

Paying for education that “the market” wants us to have so they can have a larger pool of skilled workers, leading to lower salaries
Just your typical internet guy with questionable humor


Paying for education that “the market” wants us to have so they can have a larger pool of skilled workers, leading to lower salaries
Why are you screaming like hell, buddy?
That was a really hard to parse title


Plot twist: Lovelace has that name because she was another rope-powered robot!


I need someone to explain what this has to do with Harry Potter. Off by one, too?
Not explicitly shown, but important: the CEO’s brain being incapable of thinking beyond the current quarter, since better usage = long term stability


One without attitude but lots of dumb excuses


Bloodborne, Gran Turismo, Infamous, The Order 1886


Buy a used PC that can run anything released up to ~2014 and you’re golden.


Huh, I vaguely recall micro$lop wanting something similar with their XB1, back in 2013.
> Unsub, laugh maniacally
> See new opportunity to subscribe
> Cannot get “new subscription” bonus because they got enough data to tell it’s you again
> surprised_pikachu_face.jpg


A typical 22kw electric engine today weighs about 200kg, so I don’t think 250kg is too much
https://www.auctelia.com/en/materiel-occasion/moteur-electrique-22-kw-weg-w22/uQ7C20m1XhI1_5uS6FaAM
Might start a web series called “My journey into becoming a mangaka online but the evil CEO of 《SEO CORP》has stolen my creativity and now I must fight an army of robots!”
Whatever the hell people would expect from that title, it won’t be that.
Nor does the gun have 3 barrels


I wish one of the pages would list how that weight is distributed along the different parts. I would wager half of that weight, 700kg, was the battery, with the electric engine being ~250kg.


Ankh-Morporkian democracy of one man, one vote: the Patrician is the man and he has the vote.
Hey, I’ve seen that hint on The Sims!


Point us to the right direction


Dangerous Drake’s Daring Cage
I cannot in good conscience upvote this