

Maybe they should change 開ける to "to open something)


Maybe they should change 開ける to "to open something)


And it turns out a lot of the time that’s more efficient. Hence the Honda Civic.


You’re right, my mistake. But for example, the BMW 530e G60 does have a button to charge the battery from the engine, and it is a PHEV. So it does exist.


It depends, some use the engine to charge the battery (e.g. the Honda Civic).


I think the point is that PHEVs do not achieve the real world emissions promised by the manufacturers, which would call into doubt reliance on them to save the climate as well as tax reliefs. Particularly, company cars are historically subsidized too much, and they get even more subsidies if they are hybrids, only to then never charge them.
He said his grandparents told him so
I guess it’s only the case for the Mandarin-speaking population
I generally agree, and I have the same mindset. So you can imagine how surprised I was when my Taiwanese friend told me how much better off Taiwan was after the Japanese occupation. Probably the only Asians with a positive opinion of Japan…


That’s because it just sounds cool… But for Valve, I assume the reason is that it’s like the counterpart to Proton (protons are in the nucleus, and electrons are leptons)
Ich hatte auch einen richtigen Banger beim täglichen Pendeln: Vorherige S-Bahn fährt genau vor meinen Augen ab. Nächste S-Bahn fällt aus. In den Bus komme ich kaum, weil er so voll ist. Bustür geht erstmal 10 Minuten nicht. Und zum Schluss fährt die U-Bahn 20 Minuten ohne Durchsage nicht weiter.
Fun fact: German actually has a distinction between these two meanings of the same. “Dasselbe Schiff” would be the ship itself, and no other ship, even if it is the same. “Das gleiche Schiff” is another ship that is the same.
But I think it’s better for it to fail from expected behavior vs unexpected behavior. Your storage being full is very transparent and expected, but that a file reaches max size and starts cutting off is unexpected and would surprise a lot of people.
I myself use supercomputers and the log files can get into a lot of GB, and I would hate it if it just cut off at some point.
Well, Linux is also made for servers and super computers, and just imagine it refusing to keep logs because the file’s too large


Die*


I used to run Debian Testing and it borked my install - never had that problem on e.g. Arch. I feel like because it’s not a rolling release as the default but explicitly for developers, it’s less stable. But that might just have been bad luck.
Na gut, gegen einen Stromausfall ist kein elektrischer Zug gewappnet…


It’s not an electromagnet, it’s a superconducting magnet. And turning it immediately off makes it melt.
Bei Schnee hat bei mir ABS schon bei unter 30 gegriffen