Can you use changes in monetary policy to explain why grocery store profits are higher than before? I would think that in the event of inflation stores would stabilize to profits that are roughly the same (percentage wise) as they were prior to the inflation occurring. To the best of my knowledge, this has not happened.
This is the first article I found, and in it they don't mention any economic policy as a major cause.
They might have a ton of student loan debt (+vets don't make much) so their after-loan income is fairly modest.
This might be different in your country, but in the US this isn't true.
Inflation doesn't track cost of living - it includes things like military expenses in its basket of goods. Cost of living is indexed by the Consumer Price Index (CPI) which only includes items that households purchase in its basket of goods. However, even CPI is flawed since it still fails to account for shrinkflation and is artificially kept low to keep social security payments lower (and the system solvent).
There are a few router with 10gbps ports on the market, like asus gt-be98 pro. They don't actually run 10gbps since the processors can't keep up, but they do run well above 2.5gbps.
There are a few router with 10gbps ports on the market, like asus gt-be98 pro. They don't actually run 10gbps since the processors can't keep up, but they do run well above 2.5gbps.
White hair by the door is Bell Cranel from danmachi. Not sure whothe person standing next to him is. Elf in green is sylphiette next to rudeus greyrat, both from mushoku tensei.
According to the example on this Wikipedia page you live in a village not a town. Just thought it was neat.
Isn't this old news? We've known about China and other countries hacking US infrastructure for decades. See: https://apnews.com/general-news-c8d531ec05e0403a90e9d3ec0b8f83c2
If you have the same pixels on all the time then yes you'd have faster burn in. However, since you'd be looking at different text, this degradation would be spread over the different pixels. Not uniformly, but good enough that it doesn't matter for practical usage.
No because the white parts are what will burn in. Black is the off state for OLED. This is also why many apps for Lemmy (and previously reddit) have a dark theme option for OLED devices that uses full black instead of grey so that the pixels not in use are fully off.
@cabb
@lemmy.dbzer0.com