At least it makes sense why a city council who plans budgets and tax revenue based on existing models makes sense.
They’d feel the pain of having to maintain infrastructure for less occupied offices with lower tax revenue.
I don’t agree. I think cities should work on taking the shifts into consideration but it makes more sense for them than some employers who get no benefit and seem to be doing it out of habit or for power dynamics.
Command strips are great for that. And obvious now that it’s mentioned. They even gave some heavy duty ones if you’re really worried about it dropping.
Just a quick search across printables and thingiverse to show what some people are doing with eaglemoss. May find something that matches your needs exactly if there’s somebody who can print it (or via your library)
Totally fair opinion. I like it because it’s the Wizard behind the Curtain scenarios.
That peace treaty and the wonderful meal prepared?
Yeah… guys on the lower decks had to make that happen. Mundane paperwork, etc.
How did this magically get resolved so quickly? Lower decks did it.
It’s the Star Trek equivalent of Super Store where you see the lofty ideals and futuristic space travel is really just every day life with people doing people things like we do today. Whether good or bad.
Definitely. There’s always whole swathes of nuance and you have to do that. Even so I still find some of it hard to follow.
Similar to viascience. Great introductory material that gets harder and harder the deeper you go.
Which, to me, just speaks of the incredible depth of knowledge we have and astounds me that we figured out as much as we have as it gets less and less intuitive.
Probably not need but it would be helpful when determine where to apply what limited resources (time, staff, ship location) is most needed for a given mission
As I understand it. LEDs work on PWM. The controllers should regulate it as needed.
So it’s changed from 120 to whatever internal DC current is needed and that’s cycled.
When you use a dimmer you’re lowering/raising that 120v which is messing with the bulbs AC/DC converter which is designed to take 120 and output the applicable DC current for whatever LEDs it has on the circuit.
It definitely won’t adjust the PWM rate or brightness except in some extreme range and I’d personally avoid it unless you have some bulb that says it’s fine (e.g. doing something clever to adjust the DC based on the AC input)