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yeah those are FDM 3d printed, unlikely that they are doing that in production for such simple pieces of plastic, it surely must be a prototype.

Which mobile browsers? Neither Chrome nor Firefox do this on my Android.

Insane that this is legal in the US.

It's an acceptable solution only if you used it as an excuse to buy a 3D scanner.

> I wonder why we find these features endearing

It's a side effect, evolution made sure we take care of our offspring.


It's just Ashton Kutcher trying to save our children.


Let me ground you a bit. This feature is 20 years old. The data is stored in NTFS alternate data streams.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mark_of_the_Web


Wow, it contains forensic info:

"As of Windows 10, the contents [...] include the keys HostIpAddress, HostUrl, and ReferrerUrl.[...] they typically contain the domain name and exact URL of the original online download location".


Interesting, thanks


Exactly.


I suspect a human life isn't long enough to place that many blocks.


"(1020 * 260 * 1656) seconds in years" [1] comes out to 14 years. Solid, of course, no breaks or sleep, no time for training or planning or debugging. And one block per second is a pretty good clip for a technical build. It doesn't take many multiplicative factors before it's more than one lifetime.

[1]: https://www.google.com/search?q=%281020+*+260+*+1656%29+seco...


You would probably also need another lifetime just to fix all the errors once you are finished with laying out all the pieces...


Red 5 is not allowed in Europe and doesn't have an E number, so in this case they are right.


Ummm there is not even a red 5? It was just a made up example.


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