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Seems like the same system Decathlon has been using since 2019.


Uniqlo have also been using it (in Europe) for several years, probably before Decathlon although the article isn't clear.


I'm pretty sure decathlon has been using rfid since way before 2019


All the workers clapped and one of them cried.


And who was that boy? Albert Einstein.


Would the Cybertruck still have finished faster than the Porsche 911 if it wasn’t towing the extra weight?


Sean Carroll & Jennifer Ouellette are trash hacks. They wouldn’t know quality if they where asked to write about it.


I tested with a valid email address. The result was ‘undeliverable’. More user pain for me…


Really? Could you please share the email address that you tested on nitink.saas@gmail.com? Atleast i will try to trace the issue which caused it as 'undeliverable'. Thanks!


No. Dying at 47 is fine by me.


Me and my sister (5 years younger) enjoyed the original Bubble Bobble on the NES. The mechanics are very simple. The MAME arcade version and the Lost Caves bootleg are both good.


I remember playing BB on PC back in the early 90s.. When I had 45-50mins to spare I would rock it.. If memory serves well, if you reached lvl 20 without losing a life you would open up the bonus levels.


Correct. The secret room would appear at levels 20, 30, and 40 if you didn’t lose a life.

I watched a video last night about how the special items are calculated. Blew my mind- I thought it was random.

https://youtu.be/8ufe9swEtzg


It’s fibre from the home to your provider. New Zealand's current international connectivity is provided by three under-sea fibre optic cables with a combined total throughput of 73 terabits per second.


While we're on the topic of nonsense numbers Wolfram Alpha estimates that to be 14 megabits per person


Or it could be gigabits available to any person. Since it would be 14 megabits per person per second right, assuming 100% utilisation?


I merely told it to divide 73 terabits by the population of New Zealand and to express that in megabits. So yeah no consideration of usage patterns: "nonsense numbers" just like the supposed 46G wifi this story is about.


I do agree that all these numbers are pretty meaningless . Somehow truth in advertising laws don't apply to many of these claims. Only seen the Australian regulator really crack down on it.


I was hoping for a retrospective review of Musk’s neck tie collection.


Fully agree. I switched to the web versions of Outlook and Teams about a year ago after problems with responsiveness, cpu utilisation, and excessive memory usage.


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