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8 votes
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NASA won't publish key climate change report online, citing 'no legal obligation' to do so
34 votes -
Life and death aboard a B-17, 1944
16 votes -
California farmers are installing solar, providing financial stability and saving water
12 votes -
Gates Foundation commits $2.5 billion to ignored, underfunded women's health
27 votes -
Box office: ‘Fantastic Four’ craters by 66% in second weekend
18 votes -
Meta violated privacy law, jury says in menstrual data fight
40 votes -
Web3 is going great: tracking the financial damage of crypto
12 votes -
At 17, Hannah Cairo solved a math mystery
26 votes -
Blood Box - A World of Hurt (1997)
3 votes -
Miami jury orders Tesla to pay hundreds of millions in damages in Autopilot crash case
42 votes -
Make electricity cheap again (part 1)
7 votes -
Panama Playlists — Examining the listening habits of celebrities, journalists, and politicians by scraping their Spotify accounts
16 votes -
Chappell Roan - The Subway (2025)
7 votes -
Béla Fleck - Big Country (1998)
10 votes -
Early universe’s ‘little red dots’ may be black hole stars
17 votes -
NASA-ISRO satellite lifts off to track Earth’s changing surfaces
9 votes -
Adam Sandler’s ‘Happy Gilmore 2’ debuts to 46.7 million views, biggest Netflix US film opening ever
15 votes -
8.8 magnitude earthquake near Russia prompts tsunami alerts in Hawaii, Alaska and West Coast
42 votes -
US federal government ends information delivery contract critical to hurricane forecasting
20 votes -
Novo Nordisk shares plunge 20% after Wegovy maker names new CEO and cuts full-year guidance
10 votes -
A mysterious LLC is using antique law to go after sports betting in Washington DC
22 votes -
she's green - Willow (2025)
5 votes -
Patrick Keel, the forgotten pioneer behind the LCD Soundsystem sound
14 votes -
The Internet Archive is now an official US federal documents library
51 votes -
Fast food pricing games are ridiculous
This morning I found a receipt in my kitchen. It was from my roommate, who had ordered pizza from Dominoes the night before. When I looked at it, I was shocked. There was a single line item on the...
This morning I found a receipt in my kitchen. It was from my roommate, who had ordered pizza from Dominoes the night before. When I looked at it, I was shocked. There was a single line item on the order, two large pizzas for the sum of $75.98 USD. I thought, "what the hell is this? How is he spending so much on pizza? And the junk they sell at Dominos? They don't even make the crust there!"
But then I looked down to the actual amount paid and it had a discount: $54.00 off the price for buying two of them. So the effective price was a much more reasonable $10.99 each. That's less than a third of the sticker price. After tax and an in-house delivery fee, it was still under half of that price.
I don't eat out that often, and fast food is especially rare for me, so I've been fairly insulated from this, but it seems that this kind of thing is happening everywhere. One pizza place I do get food from occasionally is Pieology. Their pizzas were roughly $10 not too long ago, but in recent years those prices have ballooned, with some locations asking for $15 for the same pizza order. But the secret is that they are actually still selling pizzas for those prices if you use their app - it's just that instead of giving you the real price, you get free "perks", which is your choice of a drink, cookie, and things to that effect. I never go to McDonalds, but I've heard endless complaining about how expensive it is. The retort I hear is, "you better get the app". The app is a privacy nightmare that requires practically every permission it could ask for in order to function, so rather than actually getting deals you're just subsidizing the cost of your food with the sale of your personal data.
There's almost no way to definitively prove this, but one argument that I find compelling as to why restaurants are doing this is because of delivery apps. Delivery apps take omission from the purchase price, and people really don't like seeing that they're paying more for things on the apps than they would be in the stores, so shops are raising the base price of their food in order to make things seem more fair, while offering in-store discounts so that they don't lose out on revenue from lower-income people who wouldn't order from delivery apps. If that's the case, that would mean that people ordering from those delivery apps are not only paying more for the privilege, but they are actively pushing up the prices for everyone else as well. And that's just ridiculous.
22 votes -
South Park mocks Donald Trump
88 votes -
Becoming numb to American violence
16 votes -
The End Kidney Deaths Act
13 votes -
The DNA of the late American composer Alvin Lucier continues to compose music
4 votes -
North Korean hackers ran US-based “laptop farm” from Arizona woman’s home
25 votes -
The Nintendo Switch 2 is the fastest-selling gaming hardware in US history
29 votes -
Why free buses in NYC could backfire horribly
24 votes -
Chuck Mangione dead at 84
31 votes -
US Federal Communications Commission approves Paramount-Skydance merger following protracted political tug-of-war
15 votes -
Professional wrestler Hulk Hogan dead at 71
20 votes -
Looking for places to get bulk OTC medicine in the US
I have a prescription for a certain digestion aide which I need to take on a daily basis. A while back, I got a letter from my insurance that they will no longer be covering it and offering it...
I have a prescription for a certain digestion aide which I need to take on a daily basis. A while back, I got a letter from my insurance that they will no longer be covering it and offering it through the pharmacy counter because it's an over-the-counter medication.
The problem is that almost nobody sells this drug in large quantities. I used to get a 3-month supply, 100 pills, for something less than $10. Now the best price I can seem to find is $12 for a 42-pack, and annoyingly they only ever come in incredibly irritating blister packs (a pox on the people who invented putting pills in those things!), or an equally unhinged option of being spread between three separate bottles and boxed together.
I did happen to find a place that sold the drug in bulk, but I've never heard of them and their website doesn't exactly inspire trust.
Does anyone know of a place where I might be able to find the drugs I need in quantities and packaging that makes sense, within the United States?
23 votes -
Malaysia no longer takes US plastic waste, creating a dilemma for California
42 votes -
The obvious reason the US should not vaccinate like Denmark – it isn't Denmark
6 votes -
After $380M hack, Clorox sues its “service desk” vendor for simply giving out passwords
27 votes -
The history of SPAM
19 votes -
MEUTE - You & Me [Flume remix - Coachella version] (2025)
5 votes -
UK government seeks way out of clash with US over Apple encryption
15 votes -
Vatican sent Italian children born out of wedlock to America as orphans; new book uncovers program
25 votes -
Why The Long Face - June 2003
8 votes -
Radio geeks reveal how to access crucial hurricane data after US Department of Defense cut it off
29 votes -
Malcolm-Jamal Warner dies: ‘The Cosby Show’ and ‘The Resident’ actor was 54
25 votes -
You can now buy eggs from in-ovo sexed hens in the US
28 votes -
A huge fight looms over the NASA budget this fall
26 votes -
US will begin charging some tourists a $250 ‘visa integrity fee’
36 votes