I’ve been trying to get back into it more. It’s hard after college when all the running friends you had have moved away, and work takes up way more time. I’ve been doing about 30-40 minutes every other day. I find it a lot harder to regulate me pace when I run less.
It all goes back to the “American (lie) dream”. The idea that with enough hard work you will become rich and better than your parents. The CEOs have to make their succes fit the narrative so they pretend to be scientists who worked hard.
No, it’s to own a car for personal use. Singapore is a city state, emphasis on the city part. The article also says it only takes 60 minutes to drive end to end so the need for a car is probably minimal. The fee they are referring to here was created to reduce the amount of cars on the roads to help with traffic. Singapore has a pretty robust public transit system so for most people it probably isn’t a deal breaker. I’m glad to see a country taking action to limit car dependance.
I find it’s kind of a mixed bag. A bunch of communities I joined a few months ago are now just bot posts and boring but a bunch of newer communities I’ve joined are way better than reddit was.
Almost like space exploration and communication isn’t sustainable at all. It’s such a harsh environment and starkink out up so many so quick. Musk isn’t liked by the FAA because he has publicly defied standards and said he won’t follow the laws. It wouldn’t surprise me if these are failing due to something simple that was overlooked and Musk payed his way to speed thru certification or faked compliance.
There would be nothing legally requiring a USA company to do any of that. When you negotiate the contract you should either increase your base price to include that or explicitly add it to the contract. It doesn’t hurt to pay a USA contract lawyer to write/review the contract to make sure it covers what you want.