[-] [email protected] 2 points 5 days ago

I definitely agree about Christmas. It's secondary to Easter. Ash Wednesday is not even a holy day of obligation for Catholics, but the Octave of Christmas, January 1st is.

[-] [email protected] 12 points 1 week ago

Read between the lines in Amazon's response.

They probably monitor the drivers for lip movements to see if they're talking on the phone, but their monitoring can't differentiate between singing or talking to one's self and talking or singing to someone else, so everyone gets flagged. The drivers know the best way to avoid the ire of management is to simply not move their lips.

It may not be an outright prohibition, but it does have a chilling effect, which makes it as good as one.

[-] [email protected] 14 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago)

HVAC systems.

When my wife and I we had to replace our forced air furnace and central air system in the late autumn due to carbon monoxide literally the evening before our son was to be born, I felt under pressure to get something in place.

I told them I needed a more powerful air conditioner for all the unique heat-generating equipment in my basement, especially since our old system had trouble keeping up. They said that the new unit was more than enough for the square footage. I reiterated again, that air conditioners don't cool square footage, they cool BTU's, and the average home doesn't have a grow op and server farm in the basement generating significant heat. Then, they decided to hit me with the old "I've been doing this for {x} decades" speech.

Needless to say, I've had to consolidate servers, stop indoor gardening, replace the bulbs in the house with those shitty blue-hued LED's that can't dim right (and dimmer switches to handle the change in load characteristics), take the weather into account when cooking indoors and clean both sets of A/C coils on a more frequent basis. The air conditioner still can't keep up and when we have a string of hot days, we can't always count on the cooler evenings to get the house back down to "room temperature".

Oh, and now our old chimney drips water into the basement.

[-] [email protected] 33 points 2 months ago

...hospitals sell your information, too.

I feel so sorry for those of you living in places with for-profit healthcare.

[-] [email protected] 46 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago)

That's limerence.

A more stable relationship is when feelings crystalize, but until then, there's limerence. Two-way limerent relationships are as unstable as a bottle of undiluted nitroglycerin. In any case, limerent relationships are quite common, and are the stuff of music, art, and poetry.

[-] [email protected] 15 points 3 months ago

If the water is cooled with a low-energy method like a Peltier cooler, the heat has to go somewhere.

[-] [email protected] 81 points 4 months ago

Also. around the mediterrainian, fish is a food staple of the poor. The point is to eliminate excess.

I'd argue that an inlander ordering fish at a fancy restaurant on a Friday during Lent is not following the spirit of the law (which can be more of a discipline than a rule, depending on the local episcopal authority), especially if it's not a special occasion and the fish was caught hundreds of kilometers away.

[-] [email protected] 39 points 6 months ago

There's a reason why every encounter with an Angel starts with them saying "Do not be afraid."

[-] [email protected] 24 points 7 months ago

It's a project by an Australian team, so one would assume two things:

  1. It's in Australian Dollars.
  2. Australia has experienced severe hyperinflation overnight (or earlier today, for many of us reading this)
[-] [email protected] 14 points 8 months ago* (last edited 8 months ago)

This was definitely an unnecessarily gendered post. My wife's secondary function is transforming food into heat energy.

[-] [email protected] 38 points 11 months ago

Ten 9/11's?

Jesus, that's... 8 and 2/11.

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yannic

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