Ok so ten years then. In that time nearly all average family cars will be smart. They will have self-driving (they can come pick you up). Will have a few years of insurance claims and premiums showing they are not responsible for 99% of crashes and insurance will react accordingly pushing up the insurance of the last holdouts so far that it becomes uneconomical for the average person to drive "manual".
Insurance says so
By my own guesstimate 95% of tetra ends up in the bin. There is something funky going in.
Found this (Indonesia)
Took the money, built the spa with planning permission but made it too large., Destroyed their relationship with their neighbours and now trying to cash in on the house.
Tetrapak aren't recyclable, don't believe their corporate lies.
Those same lorries that deliver go back to site.
It seems everyone in that chain has a responsibility of waste management. When costs inflate and services are reduced we see increased fly-tipping, and litter produced by uncollected bins, as well as shoddy disposal.
I think it's closely related to the broken window theory. One broken window = more crime. Some litter = more litter. Most are led by influence.
What use is the information in this case?
To me it can be summed up as: Lazers can be defeated (more like we are not willing to leave our best lazer tech lying around)
Signal blocking can be defeated
So we've resorted to flying bricks to defeat YOUR drones, don't even think of using them.
Oh and just remember they are presenting them in a "drone travels up" way....
But they could do the exact opposite to an "object" on the ground. (A highly deadly "penny off the empire state")
Don't even funking try to tell me Mercutio wasn't woke in that version of R&J. He was glorious!
You don't get it, that's OK. But it's very real and debilitating, so just try to empathise.
No your point was, "is it still a thing, are people still buying into it."
The answer is yes, very much so. Your opinion is irrelevant.
830 partners!, go jump espn