

Some Willem Van Spronsen type stuff maybe?


Some Willem Van Spronsen type stuff maybe?


In Time (2011). Time is currency in the dystopia in the film - paying for something decreases your lifespan, earning wages increases it.
The movie sets up a really cool class structure, wherein there are rich people born with/inheriting hundreds of thousands of years of life, and poor people barely managing to scrape enough hours to stay alive until they can earn more the next day. There are segmented areas of the city that cost years to get into.
Overall incredible premise, but the story wasn’t exceptional beyond a couple of the cool mechanics you might expect based on said premise.


Very cool image! It looks like there’s some text on it. Would you mind responding to this comment and telling me what the text says?


I sometimes like to make simple, big, one-pot meals that just rely on increments of tablespoons for spices and cups for lentils/rice/etc.


I know someone with a decade old Leaf and that thing is still going strong with more than 300k on it.


The Mission, though I haven’t seen the movie yet.


Ads in my notifications and my lock screen.


It also breaks down to CO2 after, right? A small amount but still.


Not really a hilarious assumption, but it was only this year that I actually learned anything more than the names of a few STIs. It’s good to familiarize yourself with the risk profiles and treatment options of the common ones, and get tested regularly if you’re sexually active.


It’s incredibly hot in my region for this time of year; basically summer temperatures in October. It’s a bit trippy when the leaves are all changing or fallen and I can’t split wood without pouring sweat and overheating after ten minutes.


I sometimes feel like the last person that managed to land a decent tech job without an undergraduate degree, but a good part of that was being able to play a normal, likeable person in the interview.
I think what you say might be true for any field that’s new enough. There’s high demand for labourers, very little skill around, and a low barrier for an autodidact to pick up the basics and outshine the competition.


Still a hot take probably but everyone I know hates JS.


I think this is accurate on a larger scale, but I’ll often do things like breaking up a large chain of methods with an interim variable just for readability. A few lines of simple math is better than one line of bit shifting wizardry that does the same thing but doesn’t show the semantic meaning of the operation.
I liked Bradley Cooper but after watching American Sniper I can’t see his face anymore without seeing the smug visage of imperialist murder.