Scepter televisions are a great option, no “smart” features at all. Bought two of them about 6 years ago and no issues.
QC Chemist
Scepter televisions are a great option, no “smart” features at all. Bought two of them about 6 years ago and no issues.
My choice of a retirement home will be dictated by which one offers high-speed internet service.
The m is an old apothecary unit for “minims” which was about 1 drop. Not very exact, the amount dosed depended on the method used to dispense each drop. Most of the content was probably water or glycol syrup, so the total alcohol content would be diluted to less than 1%.
Maybe something that looks like a shaggy aardvark with a curly tail.
I bought a couple Sceptre TVs six years ago, been great.
Not a laptop, but I had an old motherboard from over 20 years ago not doing anything. Screwed it to a board on the wall of my shop. Added an old hard drive and some components out of the same old box it was in, and now have it running Mint. Found an old wifi card that works too, so I can look up parts and repair videos while I’m working on projects. Works great.
I wish the US had made the switch to metric back in the 70’s. I remember having to learn it in grade school, and there seemed to be a push for it, but never went anywhere. I now work as a chemist where everything is done in metric, but then go back to US measures once I punch out for the day. Would be nice to have a single system instead.
My wife’s RAV4 is like this. Long drives are torture after a few hours. My neck, shoulders, and back end up in knots.