

The people who subsidize rewards are customers paying cash/debit.
The prices are higher to cover the Visa Infinite or whatever premium card merchant fees.
The people who subsidize rewards are customers paying cash/debit.
The prices are higher to cover the Visa Infinite or whatever premium card merchant fees.
Well, peening is hammering a bolt on the threaded side to mushroom it out to make it like a rivet, not like that’s what people usually use them for.
I had been told that, but I guess it’s not really accurate. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peening
And normally they are metal, but that exact type of hammer is a weird soft rubber one.
I was surprised they were talking about an industrial use for it. I would think this would also be a great accessibility feature.
My bad, it’s federally exempt in the US. The map here is clickable and has state-by-state laws. https://www.farmworkerjustice.org/overtime-map/
Yes, like trucking, agriculture is exempt from OT, not that some employers don’t choose to still pay it.
That double peen is soft face, harder rubber on the left, greenish softer rubber on the right. I have one just like it. I think it came with a mesh organizer to hammer the corner clips all the way in when assembling.
That double peen is soft face, harder rubber on the left, greenish softer rubber on the right. I have one just like it. I think it came with a mesh organizer to hammer the corner clips all the way in when assembling.
Hotels do that also
Not the whole claim.
“The first thing, what Dan witnessed was that within 15 minutes of DOGE employees creating user accounts, i.e. Usernames and passwords, within 15 minutes of those accounts being created, somebody or something from Russia tried to log in with the right username and right passwords — that is to say — the right credentials. And that happened over 20 times.”
Come home to all the furniture gone