Oslo got pedestrian and cyclist deaths down to zero. Here’s how

My own view, on this, is that some areas inside a city center should give absolute priority to pedestrians. I mean, whenever a pedestrian wants to cross a street, by signaling his intention, all cars and bikes must stop, and let the pedestrian through. In the long run, it would reduce the density of cars, I am sure.

>>> “In 2019, Oslo, Norway recorded zero pedestrian or cyclist deaths. There was only a single traffic fatality, which involved someone driving into a fence.”

www.wired.co.uk/article/oslo-pedestrianisation

What is the benefit of having FIPS hardware-level encryption on a drive when you can use Veracrypt instead?

I had bad experiences with many kinds of ‘whole disk encryption’ schemes. They do not seem to survive the test of time. A simple one file encryption is far better and Veracrypt will do for most users. Encryption, like a lot of things, is more an economic problem than anything else. What is it that you are trying to protect, against who, and can you afford it? I think that for the average person, the answers are; What: My personal data. Against who: A possible thief. Can I afford it: Veracrypt is free.
It might not hold decrypting from some of the world’s superpower countries, but do you really need that?

>>> “What is the benefit of having FIPS hardware-level encryption on a drive when you can use Veracrypt instead?”

security.stackexchange.com/questions/241202/what-is-the-benefit-of-having-fips-hardware-level-encryption-on-a-drive-when-you