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If you have good dental hygiene missing a brushing shouldn’t be a big deal. It can wait until you reach your destination.

I was attempting to use self checkout for some lunch I grabbed from the hotbar and couldn’t understand why my whole foods barcode was failing. It took me a full 20 seconds to realize the reason for the failure.


Sam, things always work themselves out for the better. You will be fine, keep moving forward.

Merry Christmas!


Pistols / power weapons + License to Kill. Nothing was more satisfying than catching someone with the shotgun.


Donkey kong heads, painball mode and everyone in the lift for slappers


NVidia Riva TNT2 Series! I spent the better part of a summer doing odd jobs to earn enough to purchase one from the local Electronic's Boutique. Great memories :)


Was my first dual GPU setup! An AGP TNT2 and another PCI TNT2 for my third monitor.


I needed a way to charge multiple Nintendo Switch Joycons for the kids. On Amazon the charger was around $20. On AliExpress the same exact charger was $3. I wasn’t in a rush so I paid the $3 and it arrived in a little over a month.


I live in NJ, directly across the street from a fire station. I also occasionally work nights to connect with team mates in other time zones.

You will always see the flashing lights but they have never blasted the sirens at night.


From the first and second paragraph of the article:

"A seemingly run-of-the-mill trial is playing out in Florida: The family of a deceased man is suing his former business partner over control of their partnership’s assets.

In this case, the assets in question are a cache of about one million bitcoins, equivalent to around $64 billion today, belonging to bitcoin’s creator, the pseudonymous Satoshi Nakamoto. The family of the dead man says he and his business partner together were Nakamoto, and thus the family is entitled to half of the fortune."


You don’t need any input from the user/target. Once the malicious code reaches the device the exploit works its magic.


An open source cellular modem firmware is long overdue, but there's no government on Earth that would be keen on allowing it to happen, the best we have is 2G/3G stuff that has been illegally leaked and reverse engineered.

A lot of dragons lurking in the dark there.


The network side is already covered by OpenBTS and srsRAN - I believe the latter is already including 5G.

Wonder what's blocking the client side. Power efficiency? No target market since cheap LTE sticks can be had for under 20€ apiece?



The modem firmwares might be old and hairy, but is there any evidence that they have been used to actually compromise phones? All of the investigations that I can recall reading have been exploits in the phone OS application code.


A friendly reminder:

1. All firearms are always loaded.

2. Be sure of your target and what is beyond it.

3. Keep your finger off the trigger until you’re ready to shoot.

4. Keep your muzzle pointed in a safe direction. Do not point the gun at something you do not want to destroy.


That's not how it works in movies though. Actors aren't expected to know how to inspect their own firearms. They're given a gun and told whether it's cold or hot.


Maybe actors should take the same course hunters have to take. I'm not a hunter, but I took one for fun, and the first thing you learn is always to assume a gun is "hot" until you've checked it yourself.

I'm pretty sure someone wouldn't have an unschooled actor operate a motor vehicle. The same thinking should apply when they operate a firearm.


This is a good reminder to actors then that they should learn to safely operate guns if they will be using them. It's not too hard to learn and very important.


That's like saying kids should learn how to safely operate guns since they use toy guns and might confuse them for the real deal.

The problem would be if you hand a kid a gun, saying it's a toy gun and they aim and fire it towards their friends. This is basically what happened in this scenario with Alec Baldwin.


  > The problem would be if you hand a kid a gun, saying it's
  > a toy gun and they aim and fire it towards their friends.
Why do toy guns exist at all? What do children learn other than to point weapons at each other and carelessly pull a trigger without consequence? I would understand a toy hunting rifle, but all that I've ever seen are toy assault rifles and pistols. My three children have never had a toy gun.

For context, I've served in infantry and have multiple firearms in the house.


Because kids like to play with stuff? Most people in the world (outside the US) will never hold a gun in their hand in the lifetime, so learning vs not learning to pointing weapons doesn't really matter in the grand scheme of it all.

Also, not sure what children playing with guns have to do with this accident on the Rust set.


No, it's like saying an adult professional operating a deadly machine should learn to do it safely.


So actors are children that cannot be expected to take responsibility for their actions...

I don't necessarily disagree. I too long for the day when entertainers were considered nothing more than trained monkeys. This guy still needs to go to jail though. He could pretend he's Trump while frowning in his prison cell if it makes him feel better. I'm sure SNL could spare a new cinematographer.


There is a problem with this, and that is the amount of time required to truly develop expertise in a weapons system may be significant.

I estimate I have fired > 5,000 rounds of 5.56 and > 100,000 rounds of 7.62, and, I have worked as an armorer, and while my weapon handling may have been safe, it would be insufficient to create a safe environment, because that is inherently an organizational function

You personally need the training with each of the firearms you are handling, as well as the oversight of safety personnel, and a safety culture with strong processes. You also need the safe equipment since a mechanical failure can easily cause one of these accidents too.

People, processes, technology, and leadership.

On a low-budget film pressed for $, & time, neglecting safety, I think it is much easier to understand how this tragedy occurred.


I'm sure some actors do. But a lot of prop guns have been specially modified to only take blanks, or take no bullets at all. It's going to be very hard for an actor to discern the difference between blanks, dummy bullets, and prop-gun modifications on a wide range of guns. That's why you have a licensed armorer on set.


> Actors aren't expected to know how to inspect their own firearms.

They should be ffs. Even if it's only prop guns. Basic gun safety rules aren't that hard, and most guns are easy to take apart.


These are the 4 most basic tenants of gun safety.

You are expected to know them on any gun range, and most staffed ranges will safety brief / quiz you on them before they let you shoot.

In this case, they say industry SOP would be for 2 people to verify that the weapon is unloaded (set armorer + 1 other).


Anyone who picks up a gun is 100% responsible for what happens with it. There are 0 acceptable excuses for pointing a gun directly at another human, blanks or not, loaded or not, and pulling the trigger. He broke a cardinal rule of firearms. And in movies, you aim over the shoulder or otherwise slightly away from the "target." Never directly at. The camera angle makes it look like they're directly aiming at them, but they aren't. There are several rules if not laws broken here. Negligence at a minimum. And Alec is quite vocal about firearm violence. Unless he doesn't know what he's talking about, it would be hard to say he didn't know of the possibility. Ignorance is no excuse. If you want to see an actor who actually knows firearm safety and how to handle firearms, go watch Keanu Reeves train for John Wick.


According to the article he accidentally fired the gun while practicing pulling it out of the holster. Maybe more will come out but that seems to be the story at the moment. Yes still people shouldn't have been in the line of fire when he was practicing, just clarifying.


For those who don't know, these rules are well-established "4 Laws" that _responsible_ gun owners and handlers abide by.


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