I am sure that Denmark, a country that amongst other things imposed forced sterilisation against the Inuit population up until the 1970s, and abused people with disabilities [0], is offering black-skinned people equal opportunities and not pigeon-holing them into unemployment and social exclusion...
One could make the point this is less about industrialization causing a change in behavior, and more chemical pollution destroying fertility. Of which we have plenty of concrete evidence.
Except evidence does not show that there are many more people trying and failing for kids as in past decades, so much as more people are delaying partnering up and having kids till later and later, along with many opting to be childless.
And most fertility issues people do encounter can primarily be explained by attempting to have children decades later than is biologically optimal.
It is only when judgement is rendered that it becomes a federal crime. Until then it is only alleged. And guess what: this administration is alleging a lot of things that fail.
Is there already a website to explore the dataset? I am starting out repairing old film cameras and there is documentation and tutorials, but it is very spread out between forums/reddit, how-tos in Flickr albums and a few websites who managed to grab a copy of official maintenance manuals
The data is not really helpful as a repair guide, it doesn't have any sort of "how-to", just small notes made during repair attempts, plus it only includes electrical/electronic devices.
>plus it only includes electrical/electronic devices.
It would still be very valuable. Fully mechanical cameras are, apart from some very specific components (e.g. titanium shutter blades in some high-end cameras), repairable. Electronic cameras with hand-soldered capacitors and big, individual electronic components are harder to work on (flexible circuit boards) but still possible. Fully electronic cameras... Let's just say in the coming decades, there is going to be a huge gap in camera history. A century-old Kodak or Agfa with bellows is still usable; the electronics in a polaroid SX-70 is so simple there is now aftermarket circuit boards to replace and extend them, adding Bluetooth controls; whereas a current top-of-the-line Canon/Nikon is going to be an unfixable paperweight within one human generation.
Aside from enthusiasts, I have worked a few months with (museum) conservators and this is very worrying to them. Same with cars.
Funny it didn't happen sooner, with all the "boom"boxes from brands like UE "Boom" and "Bang" & Olufsen...
More seriously, is there any limit to these ridiculous claims of feeling threatened (the article gives another one which was even more ridiculous) or are we headed to an onion-news-network-like world where "the crew felt threatened by a loud sneeze in the back" is reality?
I mean, even if one wanted to accept their fear at face value, the fact in every case they impose to resolve the situation by... just shutting off the Bluetooth or WiFi proves it was never an honest threat assessment.
[0]https://www.dw.com/en/denmark-apologizes-for-abuse-of-people...
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