A list of puns related to "Wide Is My Motherland"
Obviously a lot of us play fantasy football and Cooper Kupp is number one in fantasy points scored, but as far as overall raw talent goes, who do you think is best in the league right now?
edit: Also would like to add that the things I would want to access are things like google, facebook, gmail etc.
This is something I've been wondering for a while -
I drive an Audi S3, which is ever so slightly wider than your 'standard' car at 1793mm. However, compared to a lot of other cars & SUVs out there, it's still very much a small hatchback in terms of lengths and width. A Range Rover, for example - is 1983mm to 2019mm depending on spec. An Audi RS4, comes in at 1866mm.
There are often times I am driving that I get a bit squeeky bumhole on narrow town roads with cars coming the other way, especially when you have parked cars either side and are trying to pass. Some carparks give me palpitations just thinking about how narrow the spaces are.
What is the reality? Is it all in my head and actually it's fine? Big SUVs are so common and popular now that surely people must be about to go about their daily driving without too much worry? Or do people have far more scuffs and carpark dings and just shrug them off?
Cheers
Weird question, and I wasn't able to find an answer with a google search.
I'm wondering how wide is the field of view of the "occupancy sensor" on the Ecobee Smart Thermostat itself would be? We have a kitchen + living room open concept, and the thermostat is at the far corner of the living room (far from the kitchen), perpendicular to the kitchen (so not facing the kitchen but not obstructed). I'm not sure if the thermostat will "see" me when I'm working in the kitchen, and we hardly hang out in the living room (mostly for guests). I would guess the thermostat would need a 60-80 degree vision (0 degree being looking straight forward) up to 10-15 feet to see us in the kitchen from the thermostat position. I guess the hallway leading to the kitchen is close to the thermostat, but I read the sensor takes into account how long the room is occupied.
If the occupancy sensor can't see me anyways, I would consider purchasing a 3 lite, and buying separate sensors which I can place in the kitchen. I would prefer to purchase the Smart Thermostat as it is a better deal (in Canada, the 3 lite does not come with any sensors, but the Smart Thermostat has a built in sensor + 1 additional sensor), but obviously, if the built in sensor doesn't work for our application, it wouldn't be a good deal.
I don't need Alexa or any of those other smart features. Just curious about the occupancy sensor.
Any input would be much appreciated!
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