

I wonder if that’s due to the body distorting
Mildly reclusive American living in Europe.
Tends to get truculent about movies, music, the Oxford comma, and politics
I wonder if that’s due to the body distorting
They only owned up after lying and obfuscating for years. California said they work with manufacturers when they are out of compliance, but brought their lawsuit because VW wouldn’t cooperate
Countries have defaulted on their debt.
That’s what I meant, the device is directly next to the heat source. It’s never going to be accurate. And you can tell in the way people use the two systems. In Germany, people don’t think about our check the temperature of the room or what the dial is set at, just, I’m cold, turn it up. In the US, the room is set to a specific temperature and just left alone except for day/night, home/away.
But, anyway, the comment was about how they wouldn’t work for Nest, and that’s true. You’d need a third party solution. It would be hard to sell these and then say, hey, by the way, you can’t use it until you go out and buy something from someone else and install it
I haven’t been in many private houses in the Netherlands. I could only speak to Germany
Yes, but they are not electronic and they don’t reflect the temperature of the room like a wall thermostat does.
TBF, over 15* in Germany I’ve only seen a couple of actual thermostats. The vast, vast majority use a valve on each radiator. There are electronic solutions for the radiators, but sticking a Nest on the wall is going to do nothing for someone unless the customer installs specific hardware that the Nest would have to support
*edit : years
This was more a stunt because France is demanding Google pay to link to news sites. It’s the opposite of whether search engines should be required to list them
It makes me feel a little better about myself seeing the New York Times communication department make a typo in a post