Sedans were the default back in the 80s, now SUVs and pickups account for around 75% of all new sales (in the US, at least).
So, in terms of what the average car looked like then versus now, it's a perfectly valid comparison.
Sedans were the default back in the 80s, now SUVs and pickups account for around 75% of all new sales (in the US, at least).
So, in terms of what the average car looked like then versus now, it's a perfectly valid comparison.
Mastodon has a major engagement problem and I'm not sure why.
It has significantly more users than Lemmy but also manages to feel a lot less social, somehow.
Technically, it's for a combination of election fraud and falsifying business records.
But "paying hush money to a porn star" is definitely a sexier headline.
Expanding your network whilst also laying off your entire Supercharger team is obviously another of Musk's masterful gambits.
The MAGA cousin of
While hiding a bunch of likely keywords in the resume to increase the match rate is a good idea in theory, it's a fairly well-known trick by now, so some ATSs may already be programmed to watch for it.
Also, some of them apparently export the text of your resume into a recruiter-friendly spreadsheet, which could get screwed up if you've hidden a few hundred extra words in there.
2011–2019 Sonatas are also affected, according to this article:
https://www.caranddriver.com/news/a43941743/hyundai-kia-vehicle-theft-settlement/
I don't know how reliable these numbers are, but Hyundai/Kia have a known weakness that makes them super easy to steal.
It also assumes that the recruiter is even using ChatGPT, when the majority aren't. Companies use tailored ATS to compare the criteria of a job posting to information and keywords contained in a given resume.
Furthermore, AFAIK, these systems do not take inputs or instructions when scanning resumes, so this seems highly unlikely to have any impact whatsoever.
The difference is my six-year-old daughter isn't going to be playing Spec Ops: The Line or Call of Duty.
Yeah, you've pretty much hit the nail on the head. After hearing the dev's justification I can see what they were going for, but it's really poorly handled in-game IMO.
They way it plays out in the story feels neither darkly comic nor a poignant commentary on parents going though a divorce; instead it just comes across as unnecessarily cruel, and the player has no choice but to go along with it.
That's not an average representation of the increase in the size of pickup trucks, though.
Just look at the Ford F150:
Even if you compare like with like, pickups are around 30% heavier than they were in the 90s, and around 10-15% taller.
https://www.axios.com/2023/01/23/pickup-trucks-f150-size-weight-safety