There isn’t long running strategic planning for this type of thing and no consistency in the volume of work, so the construction industry can’t invest in having the capacity. That and risk contingencies are way higher.
The post links to it, in case that isn’t working for you, it’s !fuckyourheadlights@lemmy.world
I think it’s worth pointing out that mapy.cz is a frontend for uses data from Openstreetmap, so the quality of the data will vary depending on if people have contributed in the area (please contribute if you spot anything missing), and there are other ways to access the same data.
Cool thank you, I haven’t heard of analog.cafe before.
I use a 40% (corne specifically) for full time dev work. I use (neo)vim so I don’t really need any of the keys you mentioned apart from some function keys, for which I only have to hold one modifier and having them closer to the home row is much more comfortable.
Not quite as bad for the environment, and often just worse when it comes to all of the other reasons why cars are terrible.
High top speeds isn’t the reason that HS2 is costing so much, there’s a lot of overbuilding of things like tunnelling under rural areas to keep certain voters happy. Also, the UK absolutely can afford to finish it, it’s a political choice not to.
We have that in the UK, the parties all publish manifestos before elections. I think it helps to get the message across and to be clear about what they are and aren’t promising to do. They aren’t, however, legally enforceable so parties aren’t obliged to actually follow up on their promises.
Musicians pay royalties when they use samples. AI companies don’t pay artists for their work.
I use it over other tools, but I haven’t used the proprietary tools so I can’t provide a comparison.
It looks like a hand coloured photo to me, which were apparently popular in Japan for a while
Timeguessr is very similar to whentaken, but I prefer the former.
I don’t see it as ridiculing anyone. It’s criticising the system that created this mess.
Blaming cyclists for something a motorist failed to do seems to be a uniquely North American thing.
I can tell you that it’s also very much a thing in many parts of Europe.
You don’t even need that many people before cars become impractical.
In two years presumably. It’s been two years away since 2015.
So we can build things to a somewhat lower capacity sure. That helps, but what exactly does it solve?
You could start your own blog