OSM can technically replace Gmaps for shops and restaurants if enough people were using and updating it.
However, Gmaps in unbeatable for public transportation :( no alternative at all
PhD in aerospace engineering from Wallonia.
Docteur ingénieur en aérospatiale de Wallonie.
OSM can technically replace Gmaps for shops and restaurants if enough people were using and updating it.
However, Gmaps in unbeatable for public transportation :( no alternative at all
Honestly it seems like a sensible change. If I’m not mistaken Frankfurt Hbf is also a head station and you lose a ton of time because of it.
Looks like it does the job perfectly. Thanks!
It’s apparently early in development, but there’s an ActivityPub implementation of wikis made by one of Lemmy’s dev.
Why wouldn’t the friends like it then?
(Psst, he’s on lemmy.ca)
“Regular difficulties in social interaction or communication” is litterally a symptom for autism, my dude.
What’s the marketing meaning? I only know about the psychological effect of feeling anxious when disconnected or not taking part to an event.
Yeah, your teacher seemed to deal in absolutes: “it always happens” or “it will never happen again”. I think that events can always happen (again) but they don’t have to.
The important is now ensuring that they stay impartial and resilient even if populists are in power.
In french, we call this “useful vote” and it sucks when it is a crucial strategy… but in a flawed electoral system it unfortunately is.
It’s actually better than what OP said. We have a T cell for every antigen. Period. Even the ones that nobody has ever encountered. That’s because T cell receptors are proteins, that is, combinations of amino acids. Random combinations of T cell receptors are produced by the immune system (if it does not harm the host).
The caveat is that it takes a while for the T cell of an unknown antigen to be activated, enough time for the sickness to appear and even become critical.
Here’s the socially acceptable solution, even in public: you pick it with a handkerchief on your finger.
Thanks! I added “some nebulae” to remove any misunderstanding
I didn’t know the story, thanks a lot!
When we look at the sky, there is a line where there is way more stars than usual. This line goes all the way around the sky. This was called the milky way by the Greeks because it was like a road sparkled with milk drops. At some point, we deduced that we were in a group of stars arranged in a flat disk. Later, we realized that some weird space clouds (nebulae) were much further away than we thought and were actually other huge groups of stars like our own that we named galaxies, still after milk.
There are more details me course. Even along the line in the sky drawn by the milky way, there is one side where there is much more stars and dust than the other. We deduced that we were at the edge of the disk and the bright region was the center of our galaxy. Also, the amount of gas and dust that block certain types of light that teach us that our galaxy has arms.
That’s exactly how it works right now with VDI. I’m using one at work.
Ooh, nice. Thanks for making me discover it! I would have liked a FOSS alternative, but this is pretty good.
Edit: argh, it’s nice for local urban commute, but it doesn’t work outside or between big cities :(