

Blatantly call it rock candy. Make them roll perception to see if they notice the actual ground up rock.


Blatantly call it rock candy. Make them roll perception to see if they notice the actual ground up rock.


Make it a rescue mission.
From a candy factory.
Manned with rock gnomes with green hair.


but I don’t think I would run a plotline on human trafficking.
What about elf trafficking?
Or goblin trafficking?


Unless you’re riding downhill, riding around traffic, or at racing speeds a helmet isn’t really necessary for anyone who rides regularly. You generally don’t fall on your head on a bike unless you go over the bars or are doored. Obviously anything can happen but most people would prefer to be comfortable and ride slower than ride with a helmet.
I say this as someone who rides downhill and wears a fullface helmet.


Who wants to bet when the cut the taxes that the companies will just pocket the difference. Same as the tariffs. All these things supposed to be helping normal people end up helping the already rich. So weird. /s
When everything is hi-viz nothing is hi-viz.


I’m a member of a…less than on the up and up site (yarr, matey!) and this is how they deal with shit people. If someone you invite is a turd then you’re getting booted too when they throw out the turd. It’s like in the mafia when you are “witnessed” the guy who witnesses for you gets whacked if you turn out to be a cop.


I mean, if you didn’t realize this after snowden’s revelations, that’s kind of on you.
I personally haven’t brought my phone anywhere outside my house for a decade. Fuck bringing a spying device everywhere. If they want my movements they can do it old school.


Telling you to go learn isn’t being an asshole no matter how much you think it is. Go bother someone else with your ignorance.


The Orange Catholic Bible is against all thinking machines, not just AI/AGI. It’s why they have Mentats instead of using computers and calculators.


It’s not being an asshole. It’s correcting misinformation. There is no tone on the internet so if you read someone as being an asshole it might be a you problem, not a them problem. Sniffing packets doesn’t mean you understand networking as evidenced by the fact you think the modem is broadcasting your computer’s MAC address.
Just go read up on networking and you’ll realize that wouldn’t make sense.


I believe Kodi supports IR remote controls.


The biggest differences are speed and max amount of ram per module. For a htpc those shouldn’t matter much. I wouldn’t personally go to ddr3 unless I had some free sticks hanging out since the spec is about 20 years old now.


Personally i’d rather pay more than have these assholes tracking my viewing habits. But you could throw ddr4 in it. Should be fine for a simple HTPC.


Just build a media pc. Those media sticks have trackers and telemetry too.


No it doesn’t. Go learn about networking, the OSI model, and ARP tables if you believe that.


Routers are not modems.
Put your router behind the company issued modem and then VPN out.


If foreign made routers pose a severe cybersecurity risk then why would you let the current ones on the market stay? If they were truly a problem you’d remove them from the market, not grandfather them.
But like everything with this capricious administration the real reason they’re doing this is probably because someone greased their palms.
How Paris swapped cars for bikes – and transformed its streets
Under Anne Hidalgo – mayor for 12 years until last week – the French capital added bike lanes, cut traffic and reclaimed public space, but not without resistance
Ajit Niranjan
Paris has shaken off its car-centric reputation amid improving air pollution levels. Photograph: Getty Images
When Corentin Roudaut moved to Paris 10 years ago, he was too scared to cycle. The IT developer had biked everywhere as a student in Rennes but felt overwhelmed by the bustling French capital. Cars were everywhere. Cyclists had almost no protection.
But once authorities carved out space for a segregated bike lane on Boulevard Voltaire near his home in the 11th arrondissement, Roudaut returned to the two-wheel commute and did not look back.
He now volunteers with Paris en Selle, a cycling campaign group, and has watched with wonder as the city has shaken off its car-centric reputation.
“It was a process that started slow and really accelerated in the last 10 years,” Roudaut said. “At least in some parts of the city, we have a [cycle] network that is starting to be safe and pretty much complete.”
Paris has embarked on a grand transformation since Anne Hidalgo became mayor in 2014, planting 155,000 trees, adding several hundred kilometres of bike lanes, pedestrianising 300 school streets and banning cars from the banks of the Seine.
Parking spots have been turned into green spaces and terraces for cafes and bars. Fewer parents have to fear their child being run over when they walk to school.
Hidalgo left office on Sunday 29 March after 12 years as mayor, and now her fight to make the city more livable has been held up as an example for progressive European cities as national governments roll back green policies.
Paris’s new mayor, Emmanuel Grégoire, rode to the town hall after the official results of the municipal elections. Photograph: Kenzo Tribouillard/AFP/Getty Images
“When people ask me if I have any advice, I say don’t be afraid of being ambitious,” said Roudaut, who last year welcomed a delegation of Green politicians from Germany trying to understand why Paris was doing what Berlin could not.
Even though Hidalgo achieved only part of her plan, he added, “everybody’s saying: ‘Look at what Paris has done, it’s so amazing.’”
Parisians do not all feel the same. Efforts to make streets safer have taken space away from cars, sparking direct opposition from motorists, while referendums on charging SUV drivers more to park and pedestrianising more school streets were won with troublingly low turnouts.
Before last month’s municipal elections, Rachida Dati, the mayoral candidate for the rightwing Les Républicains, criticised the chaos in public space as “anxiety-inducing”, though she stopped short of proposing to undo central policies.
In a wide-ranging interview with the Guardian last week, Hidalgo said pedestrianising the city’s riverbanks had been “a tough battle” but now that it had happened people did not want to go back.
“Today there are generations of children who have not known cars there. People say ‘wow!’ when you tell them,” she said.
Experts say the transition was made easier by the city’s unusually tight administrative boundaries, which give commuter suburbs less say over its transport than in other capitals, as well as groundwork laid by previous mayors.
But still courage was needed to push through policies that inconvenienced motorists while introducing shared social and environmental benefits.
Cars were banned from the banks of the Seine in 2016 as part of efforts to bring down pollution, which also helped cyclists feel safer. Photograph: pawel.gaul/Getty Images
More could still be done but the changes so far are “fabulous”, said Audrey de Nazelle, an environmental epidemiologist at Imperial College London who grew up in Paris and returns frequently. She remembers when cycling was so rare “you could go and have coffee together” if you ran into someone else on a bike.
“What’s missing in the rest of the world is courage,” she said. “Mayors could say: ‘This is my opportunity [to leave a] legacy,’ but most will not dare.”
Paris is one of 19 global cities that achieved remarkable reductions in two toxic air pollutants between 2010 and 2024, a report last month found, although the list also includes a handful of neighbouring capitals with less progressive urban politics.
Fine-particle pollution fell faster in Brussels and Warsaw over the same period, while nitrogen dioxide fell faster in London.
Berlin, which last year opened a new stretch of motorway inside the city and voted to scrap 30km/h speed limits on 23 main streets, still has a higher share of cyclists than Paris.
Rather than being exceptional, Paris has caught up with many other cities from a lower starting point, said Giulio Mattioli, a transport researcher at the Technical University of Dortmund, who used to live in Paris. “The conditions were there already, you just needed to make some bike lanes and people would use them,” he said.
Cities across Europe saw a boom in cycling and bike-friendly infrastructure during the Covid-19 pandemic but have suffered setbacks amid a political shift to the right and the emergence of conspiracy theories that have unexpectedly taken aim at ideas such as having amenities within walking distance.
While Paris proper has undergone a radical shift to becoming a “15-minute city”, the extensive suburbs are still dominated by cars and are cut off by a busy ring road.
Analysis for the thinktank Terra Nova by Jean-Louis Missika, a former deputy mayor who served under Hidalgo and her predecessor, said transforming the Boulevard Périphérique that surrounds the city was essential to making Paris a post-car metropolis.
“As long as this 35km motorway continues to encircle Paris, the Greater Paris metropolis will remain a figment of the imagination, an administrative construct devoid of urban reality,” he wrote. “Because a metropolis cannot be built by erecting walls between its inhabitants.”