0° = Water frozen 23° = Comfy Indoor temperature ~36° = Human body temperatur 100° = Water boiling
I guess you have super hot snow over there. Pretty cool!
0° = Water frozen 23° = Comfy Indoor temperature ~36° = Human body temperatur 100° = Water boiling
I guess you have super hot snow over there. Pretty cool!
Well, trials are there for a reason. Battery-only-powered trains could be a good idea or a bad idea.
Remember the trial project for overhead wiring for trucks on the motorway? It ran for a couple of years, and the end result was that it wasn’t feasible, despite some interesting benefits. But if it weren’t for the trial, some people would still think it was feasible, while others would think it was unfeasible.
I’m leaning more on the unfeasible side with this train, but let’s just see what happens.
Thanks, glimpsed over that line too fast. So durability concerns are most likely the limiting factor, hence the trial run. If, say, the battery can’t keep up wih continuously getting topped up and fails after a short time, it’s impractical/expensive. But could be the other way around as well.
Makes me wonder if this is cheaper than refitting a train line with overhead wiring and if not possible, power rails.
Oh, that’s a sad loss of a fun law… Well, I don’t have an original text, since I was just pointed to a snippet of it a long time ago. It stuck with me because of how morbid it was.
I do have some memories on other fun implications of laws due to how specific they are. I can post some from memory if you like. Something about lawnmowers and defective cars for example.
I think BGB §18 was fascinating until it got revised/removed:
As far as I understood this, if you have to transport a corpse in Germany, you have to be a trustworthy person according to the German Civil Code (BGB). However, you do NOT have to be a trustworthy person to transport a skeleton. So if you see someone with a fresh corpse in the trunk of a car in Germany, you can rest assured. You can blindly trust this person. If, on the other hand, you see someone with a pile of skeletons in their car, then you should quickly take cover.
Meine bessere Hälfte hatte Mobbing auf Arbeit, jedoch durch den Chef und das indirekt durch unnötig hohe Arbeitslast trotz Hinweisen, dass dieses Pensum nicht zu schaffen ist und dann noch obendrauf Arbeit und so.
Letztendlich hat nur eines geholfen: Krankschreibung und Arbeitgeberwechsel. Kann man während der Krankschreibung tun. Die ersten 6 Wochen sind dabei quasi vollbezahlt. Danach 2/3 davon. Also ranhalten und raus aus der Situation, egal wie sehr man das nicht möchte.
Nur so: Bossing ist doppelt so schlimm. Da wird einem der Wille zum kündigen genommen. (An dieser Stelle Grüße an alle Zom100 Fans die die erste Folge noch zu gut in den Knochen spüren)
A dumb and sort of wrong version would be:
Politically Left: “Society combine for everyone”,
Politically Right: “Freedom for everyone at all cost”
Unfortunately, left and right are rather coarse terms within the political spectrum. Consider looking for some easy explanations to understand the finer details.
Fun Fact: The emergence of the “left” / “right” distinction in the political sense is attributed to the original seating arrangement at the Constituante, the constituent national assembly of 1789 in France.
EDIT: I hate talking about political stuff. Never a correct answer and every word is scrutinized. I hate it.
I feel the need to repost CGP Greys Playlist on Voting (or why the american version is so very very bad)
Thanks for the feedback! So, bad windows in my case. Either way, badly insulated windows just tend to form condensation it seems.
I guess in the end it’s the usual: Regular short cross-venting and wiping off moisture - or go on an insane money spending spree on insulation and air conditioning.
A picture should explain this better. Middle of the pane is difficult to measure in Infrared, but a regular probe taped to it shows about 18°C right now, so just a bit below room temperature. I assumed this behaviour is normal, since all windows in my rental are like this. Note that this windows specifically has not been resealed at the movable part of the frame yet. However, as you can see, it’s not the coldest point of the entire window either. Outside temperature was -3°C when the photo was taken.
Ah, my bad. I meant the silicone sealant of the glass pane where it meets the frame. The regular seal - while originally bad - has been fixed already. So it’s really the seal where the glass pane meets the movable window frame, not where the movable frame meets the frame fixed to the walls, if that makes sense.
Interesting idea. The thermo cam shows a consistent stripe of cool area where the seal sits all around the window. Not sure…
Couldn’t solve this as well so far. Looking at it with a thermal camera in cold weather revealed insufficiently insulated windows as the root cause. Basically the frame holding the glass sandwich itself is thermally too conductive at the seam, which tends to be a lot colder than the rest. If the difference is too low, condensations forms depending on the current dew point in your room. As a rule of thumb, if you have 22°C inside and 59% relative humidity, you have a dew point of around 14°C. If your insulation on the windows gets below that, humidity condensates there first. Airing out the room can help lower the dew point, but usually that’s barely enough.
The only fixes to lower the dew point are reducing relative humidity to inhumane levels (below 30% relative) or increasing the room temperature by alot (more than 25°C), all combined with several airing out of the room for 5 minutes 3x daily all winter.
Other things to do are identifying and monitoring high-humidity rooms nearby. Most likely your bath with a shower inside. If you have a “dark bathroom”, meaning now windows and just a vent, switch the vent for a humidity-controlled version and dial it in on around 63% humidity. Install a vent in the door near the bottom as well if not existent already, since a closed door chokes the vent. Once the door opens, water vapor enters the flat/house and raises the humidity quickly.
The only ultimate solution to this is replacing the entire windows with three-panel versions in properly insulated frames, reducing constant water vapor sources like in baths and kitchens using whatever venting methods work best there and lastly (most likely impossible due to cost if you are not considering building a new house) switch from traditional radiation heaters to an air conditioning heating/cooling solution which levels out most of the humidity issues electrically.
On e cigarettes specifically, after having watched bigclive dismantle lots of them, showing that they are practically just a few tiny cheap components away from being rechargeable and refillable (and they can indeed almost all be recharged and refilled), I guess manufacturers simply saw a market for it. It’s stupid from start to finish, but then again cigarettes as a whole are stupid.
Actually, some of them aren’t remotely placed correctly.
Gentoo… oh my. I vividly remember installing it as Stage 1 on a then-budget Laptop in 2003 or so. Sure, great performance for what that device was capable of. But 24 hours compiling time until I had a desktop… Oh and all the fun of dependency resolving with emerge. @OP, alternative title:
hell
I wish I could do that. Unfortunately my rented flat requires 23°C of heating to prevent mold thanks to bad windows that cannot be fixed due to the house community not wanting to pay for replacing them. And yes I’m practicing proper venting, supported with several devices for timing. I’m so glad I’ll be moving out soon.
Well, he made that dishwasher video a few years ago, sooo…
Are you implying they’ll remember their own actions? Doubt it.