

Industrial-scale coffee brewing can use counter-flow heat exchangers to recover pretty much all the heat energy, combined with insulation to prevent losses.


Industrial-scale coffee brewing can use counter-flow heat exchangers to recover pretty much all the heat energy, combined with insulation to prevent losses.


You posted this comment at least 20 minutes after someone responded to your similar comment in another post offering a US imperialist news source reporting the same news:
Fuck off with your bullshit.
https://www.cnn.com/2026/06/10/middleeast/iran-water-reservoir-us-bomb-hnk-intl


evolved with the times into various forms perfectly adapted to whatever their niche may be.
just like pigeons, owls, crocodiles, finches, etc.


weekly
lol
Twice daily is more like it.


This makes no sense. Assuming the two factory halves have equal revenue:
$16,000,000 × 0.0001% = $160 [edit: i mean, $16]


Seems more like a problem with the local streetscape devoting space to long term storage of vehicles.
One thing councils are competent at is issuing parking fines, if only the appropriate restrictions were in place.
My personal preference would be to see residential access roads transformed into communal green spaces with basic access paths for pedestrian/cycle/emergency/utility purposes.


I remember seeing a video of their system behind the scenes, maybe in an attempt to reassure us we’re not being facial recognitioned or something – it showed height dots walking around the store.
Hmm, so it’s actually far worse… I suppose that means gait analysis, too (≈mood/tiredness?). Combined with where you go in the store, how you pause at each display, what time of day/week, then finally correlating it with your card details and direct in your face camera at the checkout.
It’s an incredibly detailed picture of who someone is.
What a lovely relationship they have with Palantir and Microsoft. I love being a participant in the genocide machine every time I feed myself. (I’m assuming Coles is still in bed with them).
Blackbirds get into my pots and garden beds. They’re useful in that they eat a lot of earwigs and other pest insects, but in delicate places they do wreck a bit. Heavy enough rocks can stop them, or bunch up some chicken wire. Or carefully cut some chicken wire to size and they can pick through it without digging it all up.


Australia (and other countries not in the slop graph) are in this source for the post’s linked article.


The Aus stats are from 2021, too (most of the other countries are 2024). I can’t see how PPP was worked out, or if inflation comes into it. Also, '21 is in the midst of covid.
My anecdotal feeling is that our wages go a long way here. Food is cheap and high quality, essential medical care is pretty much free, fuel is cheap, electricity is cheap (in most states), taxes are low.
What about at or beyond the equator from the language’s native region?


sigh I knew alekwithak’s comment would get misinterpreted and downvoted.
FFS, the negative reaction against the stream of “unreasonable” questions posed above is exactly the problem. A question is asked of a professional warrants a clear compassionate response, not prejudice and derision.
Yes, the single aspect of Vitamin K1 injections/oral for neonates is highly effective uncontroversial science based medicine, but one needs to remember the context: so much of what parents are pushed to do medically around pregnancy and childbirth in a hospital-based birth is controversial and questionable, and in many cases the norms pushed by hospitals have evidence against them yet are still pushed by that system (for example: GBS testing & prophylactic antibiotics, gestational diabetes testing, routine induction before 42-43 weeks, continuous electronic fetal monitoring, circumcision).
In any case, prophylactic vitamin K1 can be offered orally if the parent is averse to shots for the newborn, sidestepping much of the perceived issue. It’s unconsciable that this is not offered in some places (USA).


Oral vitamin K1 is almost as effective as injected K1, and most countries seem to offer it orally as an alternative to injected. Oral is pretty much just as effective as injected. 1, 2
The article doesn’t mention oral. Is it still not approved in the US? (It’s the same formulation as that injected).
It’s very cheap. In Australia it costs ~9AUD (~7USD) for a single dose vial with oral syringe without subsidies.
Article from January. The list is longer now.
The widespread gently-spoken implicit celebration of genocide (and further depraved violence against civilians of the region) is sickening.
But don’t be upset, you’ll make someone feel unsafe. /s


The trouble in Australia with the Fairphone models is that some/all networks are blocking them due to a perceived/actual risk they may not work reliably on Australian networks, and Fairphone has not done what the networks demand for that approval. (There’s a heightened risk-aversion here at the moment due to a few highly-publicised emergency-call routing/connection/fallback failures).
It’s a work in progress though, and it should work already/eventually:
https://forum.fairphone.com/t/3g-network-closure-australia/109696
Pretty sure it’s a photo of a negative post.