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I once went to Costa Rica on a business trip, and every one of my colleagues there would head to the bathroom after lunch and brush their teeth. That’s what you get when you teach dental hygiene.
I once went to Costa Rica on a business trip, and every one of my colleagues there would head to the bathroom after lunch and brush their teeth. That’s what you get when you teach dental hygiene.
It does work on anything but “everything” as far as I can tell, however. If I’m looking at an instance, filtering communities does nothing.
I haven’t been able to find a way of viewing where filters work at all. Are they broken, or do they only work in specific circumstances?
Great comment. I ran dd-wrt for years, but finally picked up a used Ubiquiti router and purchased the Eero Pros for wifi. Software does the security now.
That helps, thank you. I am thinking pancreatic cancer would be in this category. That’s horrible stuff.
Somebody explain what solid tumors are.
Eighty one percent of Americans think God will save them, so why would you care about any of their other opinions?
IIRC people with older devices have found that replacing their battery does not significantly help, becathe replacement battery was manufactured at roughly the same time as the device it goes into, and has degraded over time even without use. This is anecdotal of course, but seems reasonable to me.
Some short browsing appears to indicate that batteries can last for years of stored properly, but how does one verify if the replacement battery in their phone was really stored appropriately?