Last time I checked, it was not mandatory to work for Toyota, so anyone feeling overworked there could leave.
So it's fine for Musk to abuse Tesla workers and union bust, because they can leave? Is that what's you are saying? I'm not sure the fact someone can leave is any excuse for a CEO's behavior.
Unlike those feeling threatened under President felon, who can’t just up and leave the country.
Unlike those at Toyota, a Japanese company where it's the cultural norm to work at the same corporation your entire life, and it's unthinkable to leave or complain about your employer?
Anyhow, it was just a made up example, I know nothing about Koji Sato, maybe he's amazing. My point is that buying a car is not a political statement and not an expression of support for the CEO of the car company. It certainly can be, but it usually isn't.
People buying a Toyota aren't expressing support for Koji Sato's work policies resulting in deaths from overwork. In fact most people buying a car don't care in the slightest who happens to be the CEO of that car manufacturer.
They might just like the retrofuturistic shape, and aren't interested in politics.
It's a thought experiment. Of course such a stick wouldn't exist. OP's question is what laws of physics prevent this theoretical scenario from working.
They didn't. They moved it from the foreword to the final line.
To be clear, Google is absolutely evil, and the unofficial motto was always worthless. I am just annoyed everyone ate the clickbait reporting about something that never happened and is repeating it to this day. I guess "Google moved Don't be evil Clause to a less prominent spot" doesn't click as well.
That's a perverse sense of "productivity" then. I like spending my free time getting a lot done, but none of it is a "hustle" or an attempt at making money.
Working on my hobbies is fulfilling and makes me happy. If I like painting train models all weekend, who are you to argue against it? Doing nothing is boring and sad.
You could come up with a scenario that doesn't involve anything violent like a tsunami. Water level going up to cover the building, carrier hitting it and getting stuck, then water level going down again.
Why are you posting stuff about some other OS on a Linux sub? Maybe try some general technology one.
More of a meta comment, but are all organisations stuck with their slogans forever?
NFL rotates these messages and this game it moves from "End racism" to "Choose love". Next it will rotate again and people will be upset they removed the "Choose love" slogan because they are anti-LGBT?
Google changes their motto from "Don't be evil" to "Do the right thing" and everyone is upset. One day they will change it again and everyone will be upset because of course they are not doing the right thing anymore?
Both NFL and Google are evil and deserve no sympathy, but I wonder what's the expectation here? Never change any slogan?
To be fair, breadsmasher didn't ask if it's the public motto, they asked if they removed it. And they didn't remove it, as it's still in the public code of conduct.
The 6-figues line could very well be a joke without the story being untrue.
I see nothing wrong with using it if you already have it.
BambuLab is not to be trusted, they are anti-consumer and remove features after purchase
You don't need to update
If I have to careful to defend something I bought against the manufacturer remotely bricking it, then maybe it's not a product I'd recommend
Right? I keep a list of every single company/service that I gave my email address, physical address, or phone number to. Every time I give it out I add it to the list. When it needs changing I go through the list and update it in all of them.
That often works, when worded more positively. You will get an expedited hiring process, because the company doesn't want to lose out to another company hiring you first.
That's the point. There is nothing strange or shady about the fact that things you type into DeepSeek.com are sent to DeepSeek.com. Obviously keystrokes you submit to a website are submitted to the website.