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I've lived in 3 states and none of them have required proof of citizenship to register to vote. You basically check a box that acknowledges that you are a US Citizen with the right to vote and that illegal registration carries penalties.


The Kia Telluride does not have a locking differential in the same sense as conventional 4x4 vehicles. In fact, the Kia Telluride comes with a multi-plate center clutch that allows for distribution of power between the front and rear wheels. When the clutch is fully engaged, in most cases there should be no slippage which means that power is distributed evenly (50/50) between the front and rear. However, there's always the possibility that the clutch can slip given enough of a torque differential between the front and the back. It can offer improved traction in poor road conditions.

A proper locking differential found in most traditional 4x4 vehicles/trucks, when engaged, physically locks the axles together which means they cannot spin at different rates. This is essential for many more rigorous off-road applications when you may have to rely on traction from a single wheel to get you unstuck.

This is exactly the type of misleading marketing that is described in many other comments. A clutch pack cannot physically lock axles together in the same way as a locking diff.


Agree. I see no reason why Google should be the only means to log in


I'm very sorry, I usually use Google the most. Could you please let me know your preferred login method? Email or something else? I will add some additional login options.


Email is preferred for me (no oauth) unless there is a particular need to access data on something like a Google account for the service to function


Alberta’s population growth trend in the last 5 years is anything but linear. It has accelerated significantly driven in large part by new to Canada immigrants and those escaping higher cost of living provinces like BC and ON.

Source: https://www.alberta.ca/population-statistics


That page shows population change measured in several tens of thousands, not several hundreds of thousands, so as a year over year increase that's basically still linear, just with a slightly higher coefficient, but nowhere near enough to scream population boom. Just an above average increase.

If we look at the population numbers for the last 24 years there's nothing particularly out of the ordinary going on [1].

Sure, the last two years could be the start of an explosive increase, but the drop in year-over-year increase as indicated by the charts from your own link suggests it's far more likely to return to the overall trend.

But of course: even if the population doubled over the next 5 years, Alberta is still the size of Texas, and has plenty of room to address those energy needs using renewables.

[1] https://www.statista.com/statistics/569880/population-estima...


I'm not debating the merits of renewables, I'm just stating that the population growth in Alberta is not linear. And the population IS growing by hundreds of thousands annually. To quote directly from Alberta population statistics:

"Alberta’s population growth continues to accelerate. In the 12 months preceding April 1, 2024, the province’s population expanded by 204,677 people, or 4.41%." [1]

"This represents a significant increase from the previous year (3.67% between 2022-23) and the highest April 1 year-over-year growth rate since 1981. Alberta’s population expanded by 49,138 residents over the first quarter of 2024, or 1.02%." [1]

The vast majority (over 160,000) of those new residents of Alberta were immigrants to Canada, driven by the federal government's massive immigration ramp-up. The immigration levels plan targets a continued increase in immigration through 2026 [2] and with Alberta having a comparatively low cost of living and very high quality of life, it's hard to believe that trend in population growth will not continue.

[1] https://www.alberta.ca/population-statistics

[2] https://www.canada.ca/en/immigration-refugees-citizenship/co...


Ontario contains almost half of Canada's population so that seems very plausible


It's actually 38% according to Wiki. Still a lot.


We should have the data to study that since some countries decided to wait longer between doses. The UK and Canada focused on getting as many first-doses into arms as possible before folks were eligible for a second jab.


The cards are pretty small so I doubt there's enough space for an m.2. I would guess proprietary


Yeah they’re not quite long enough as it turns out, although a different module could stick out if you really wanted it to.

It is indeed proprietary, but I think they share the design resources for it.

https://community.frame.work/t/storage-expansion-cards/154


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