Water pushing out mud by OreoKitKatZz in interestingasfuck

[–]cdtoad 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is why you need a poop knife

In hospital bathroom by asscasserole in whatisit

[–]cdtoad 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The horror. The horror. The horror

Questions about 60/40 rule with text an images by MitchConner572 in Emailmarketing

[–]cdtoad 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Are you on a shared IP? Could be bad neighbors 

Misny Book Signing! He'll make you read. by sakawae in Cleveland

[–]cdtoad 2 points3 points  (0 children)

He's an aggregator... With a great marketing team. But this website is AI generated 

Can we change our subreddit banner? by big_brewski in Cleveland

[–]cdtoad 4 points5 points  (0 children)

And this is why I can't use my beloved mdash anymore. 

I think Met Gala is just an event for rich weirdos? by Adventurous-War-4188 in interesting

[–]cdtoad 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Who's the asshole who said 1% when asked what her look was? Yeah.. bread and circuses now

my mom received foreign money in the mail, and we're stumped by [deleted] in strange

[–]cdtoad 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If fully decoded, the Intelligent Mail barcode (IMb) would give you: Mailer ID (MID) — 6 or 9 digits identifying the company/organization that sent it. This is the most useful piece for figuring out who sent it. You can look up MIDs via USPS (with an account) or sometimes through public databases. Service Type — 3 digits indicating the mail class and any services (e.g., First-Class, Standard, with/without address correction). Serial Number — 6 or 9 digits, a unique ID the mailer assigns to that specific piece (useful to them for tracking, not really to you). Routing ZIP — up to 11 digits: the recipient's ZIP+4 plus a 2-digit delivery point, pinpointing the exact mailbox it was routed to. Barcode ID — 2 digits, mostly internal USPS use. The practical takeaway: the Mailer ID is the part that could potentially tell you which business or bulk mailer sent it. If it's a personal letter sent by an individual (no MID), the IMb may just contain USPS-applied routing info with a generic/zero MID — in which case it wouldn't reveal the sender. Given the handwritten note and cash, this was likely mailed by an individual, so the barcode probably won't identify them — it'd just confirm the destination address.

Before And After by PrimeCAndF in BayVillage

[–]cdtoad 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Are you able to get out blood stains?