Yeah.....I hear about all these squirrel deaths and squirrel diseases and rabies issues from squirrels in the 14 states it's legal to own in......
ColeSloth
I'd say every other year is pretty close to average.
Well 15 years won't quite work as well due to cell frequency changes and the occasional fundamental software changes, but people could really stand to keep their phones for like 5 years no problem. New stuff coming out isn't usually "revolutionary" most of the time. AI isn't cool enough to want right now, and picture stuff only ever gets a minor improvement. Same for battery life or screen quality.
Really? Can't be a barrista anymore because you can only see from one eye? I've wore a patch before. It isn't much of a hindrance, really.
I'd imagine tearing and blinking may rinse them away before they could burrow, but if they got under the lense they'd be protected.
Your screen name looks a bit wonky.
Oh no. It was against the law so they killed it.
There's like 14 states where you are allowed to own them. Just because there's a law, doesn't mean it's a good one. You sound like the guy who'd narc of a black kid in the 1950's for drinking from the white kid fountain at the park "cause it was against the law".
Like 7 years in a house?
It was cool to waste a few quarters on at the arcade, but the entire game is actually only 15 minutes long, has terribly unrewarding gameplay beyond going beast mode, and is super repetitive.
MKII is still sweet. So is killer instinct, Mike Tysons punchout, tecmo bowl, super dodge ball, most of the Mario games, ff 6 and 7, chrono trigger, the first Mario kart, some of the zelda's, and a ton more.
"I'm insulted enough that we're going to shoot at each other over it" in a time where anesthesia was "drink a few swings of liqueur before I use these pliers to dig out the bullet and hope it hit only mostly unimportant things inside" still seems pretty ballsy.
Come back in a year or so and we'll see who has to eat their words.
Literally thousands do it, though. The depth perception thing is a bit overblown, really. You aren't losing that much depth perception.
Also, the article states her reasons for having to quit, and driving there isn't one of them.