Skimmed through the article to try and find the cause. They're still investigating but the driver's theory is a piece of road debris punctured the battery.
Before anyone thinks EVs are more dangerous, the article states upfront that EVs are much less likely to catch on fire than ICE vehicles, according to KBB reports.
If you are working at an AI company, here's how you can sabotage Anubis development as easily and quickly as possible. So first is quit your job, second is work for Square Enix, and third is make absolute banger stuff for Final Fantasy XIV. That’s how you can sabotage this the best.
Agree it's dependent on your personal values and goals. I prefer environmental causes and also try to help smaller local animal rescues because they're often run on shoestring budgets so a little goes a long way, whereas bigger non-profits have access to more resources.
Would recommend researching whatever you end up choosing.Many charities spend a lot of money on executive pay or marketing vs. core programs. I'll usually check annual reports for budgets or see if they're on Charity Navigator.
I'll have to check out Until Then, I've been reading more VNs than books lately and enjoyed Steins;Gate so that sounds promising.
I like Up Dharma Down's old music and their new electronic stuff is growing on me.
Getting back into guitar and found Joko Reantaso on YouTube to be super talented. Think it's great more young artists are striking it out on their own and gaining recognition.
Yeah this has been the most reliable method for me. They'll usually tout endorsements and those folks are usually easier to get a read on. Otherwise, try to find news stories or blue voter guides that mention them.
Air flow was key. Tried to get a good cross breeze from one end of the house to the other (unless the breeze is also hot). At night, we'd use a box fan in the window or door to get all the hot air out. If you can block your exterior walls/windows from getting direct sunlight, that should help. Curtains work (or you could also just place objects or plants in front to block the sunlight). Alternatively, you could install one of those large roll up sun shades for a more permanent solution. Did that for a few windows that get a lot of sun and made a big difference.
From personal experience, the following made a difference (but some will have a lot higher cost):
Replacing the insulation in the roof/attic. You could also add radiant barriers, but insulation is probably a better bang for your buck.
Insulating the exterior walls (drill and fill). Our walls used to be hot to the touch in the summer before this.
Double pane windows
Seal any air gaps or holes. Expanding foam is pretty good at this.
From what others have told me:
Installing a whole house attic fan to evacuate hot air at the end of the day. My neighbor did this and swears by it.
Painting your house a lighter color. Can't say how effective but makes sense intuitively.
Stuff that only sort of worked:
Swamp coolers. Works ok in a pinch, but your house will feel humid like the tropics. Would personally skip.
Portable AC. The exhaust hose gets hot so it's not as efficient as an external AC or window unit. But it could help if you're directly in front of the cold air vent.
I might try this. Normally would just pipe history into grep to search or scroll till I found the right command. Also smite is a great name for that function.
Awesome work, digging the dimensionality of the leg offset down to the frame and panel doors. Those Blum hinges are expensive but the soft-close is pretty sweet.
Some useful tips. I used to be enthusiastic about writing a blog on a static site I hosted, but the idea that it would be scraped to train some LLM makes me less jazzed about putting it out there.
Old videos were great too when they weren't stuffed with ads, asking you to like and subscribe, or have similar wacky faced thumbnails. Anytime money gets involved, the incentives get all out of wack.
Made a big difference honestly. Used to work in an office where I sat for 8hrs a day and my back/legs would go numb after awhile. Went all in on an ergo set up during COVID. Sit-stand desk, split keyboard, vertical mouse, etc. I figure if I use them more than 40 hrs a week and they prevent some form of RSI or back-pain, it's worth it.
Also, the other half of the equation is stretching, yoga, and walking. If I have to wait 5 min for something to run, I'll do a quick stretch while waiting.
And energy. And water. And land. The list goes on and on.