Singapore is also beautiful, they slap you with a cane for littering.
If the Russian Army is canablizing old Naval weapons, there is a chance the Russian Navy doesn't have a lot of manpower or weapons to requisition from stocks. https://www.forbes.com/sites/davidaxe/2023/03/04/desperate-russian-forces-are-adding-80-year-old-naval-guns-to-70-year-old-armored-tractors/
This reminds me of having a palm pilot as a teenager. It played mp3s, and had pdfs, but otherwise you could only take notes and fiddle with settings. I read all of the origonal halo books off of it.
It's English, there are no rules. Call the cops, no one cares.
I am very happy to support the EU economy by buying Prusa. Outstanding printers and support. Also we don't have anything remotely close here in the US.
I am imagining the horrible graphics of Red Baron 3d (1998) played at a ludicrously crisp frame rate through VR goggles. The game had fast forward and play buttons because it took so long to fly over to the trenches or to ascend to a decent altitude. Solid idea though, it would be hectic with numerous biplanes dog fighting over France.
Edit: there are youtube videos of players using VR headsets and flying biplanes on IL-2 Sturmovik: Flying Circus (2019).
I enjoyed this a lot, thank you for the nostalgia.
Wtf, the future is weird.
I also am under the assumption that no material exists that could be stacked tall enough to build a space elevator.
Only about 4% of the worlds population had internet access in 1999.
The thought of having your digital foot print live on forever was kind of neat, but most of it wasn't worth remembering or will probably get deleted after a few decades anyways. Future generations will ever know about the witty banter on yahoo answers.
I am wildly speculating it is to collect all the workflows from remote workers in the hopes they can sell the data to other companies for future automation. Just another way of squeezing money out of users who already paid for the software just to have more information stolen from them.