

With modern induction cooking this should not be as problematic. You can use the magnetic field to put something in motion


With modern induction cooking this should not be as problematic. You can use the magnetic field to put something in motion


Why is he tweaking the recipe on his own while franchises located in the rest of the world have used alternatives for decades? Potassium bromide has been banned in Europe for 36 years as it causes dna damage and tumors in animals.
Some luxury models have this, including massage settings. To be honest I dont miss it. But seat cooling would be nice in hot summers.
It seems to be in German


From the same article: If you prefer tapping, you can select Summarize Page under More in the three-dot menu.


Nice that they use the Mistral AI, supporting European innovation.


I believe its roots have more to do with the railways than with the military. I have never called it military time to be honest.


Well, in crypto all your assets are on the blockchain. But you can access them using wallet software. You can have multiple addresses that have a balance, and most of the time anyone can see those balances, as the ledger is synchronized and transactions are checked by all clients.
However, in order to access and send the money, you will need proof that you are the owner. Therefore every address has a keypair. In older desktop clients, there was a local file called wallet.dat which stored all of the owned wallet addresses and their private keys. That file could optionally be encrypted. Newer clients often use a mnemonic phrase and derive all keys for the addresses based on that single phrase, but the person in question still had the original wallet.dat, even unencrypted, meaning he could access the keys all along. Not sure what the mnemonic had to do with it. Perhaps that belonged to a newer wallet where he imported the old addresses into.


Same in Europe, it’s generally not allowed to have distracting lights or signals on cars. Advertisements on trucks are only allowed if they are passive (e.g. painted or printed).


There are many other crucial steps to take for cross border competition to take off. European countries often still use incompatible voltages, alarm systems and rail sizes.


Opus is a hybrid codec, it combines codecs for both speech and higher quality audio/music.


Now try it with chrome


All Android phones support Opus which makes it a great format if storage space is limited, as it’s optimized for low bitrates. You can go as low as 64 kbps if you are not picky. 128 kbps is near transparent and certainly enjoyable, while 192 kbps is basically a 320 kbps mp3 equivalent.
At 128 kbps, one can store 5000 songs even if they have just 20 GB to spare, as mentioned above.


The general conception is that it does improve focus in the class by taking away distractions. However, it doesn’t always improve end results as many kids double down on smartphone use after school. Nevertheless it’s a step in the right direction


Same here. Moved away from Spotify and store the music straight on my phone. I use Poweramp to play and manage the library, which has excellent Android Auto support as well. And I use the Seeker app to use Soulseek straight on the phone. I also convert to Opus using Ffmpegme to save space as I don’t need lossless on my phone and a 128 kbps Opus file sounds just as good as a 192+ kbps mp3.


The quote is obviously incorrect, perhaps the engineer meant to say “absorb 1.2 GWh and start providing power to the grid in a matter of milliseconds”, and it was lost in translation.


From what I read, it does 800 MW max, which is still a lot.
1.2 GWh is just the capacity. And response time can indeed be quite fast as the system is always on standby, but I would guess it would still take a few seconds to go from zero to full power


Not sure if that’s a problem though, the German power grid is connected to many European countries including France, Switzerland and Austria.


Personally, for long term storage, I’m more a fan of simple solutions because they scale better, such as using the excess electricity to pump water up a hill, then using generators in the winter to convert it back to electricity (pumped storage).
It’s partly due to the social systems in place in many European countries. Unemployment benefits, mandatory affordable health insurance, allowances for low incomes, affordable social housing etc ensure that almost no one falls of a cliff and people have a chance to reach the quality of life they want to achieve.