People like the convenience of having their bookmarks and saved passwords available, so the Incognito mode serves a purpose, it's just not what its name implies. Only its name is a problem, the description on the starter page correctly describes the behavior.
"Guest Mode": (1) hides the identity on the internet, and (2) hides the activity on the local machine.
"Incognito window": (2 only) hides the activity on the local machine.
To clear the confusion, "Incognito mode" should simply be renamed "Ephemeral mode" or "Transient mode" or "No-Save mode".
Manipulating ions requires a lot of current. Drop an AA battery to a soup and nothing remarkable happens quickly, but lick the same battery and you will definitely feel it immediately.
If you do it while something sour/salty is in your mouth, your tongue may get confused, since it's only prepared to detect 5 flavors plus hot and cold, and it may simply assigns the extra feeling to the strongest sour/salty/umami taste currently experienced.
The electronics is probably just to cut the current when the two chopsticks touch to prevent short circuit.
Only one chopstick appears to have an electrode, while the wristband looks like a ground contact. This device looks like it makes a circuit from the chopsticks, through your mouth and body to your arm.
Yup, the "sodium ion" thing sounds like BS. Almost certainly this thing, if it does anything, is merely shocking the tongue at a voltage/current that's high enough to be detected, low enough that you don't know you are being shocked.
Whether or not that "confuses" you into thinking this is salty, IDK.
It's just to emphasize that they may be lenient about some other tickets as long as they are way in the past, but they are not lenient about these ones.
These are reasonable conditions, but apparently they are not easy to pass.
I think the texting while driving is the more interesting one: a bunch of states don't care too much (Arizona, Montana, etc.), some others only impose a small $25 fine, so young people may not think about it as a huge obstacle to a high-paying job much later.
While I am an annoying stickler for safe driving (I gave advanced driving school gift certs for Xmas), one of the thoughts is - if you made an whopsie when you were 16 years old, how much should that cost you when you are e.g. 27 or for rest of your life?
I am cognizant that not everybody makes brilliant decisions when they are young, and not all of them remain awful incorrigible human beings forever.
Tesla cars are not licensed for operation without a control of a driver. It's unlikely Tesla (the company) would take the financial responsibility to cause any damage or injury during an unlicensed operation without a driver.
Straight from the Model S manual:
"Model S may not detect certain obstacles, including those that are very narrow (e.g., bikes), lower than the fascia, or hanging from the ceiling. As such, Summon requires that you continually monitor your vehicle's movement and surroundings while it is in progress, and that you remain prepared to stop the vehicle at any time using the Tesla mobile app, by pressing any button on the
key fob, or by pressing any Model S door handle."
PHP's main problem is its very shallow learning curve.
The 5840 built-in functions provide easy ways to get many useful things done with minimal dabbling.
In other words, one can be a "scripter" instead of a "programmer", and for many projects that's 100% OK.
Other languages automatically filter out "scripters" from their field by demanding a certain level of mental abstraction to produce anything moderately useful.
While there is absolutely no difference between a good programmer using PHP, or a good programmer using any other language/environment, but there is a big difference between the median levels and below.
This in turn lowers the reputation of the field, and it becomes uncool to put PHP on one's resume, therefore the more capable programmers propagate out to other languages, which further lowers the median, etc.
Most people don't have metabolic issues, yet steadily gaining weight.
South Korea vs. North Korea clearly shows the effect of food availability. Same genetics.
No one said the solution was easy, only that the solution was simple. But very hard.
But which one is easier to live with?
(1) "this is in my control, but it is too hard, and I am too weak to do it", or
(2) "this is NOT in my control, and I'm failing due to the circumstances, in spite of doing the most possible"
Medical software is terrible, because healthcare is very expensive, and this is the only effective cost control.
Since the payers (insurance companies and the government) want to avoid seen making medical decisions, their only way to bring the cost down is to slow down the providers.
Therefore, they do not allow automation in the EMR/Health software. This is not a joke: for appropriate billing, the physician has to go through an elaborate dance of clicks, and write and rewrite fields with the same content, personally. In other words, if it was automated, or if the office staff filled those out, then the billing would be much lower.
It's not true software vendors would not be able to automate a lot of this, but they just can't, because the physicians are required to work in a manual way for proper reimbursement.
It's a strange world, where a doctor who is a faster typist makes more money...
It's very sad, but unfortunately it's working, at the cost of driving physicians to the edge of insanity.
I think in today's world, typing faster is a life-skill. I learned typing on an actual Remington type-writer during my summer holidays eons ago because my dad forced me to go to typing classes (he hoped with that I'll atleast be able to secure a typist's job, if nothing else). That skill of touch typing has paid for itself many times over since then.
"Guest Mode": (1) hides the identity on the internet, and (2) hides the activity on the local machine.
"Incognito window": (2 only) hides the activity on the local machine.
To clear the confusion, "Incognito mode" should simply be renamed "Ephemeral mode" or "Transient mode" or "No-Save mode".