Thank you for the tip, I tested.
Without logging in, both resources load instantly.
When I log in, however - "lemmy.world" becomes slow.
Environment: Firefox on Linux, discards cache and cookies on every browser exit.
Thank you for the tip, I tested.
Without logging in, both resources load instantly.
When I log in, however - "lemmy.world" becomes slow.
Environment: Firefox on Linux, discards cache and cookies on every browser exit.
Just don't let him become a president-for-life. If someone becomes president-for-life, the way to end their presidency unfortunately involves ending their life.
Would subscribing to 20 communities be considered "many"?
I'm observing the same effect, but only with "slrpnk.net/c/world@lemmy.world" - it just now took me 20 seconds to load.
For comparison, the community (very new and low volume) "slrpnk.net/c/eesti@lemmy.frozeninferno.xyz" loads in a second.
Glad to see it reversed. It was shortsighted.
Sad, but informative reading. The article explains why it wasn't by accident.
There is nothing to do with the goods that are supposed to be bought, definitely at the price they sell - and the investments are supposed to be made voluntarily by the private sector.
Nobody's going to do it. There's no incentive mechanism and no enforcement mechanism except warm vapour out of politicians' mouths.
Realistically about 30% of this is maybe going to happen.
Also, what "all times in history" are you referring to? I doubt you have an overview of all trade disputes between the US and EU, and their outcomes.
As an EU resident: we promised him that during the next migration of flying unicorns, they would land in the US.
We're not even going to cheat. Unfortunately flying unicorns don't exist.
In my experience, most car sockets struggle to deliver 10 A and might be fused at 20 A (but a fuse is not a suggestion, it's a safety device). :)
Fortunately in this case, the charges are already in the hands of the court. The court does not have to abide by the opinion of the ministry of justice.
However, that a ministry of justice - which should be a mere support organization for two highly independent institutions, that is prosecutors and courts - is attempting to interfere in ongoing criminal cases - is reprehensible.
It's also reprehensible that cops get away with recklessly killing people. If there is no legal recourse against them, surely that makes people consider illegal ones.
The concerns are legit. :(
Then again, empires and wars make for great story material. Persistent peace... not so much. So I believe science fiction has a bias towards epic messes.
As for when this was written - wow, 1978. Probably before Iain M. Banks brought a typewriter home and started typing his first Culture novel...
...but as a result of his typing, even libertarian / socialist viewpoints of science fiction contain empires (often defeated) and wars (sometimes resolved without mass casualties, but not always). The damnable reality of literature tends to be: if there's no gun on the wall in chapter 1 and someone isn't shot by chapter 3, you have to figure out what sells the story. :(
Nice to have confirmation.
For those who haven't heard, adjuvants can increase the efficiency of a vaccine - producing stronger immunity with less active ingredient.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Immunologic_adjuvant
...and one of the fairly boring adjuvants is aluminum hydroxide. People ingest it if they have too much stomach acid. In a vaccine, its presence helps stabilize proteins in a solution (prevents them from precipitating out) and provokes the interest of the immune system, causing a local secretion of uric acid from tissue, which in turn attracts monocytes and dendrite cells.
Being able to visualize the problem is often nearly halfway to solving it. :)
Also, if you haven't got enough colorful string, try GnuPlot. :) It's free and it has considerable capabilities. :) It can even draw animations.