Huh, I thought that bit sounded interesting but each to their own. I like card games in real life, but not having to deal with bothering to shuffle all the time is nice.
Huh, I thought that bit sounded interesting but each to their own. I like card games in real life, but not having to deal with bothering to shuffle all the time is nice.
Uncharted
That’s still a series I’ve yet to start but I’m sure I’ll love them.
Ah, I’m too late for this. Cave Story+ is on until “today” (no idea what time/timezone it changes).
I just re-read your link it to see if it mentions where the sensors are; I’d assumed the sensors were outside the bowl since that’s what people are interested in but it doesn’t say.
The paper is available, but as a layman the “read full text” path just takes me in a circle.
The research found that putting the toilet lid down reduced the number of both visible and smaller droplets during and after flushing by 30-60%. However, use of the lid also increased the diameter and concentration of the bacteria in these droplets.
It was also found that airborne microdroplets were detected for 16 minutes after flushing the toilet with the lid down, 11 minutes longer than when the toilet was flushed with the lid up. The researchers suggest that this could be due to particles being re-aerosolised from surfaces rather than being created by the turbulence of the toilet flushing. Alternatively, the researchers suggest that airborne particles could stick together, or agglomerate, which would cause them to remain airborne for longer.
Those are fascinating findings; I wouldn’t expect that in some ways lid-down is worse…
I just tried to decode that acronym for a bit too: “mystery kanban bunny haired boss”? He’s a tech YouTuber.
oops - fixed, cheers