Parking by App Only
Is this a big city thing or maybe a European thing? I have never seen this but maybe I escaped California just in time. People on HN have mentioned it a few times. I'm in a rural area and I often leave my cell phone at home. My goal is to eventually get rid of my phone all together and I think that is doable.
A bunch of lots in downtown Denver have this "feature". I suppose it's good for the lot owners, they don't have to buy and maintain receipt vending machines.
Makes sense. I just can not foresee myself participating in anything that places a hard dependency on a fondle slab.
These have been far superior to “if you lose your ticket we will charge you max daily price”
As so often, a thinkpiece exemplifies the problem.
You include a bunch of random AI-generated images to go with your AI-generated prose. The images are cluttered and filled with pointless, fictional detail which convey nothing beyond the prose and which anyone could vaguely predict, and yet take up something like 2/3rds of the vertical space of the article body. And that is generous, because your items are padded by LLM writing, that is to say, verbosely filled with needlessly superfluously repetitive redundant redundancy. And that's where it's not filled with crowdpleasing but dubious rhetoric and assertions (all present, of course, without any sources or backing).
Consider with a critical mind a random assertion like
> For many people, the first experience of healthcare is no longer treatment but paperwork. Intake forms, insurance verification, privacy acknowledgments, and consent agreements often precede any human interaction related to care. The administrative system introduces itself before the clinical one. This changes the shape of the experience. What should begin with care often begins with bureaucracy, shifting attention away from the person and toward the process.
Really? Recently, peoples' first experience of healthcare was treatment? What wondrous era was this? How could 'intake forms' not, by definition, 'precede any human interaction related to care'? Why should it begin with care? 'Ready, fire, aim!' etc. When did all this happen, exactly?
And it's all like this. Engagement farming - that OP is worthless won't stop people from falling for it and chiming in with whatever pet peeve they have, no matter how many other people have commented about it or how tiresomely predictable some complaint about, say, smartphones will be.