I tend to put 2 - 3 days worth of stuff in the fridge, then freeze the rest (if it's something reheatable)
I then eat something else from the freezer for the rest of the week so I don't eat the same thing for a whole week.
I tend to put 2 - 3 days worth of stuff in the fridge, then freeze the rest (if it's something reheatable)
I then eat something else from the freezer for the rest of the week so I don't eat the same thing for a whole week.
It's one of the slot in ones though right? so it doesn't really count - it effectively integrated.
Huh, that's supprisingly generous of them!
I may be guilty of assuming things works the same everywhere
Most insurance policies will require that the insured trip begins in your home country. (Not that you bought it there) There was a news story about this recently.
Can you not extend your initial insurance? I would really recommend having a chat with a person at one of the insurance companies.
And working on stuff that never gets shipped/used is demoralising too. No product to be proud of making/maintaining etc.
Also remember - no computers and that all space access is through the spacing guild or whatever it's called.
So control/timing is difficult and you would have to persuade (bribe) the spacing guild to support you. (Or have someone suicidal enough to do it manually. Could be set up manually with a timer I guess?
I assume that if you created a Lemmy account and subscribed to all the kbin communities (magazines?) you were interested in that would mostly cover you? I think the federation works?
Does Kbin have any other functionality there that wouldn't work?
Sounds like a prelude to bankruptcy. Also sounds like an incredibly badly run company. Difficult business to be in though I guess.
I wonder if their lawyers are getting paid...
Recently 'World on Fire's by Dolly Parton.... Which was unexpected
Posting to a news article is easy compared with creating content, so you will see a lot more of it.
YouTube runs at a loss still I believe? Low res is probably supportable, but 4k etc gets expensive.
They are upping the rates on their fixed rate deals ( 5.84% for the next two years for example).
Because these rates can't be changed once agreed the banks forecast what they think the cost of their borrowing will be over the next two years (based on the central bank/gov interest rates) and set a customer facing rate that is competitive but will make them good money.
They have been setting their rates with the assumption that the government set interest rates will fall sharply this year. That would mean they could give customers an interest rate that's lower than the current government rate now because in a years time the government rate will have fallen and the customer would still be paying the fixed (higher) rate they agreed. (Making the bank good money)
However, inflation is proving more entrenched than expected and the government isn't reducing interest rates like expected. The banks are therefore not offering those lower interest deals to customers as they're not expecting to make it back later.