogy would be 23andme has a 6.4mil page book of DNA for a single customer but they only know the position and letter of single character on every tenth page. Sure it’s enough to identify someone (You can confidently use 50 SNPs to identify these days) but it’s not like 23andme was ever storing a whole genome
Fahrenheit is Celsius - 32 then divided by 1.8 which is not an easy conversion luckily its also 9/5ths
The trick I found out was to subtract 32 from Fahrenheit then divide by 9 then multiply by 5.
The other trick, you subtract 10% from your Celsius times by 2, then add 32 but this one doesn’t reverse well because you have to add 1/9th
What an adorable kangaroo
:.|:;