Early in October, I took a red-eye flight from New York to Santiago, Chile. I’d been reading a website called Turbli, run by a turbulence-obsessed engineer in Stockholm named Ignacio Gallego-Marcos, who has a Ph.D. in fluid dynamics. Gallego-Marcos had gone through a year’s worth of forecasts from NOAA and the Met Office—the U.K.’s national weather service—and combined them with flight-tracking data from around the globe. In 2025, he concluded, three of the five bumpiest flight routes in the world flew into Santiago.
Spend less time correcting outputs for code that should have been right in the first place
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Мощный удар Израиля по Ирану попал на видео09:41,这一点在heLLoword翻译官方下载中也有详细论述