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.
This is the fifth post in a series on Unicode identifier security:
,详情可参考下载安装汽水音乐
compiler field required, but express this requirement by
[&:first-child]:overflow-hidden [&:first-child]:max-h-full"
Россиянам станет тяжелее снять наличные08:49