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Comments · 20,258
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So Far, Supreme Court Unanimous
The Fuji vs. Jazz Camera, Lexmark vs. Arizona Cartridge Remanufacturers, and other cases have been rare examples of unanimous rulings by the Supreme Court vs. similar appellate court rulings on patent extension. I work in the re-manufacturing industry and am not too worried about the USA courts (though the Terminator-like persistence of foreign companies bringing the case that resale = patent or trademark infringement is frightening, and the Mickey Mouse rulings on Trademark are depressing). What's more troubling is the direction ownership law goes when the USA Supreme Court and European Courts no longer oversee 80% of all product sales. Chinese consumers purchase more computer products than the USA today, and if they take a Japanese turn in their court rulings, these corporations may become godlike, and the USA may be tempted to try to give our own companies (like Apple) similar power. See links to the cases above at http://retroworks.blogspot.com/2012/03/usas-finest-supreme-court-ruling-for.html
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Re:so all those people weren't crazy
Indian legend has flying chariots
And then there's these goodies -
How I made one....
http://lizardmonkeyengineering.blogspot.com/
I had an atrix and one of the laptop docks so I created one of these a while ago. All it takes is some cables and adapters and some time soldering. Everything works; mouse/keyboard. Able to power the raspberry Pi from the lapdock. Currently working on getting a good wifi dongle to work so it would be truly portable.
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Re:my guess
World oil sales month 2 month
http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-vgnxa_JCLkU/Ti4TxYIppMI/AAAAAAAAAdw/rLpNUkhusNg/s1600/FIGURE209.GIFIf you burn 89 million barrels of oil per day, thats got to be the majority of pollution.
If that changes year to year, then the co2 levels must follow it.
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Re:Here's an idea
Photo linked with the caption "Stupid Americans"
I hate to break it to you, but those are clearly Schuko plugs, not NEMA plugs. You can note the extra ground along the sides of the sockets (actually, a safer design that NEMA).
Hate to let facts get in the way of a good insult, but those are stupid Germans, not stupid Americans. Which makes it funnier that you might link it, because (like everywhere else) we have no shortage of idiots here
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Re:Here's an idea
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Simple enough.
1. Realize safety is one goal among many and that we have to deal with tradeoffs. Over the past 30 years it's been "the engineer giveth and the safety inspector taketh away" as overblown concerns about collision readiness have turned into absurd safety regulations and a curb weight arms race.
2. Raise the gas tax to reflect the real costs of driving- the tremendous spending on road construction and maintenance, the externalities associated with road congestion and pollution, etc. Everyone who's willing to be honest about the impact of different policies, from Greg Mankiw (former chairman of the CEA and an adviser to Romney) to Steven Chu (Obama's energy secretary), knows that this is the only realistic way forward.
Higher gas taxes would be much much less distortionary and harmful to the economy than simply mandating higher fuel standards. The gas tax is also a better way to raise revenue than most other taxes; a revenue-neutral bill raising the gas tax while lowering the taxes on labor and productivity (payroll, corporate, income, etc) would be a huge boon to the economy.
Of course, I don't expect either of these two things to happen, since political bickering and accusations ("you want to see more Americans dying on the highways! you want to put the pain on us every time we go to the pump!") will probably trump any kind of attempt to bring our policies back in contact with reality.
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Re:Actually, 10 years.
When asked why, he pointed out some standard feynmann estimates that showed that there isn't enough Lithium in the world to make nuclear fusion a practical power source, using the DT reaction.
More lithium has been discovered since then. How much lithium does a fusion plant need, anyway?
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Re:big surprise
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Re:big surprise
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visit me
visit me http://ymku.blogspot.com/
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Re:McAfee is trying hard to get into this market
install applications from trusted sources to minimize failures, not only affected by the source that provides a free application but the quality is not good, it would be very unfortunate if the android is broken and all of our data to be lost, a little sacrifice by buying the paid apps I do not think No problem, it would be comparable to the benefits that we will get http://androiddevelopersindonesia.blogspot.com/
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Re:A flawed rebuttal
he basically seems to think that scientific studies are done to push their findings and make hard conclusions, rather than experiments that publish their findings. It was the ridiculous new media he's a part of that made the assumptions and conclusions he has issue with.
Many studies are done to push their findings and make hard conclusions, and it's not difficult to believe that a school with tight ties to Monsanto who has been caught lying on their behalf in the past is lying on Monsanto's behalf again. Indeed, the most logical conclusion is that this is precisely what is happening, because they have demonstrated a propensity for this specific kind of dishonesty in the past. If a person had done what Stanford has done, it would never be trusted again, and the same group of corrupt assholes are running it as have been.
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Re:Really?
The bill sets up a council of 9 faculty (from CSU, UC and Community Colleges) and they will be responsible for acquiring the books. If they acquire crappy books, faculty will not adopt them. If they do not offer enough to authors to entice them to produce typical ancillary material, faculty will not adopt them. The funds have not yet been allocated and I have no idea whether or not they will be sufficient to attact good, complete books. We will see. More detail at: http://cis471.blogspot.com/2012/10/governor-brown-signs-california-open_1.html.
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Nitrates are perfectly healthy...
...and the idiot writing the hit piece doesn't seem to know that.
http://junkfoodscience.blogspot.com/2008/07/does-banning-hotdogs-and-bacon-make.html
"What may be more surprising to learn is that scientific evidence has been building for years that nitrates are actually good for us, that nitrite is produced by our own body in greater amounts than is eaten in food, and that it has a number of essential biological functions, including in healthy immune and cardiovascular systems. Nitrite is appearing so beneficial, it’s even being studied as potential treatments for health problems such as high blood pressure, heart attacks, sickle cell disease and circulatory problems."
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Abject Ignorance of Our Intellectual "Leaders"To tease apart causation from mere correlation, science came up with something called a "controlled experiment". That no variation on that phrase appears in the article at Slate, nor in any of the responses, indicates a level of abject ignorance that is nothing less than a civilization's tragedy.
If people want to deal with social science causation, they must stop arguing and start experimenting. But how? How can we experiment in the social sciences in a way that demands consent of the human subjects at the same time as providing experimental control?
The answer is Secession from Slavery to Free Scientific Society:
Secession from Slavery to Free Scientific Society
by James Bowery
INTRODUCTION
Secession is necessary to free society. Free society starts with mutual consent. Mutual consent implies the option not to consent. "Freedom From" compliments "Freedom To".
Secession is necessary to true social science: We can best discover causal laws by testing theories with controlled experiments. This is true of all science. Controlled experiments require separate experimental groups, treated according to different theories and comparing the measured results with predictions. In practice, human ecologies can form separate experimental groups only by upholding geographic boundaries that prevent cross-contamination between treatments – cross-contamination with its resulting confusion and confounding of results. We can argue how best to achieve this in practice, but the principle of giving experimental evidence priority over any amount of argument, debate, deliberation, peer review or judicial proceeding stands as more self-evident than anything in the Declaration of Independence.
In a free scientific society, an individual is subject to treatment only after giving informed consent.
These two pillars of social good -- truth and freedom -- stand upon the foundation of secession.
Tyranny of the majority, limited only by a vague laundry list of selectively enforced human rights -- the sine qua non of "liberal democracy" -- must submit to the right to secede or it violates truth and freedom, hence all social good.
SLAVERY
Getting right to the point that people need addressed whenever "secession" is uttered:
Abolition of slavery is support of individual secession.
Slaves want to secede from their "owners" just as others want to -- and do -- secede from societies they find objectionable. The difference between slavery and others turns solely on whether the individual's right to secede is realized. All who are denied secession are slaves: their consent is violated.
If men from Maine choose to support the right of secession of slaves by marching on South Carolina to kill unrepentant slave owners -- every last one of them -- those men from Maine in no way lose their own rights. Men retaining their humanity may differ over whether it is wisest to intervene in such a way – or to intervene at all. For example, should a government which is capable of raising taxes do so for the waging of war against slavery or, better for the purchase of slaves to be freed from their dependent owners? Eminent domain “taking” arguments aside, just men may, as well, differ over whether it is wisest to put down a rabid animal, or to treat it. The compromise upon which the United States was founded was flawed, perhaps fatally, by its incorporation of slave states.
Likewise, this in no way supports the 14th Amendment to the United States Constitution or The Union. It supports only the 13th Amendment. Despite Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964's pretenses to the contrary, it is still a "badge of slavery" to be forced into association with others. Likewise the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965 compounded this badge of slavery born of the so-called “Civil Rights Movement”.
"Freedo
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Re:UML
Don't get me wrong. I'm a big advocate for mind maps. See http://ploneglenn.blogspot.com/2010/10/mind-mapping-in-modern-age.html for a list of map mapping software that I have used over the years. I just don't see why you would use a mind map as a replacement for UML. Outside of them bothing being a type of diagram, I don't see much similariity or purpose. You use UML to model object oriented systems. Mind maps are a diagrammatic way to organize just about any cognitive activity. Using a mind map as a replacement for UML would be like attempting to drive to the super market with a pencil. http://stackoverflow.com/questions/423218/best-tool-to-create-architecture-diagrams-for-software/423288#423288 is what I recommend for diagramming in UML.
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Re:Transparent Aluminum!
In 1986, James Doohan demonstrated a slight purple flare when transporting live sea creatures into/out of transparent aluminum (sapphire) aquariums.
They used a Klingon transporter to do the beaming... The transporter effect was orange.
Double dumb ass.
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The Real Reason Samsung Lost.
Samsung was destroying emails and manipulating the discovery process.
http://internationaledisclosure.blogspot.com/2012/09/apple-v-samsung-largest-international.html
Here's what the judge had to say:“Apple sought a finding that Samsung spoliated evidence, and as a sanction for such conduct, an adverse inference jury instruction “to the effect that: (1) Samsung had a duty to preserve relevant evidence, including emails; Samsung failed to preserve large volumes of relevant emails and other documents; Samsung acted in bad faith in failing to preserve the relevant documents; and the jury may presume that the documents that Samsung failed to preserve would have been favorable to Apple's case and unfavorable to Samsung; and (2) if the jury finds infringement of any Apple patent, trademark, or trade dress, that jury may infer that the infringement was intentional, willful, and without regard to Apple's rights.”
The jury was issued an Adverse Inference Instruction by the judge.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adverse_inference
Quote from Wikipedia:
"The United States Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit pointed out in 2004, in a case involving spoliation (destruction) of evidence, that "...the giving of an adverse inference instruction often terminates the litigation in that it is 'too difficult a hurdle' for the spoliating party to overcome. The court therefore concluded that the adverse inference instruction is an 'extreme' sanction that should 'not be given lightly'...".Judge: "Assume Samsung is guilty. Feel free to be as impartial as you wish to be."
Jury: "Sweet. We'll be back in a few hours and can go home early."The critical point in all of this is that Velvin Hogan's personal feelings were legally allowed to be part of the decision making process at that point. There is no misconduct.
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Re:Is there one?
Good point, although ironically none of them charge anywhere near fast food prices.
Well, I will say this about US cell phone carriers I was happy to see how much the price of data plans have gone down in price last time I renewed. I think Verizon charges like $30/month for 2GB, which may seem insane, but compared with what they charged back when the whole ".002 cents fiasco" happened 6 years ago (About $209.71 per GB), $15/GB isn't as bad. Of course, its still quite far from what you might pay for overage at a web hosting company ($1/GB) or what you pay per GB with a OC-192 connection (maybe $0.008/GB).
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Is this idea a waste of time, or not?
I had an idea back when I was in college (1981-82) about using an array of look up tables to do programmable logic. I've never really had a chance to get a chip made, as my work is nowhere near that field these days. I'm wondering if you think my idea has any merit.
I had a blog up at http://bitgrid.blogspot.com/ where I wrote about this subject, trying to get a chip made some day. But things happen, and it's been dormant.
The idea is simple, really... a grid of cells with 4 inputs, a look up table, and 4 outputs. The 64 bits determine the outputs for any possible input combination.
Routing logic is even simpler... there is none. If you want to route through a cell, you have to program the cell to do it.
Thus any cell can be routing or computation, or both.
An unsigned n bit adder takes n cells
An unsigned n bit multiply takes n*(n-1) cells
A divider takes (n+1)*n cells, unless you want to divide by zero...then it's (n+1)^2 cells
Sound interesting? Waste of time?
I'd like to know what you think.
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Agreed, 110% (& you're not alone)... apk
"I get exactly the same effect with my Hosts file" - by fast turtle (1118037) on Sunday September 30, @03:00PM (#41507585)
Excellent - You get better:
1.) Speed/Bandwidth
2.) "Layered-Security"/"Defense-In-Depth"
3.) Reliability (vs. downed or dns-poisoned redirected dns servers)
4.) Anonymity (to an extent, vs. DNS request logs + DNSBL)
5.) MULTI-PLATFORM ability to do the same (think smartphones, you can apply hosts there too)
6.) MORE EFFICIENT OPERATIONS (ring 0/rpl 0/kernelmode filtering @ THE IP STACK LEVEL, vs. ring 3/rpl 3/usermode layered on MORE INEFFICIENCY in browser addons)
7.) The ability to SHIELD OTHER APPLICATIONS from ads & threats (I used to do this using hosts for Opera before it was freewares, & Ubuntu users can do the same now (since part of it's adbanner sponsored now)& FAR MORE... good choice on YOUR part, but... there's more you can do with hosts than merely adblocking (read on)!
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"and for those that don't understand how they work, it's pretty god damn simple." - by fast turtle (1118037) on Sunday September 30, @03:00PM (#41507585)
They are, & SIMPLER than editing adblock lists, that is certain... hosts are just a text file with line records you can add/remove/alter etc. as you wish with tools you already own in text editors, but also for more?
Well, you can use the app I wrote that I posted about earlier... there's a reason I am noting this, since you are NOT USING custom hosts files TO THEIR FULL POTENTIAL!
Seriously...
(The app handles filtering them vs. comments & other bloating crap hosts files makers put in (they mean well, it's usually documentation, except MVPS which puts WAY TOO MUCH B.S. in theirs), importing hosts data from reputable & reliable sources, deduplication of hosts repeat bloating entries + making the hosts use a MORE EFFICIENT parse by using smaller blocking addresses (0.0.0.0 vs. 127.0.0.1)... & more!
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"I never make the connection to the god damn server - no ad/malware or other crap to see. " - by fast turtle (1118037) on Sunday September 30, @03:00PM (#41507585)
"EXACTAMUNDO" & that?
That also EXTENDS TO MALWARE LADEN SITES/SERVERS/HOSTS-DOMAINS as well as adbanners!
So - that's where you aren't using hosts to their FULL potential here (as well as the fact you can "hardcode in" your FAVORITE SITES into it, making them resolve even FASTER than remote DNS can do!)
My "APK Hosts File Engine 5.0++" does all that for you, & "automagically" IF YOU WISH (it has the option to run automatically)...
If you opt NOT to use my app? Here's the sources I import from for your reference:
http://www.mvps.org/winhelp2002/hosts.htm
http://someonewhocares.org/hosts/
http://hostsfile.org/hosts.html
http://hostsfile.mine.nu/downloads/
http://hosts-file.net/?s=Download
https://zeustracker.abuse.ch/monitor.php?filter=online
https://spyeyetracker.abuse.ch/monitor.php
http://ddanchev.blogspot.com/
http://www.malware.com.br/lists.shtml
http://www.stopbadware.org/
Spybot "Search & Destroy" IMMUNIZE feature (fortifies HOSTS files with KNOWN bad servers blocked)---
"As to updating the damn thing every week? I don't do that." - by fast turtle (1118037) on Sunday September 30, @03:00PM (#41507585)
Well, per what I wrote above? Vs. mal
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Re:pharma?
but I don't think there is some big conspiracy to block it or actual cures. I think the much simpler solution is that curing most diseases is much harder than curing it. And drug companies do come out with things like antibiotics that do in fact cure disease.
With all due respect, like most people inside and outside the medical community, you've been fed a line of complete bullshit.
I've got karma to burn so here goes (this is just scratching the surface):
Cancer-Gate: How to Win the Losing Cancer War by Samuel S. Epstein, M.D.
Harvard Medical Students Rebel Against Big Pharma Ties
Big pharma loves the (non-stop) war on cancer
The Nature of the Pharmaceutical Industry
Big Pharmaâ(TM)s War on Health
The drugs donâ(TM)t work: a modern medical scandal ~ Ben Goldacre
Money, Politics, and Health Care: A Disease-Creation Economy â" Part I by Mark Hyman, MD
Corruption in Drug Research and in Medicine
Scientific Sleight of Hand: Two Ways Big Pharma Lies to You
The 6 Types of Pills Big Pharma Wants You Hooked On for Life
Should We Stop Trying To Cure Cancer?
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So what and here's why:
Sanitizing events lets people avoid confronting reality.
People should KNOW what death and violence and other Bad Shit look like, not masturbate to the Tasty Car Chase then cut to commercial.
PC bullshit is just another US Media Failure. Show the truth, even when that Truth is dead people. Actions have real consequences.
BTW, war is made more acceptable by not showing dead own-side troops. The "Greatest Generation" could face truth, so we have no excuse.
Would Faux News show this?
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Re:Good
$10 million will fund medical care for about half a dozen elderly grandparents whose children won't let them die gracefully. With that money, the hospital will be able to pay the staff and buy the drugs and equipment to keep their bodily functions active without brain control for another few weeks. No amount of money will give dear old Grandma a realistic chance of recovery, but the beeping of the monitors will comfort her family a bit, while they wallow in fear and postpone the actual grief.
There is no punchline here. The fact that the most biased party possible still has near-absolute control over a dying person's medical treatment is just sad, and it's a major reason medical costs are so high for everyone else.
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Then pay taxes, MS
If MS wants the U.S. to educate its workers, then perhaps MS needs to stop looking for ways to pay U.S. taxes.
Oh, that's right. MS just wants the other U.S. taxpayers to increase MS's profits. I forgot.
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Re:When in Rome...Here is Mr. Fabio's comment on the issue:
You may have read articles in the press over the last couple of weeks about YouTube videos in Brazil. Given all the interest, we wanted to explain what has happened, and why. First of all some basic principles about the service. Our goal is for YouTube to be a community that everyone can enjoy, as well as a platform for free speech around the world. This can cause real challenges, because what is OK in one country may be offensive or even illegal in another.
So we have clear community guidelines about the kind of videos that are unacceptable--and when they are flagged, we review and if necessary remove them. If a video is illegal in a particular country--and we have a local version of the service there, as in Brazil--we will restrict access to it, after receiving a valid court order or government complaint. Because we are deeply committed to free expression, we often push back on requests that we do not believe are valid. For example, we were recently in court in the US arguing that videos were perfectly legitimate and should stay on YouTube.
Now for what’s happened in Brazil. As usual during an election season, we have had a lot of court orders to remove videos that are critical of political candidates. As always, we have reviewed them all-- and pushed back on the many legal complaints that we believe are invalid. For example, last week, we appealed a court order to remove videos from YouTube. While we were waiting for that appeal to be heard, an arrest warrant was issued for me as country director of Google Brazil.
Late last night, we learned that our final legal appeal has been denied and so now we have no choice but to block the video in Brazil. We are deeply disappointed that we have never had the full opportunity to argue in court that these were legitimate free speech videos and should remain available in Brazil.
Despite all this, we will continue to campaign for free expression globally—not just because it’s a key tenet of free societies, but also because more information generally means more choice, more power, more economic opportunity and more freedom for people. As Article 19 of the United Nations’ Universal Declaration of Human Rights states, “Everyone has the right to freedom of opinion and expression; this right includes freedom to hold opinions without interference and to seek, receive, and impart information and ideas through any media and regardless of frontiers.”
Ironically, the user who published one of the videos has now removed it and closed their account-- showing just what a chilling effect these episodes can have on free speech.
Source: http://googlebrasilblog.blogspot.com/2012/09/youtube-no-brasil.html
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Re:All Edison's fault
$800/mo for cell phone + cable?
Woah.
How about cancelling both services, get a basic landline for $25/mo for incoming calls, and use the $9300 in annual savings to take a nice vacation, say Tahiti.
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Re:'monopoly'
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Errata re parent post
First sentence fourth paragraph should read:
Second, Blackboard does not list any Linux distro as "supported" but users have found that at least some distros do in fact work, even with "unsupported" browsers.
A typo had destroyed the link.
Also there is a link from the blackboard.com site to the pdf file that describes the Redhat / Blackboard training opportunity.
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Re:Get your head out of your ass
You're so right! How dare he expect more for his money! College should teach you how to be a good little worker bee, accept what you're given and do your job.
Teach critical thinking and problem solving skills in college? Psh. That just ain't right thinkin'! What a complete asshole this guy!
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Re:Largely Demand Driven
You seem to not have read the part of my post where I mention the subsidies, but your point is valid. We can then take the true cost of the electric car and compare it to the true cost of the gas car. This study found the total costs borne by both consumer and taxpayer for every gallon of gasoline burned to be $15.14 in 2007 (if you don't follow the link, they include medical, environmental, and military costs as well). A 2012 study and a 2011 study both found the total cost of dirty coal-fired electricity to be less than 9 cents per kilowatt hour.
Now take your average new compact gasoline car at 28 mpg, and a Nissan LEAF which gets about 3.6 mi/kWh. To go 1000 miles on gas, you burn 35.7 gallons, which equals $540.71 in total societal costs. Now to go those same 1000 miles in the LEAF, on 277.8 kWh of electricity, it costs society $25. The electric car costs just 4.6% of an equivalent gas car when all these factors are taken into account. Over a 100,000 mile life span, the electric car saves $51,571, more than five times the typical production subsidy. The conclusion, then, is that the taxpayer gets an incredible return on investment for electric vehicle subsidies.
If you can find numbers that contradict mine, please post them. I could not find any concrete facts on sites with opposing biases, so I must assume they have motivations other than scientific accuracy.
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Re:Just pass the course and move on
If there’s any industry willing to quash innovation and progress to save its stodgy existence, it’s book publishing. Sales reps have become incredibly adept at the care and feeding of the university faculty that they depend upon to adopt their books. even private industrial leaders and economic pragmatists like Alan Greenspan have begun to criticize the decline of traditional liberal arts education and the rise of the corporate university as economically and socially disastrous.
Good luck on your quest.
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Rooney here
Your parents gave you "detention"? Perhaps this is your dad?
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Old news: RIM analysis from Oct 2010
He said it the best two years ago.
http://mobileopportunity.blogspot.com/2010/10/whats-really-wrong-with-blackberry-and.html
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Re:Well don't look to Google for answers!
I wasn't aware that outright fabrication about map issues had become humor.
Siri,
Where is Earth?
"I have found Earth. Displaying on iMaps."
http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_ywQvbF86xjs/Sx30uuAmANI/AAAAAAAABdA/EdmbkorO-00/s400/536J++earth+and+nebula+web.jpg -
Apple Moving to Japan, Korea based
Oddly, I was just researching news on Digitimes that Apple was moving away from Taiwan-Shenzhen touch screen production, moving the work to Japan and Korea. http://retroworks.blogspot.com/2012/09/revolution-number-nine-apple-google.html Stay tuned for opinions to swing on axis.
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Re:Apple has always stolen other designs since day
Not stolen, but 'inspired by' according to Apple. Apple design has been heavily 'inspired' by classic Bruan products.
http://badbadapple.blogspot.com/2012/09/braun-vs-apple.html -
Re:That's the way the cookie crumbles
Although what you say is technically the case, in practice small claims courts have heard copyright cases. Sure there's a jurisdictional issue, but if the other side never appears or never raises the subject matter issue, you can still get a judgment. This isn't a one-off situation either. I used to work in Small Claims Court in another state and we would get copyright cases from time to time. Depending on the presiding judge, the cases would sometimes go forward, and other times would basically be dismissed by a motion for summary judgment.
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Re:Developing Marginal Lands
Israel. They have developed techniques to make it work. Other peoples in the area haven't been as diligent.
May as well get this out of the way
Very interesting read. Thanks for posting this. Taking care of your own water supply is one thing that almost all people (conservative or liberal) can agree is a vital function of Government.
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amazing internet site
I was surfing the internet a lot and many find amazing site, one of them in your site, help this post rank http://indexbisnis.blogspot.com/2012/09/sepeda-motor-bebek-injeksi-kencang-dan.html
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Re:Um, some problems.
2) Yeah. An online petition. That'll learn 'em.
Didn't you hear? It's valiant.
I assumed they meant that Prince Valiant was organizing the petition.
Sorry, if he's not involved then I'm not interested.
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Re:Developing Marginal Lands
Israel. They have developed techniques to make it work. Other peoples in the area haven't been as diligent.
May as well get this out of the way
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My False-Tag Fake ID Group Is Deleted
After a similar discussion on Slashdot, a year or two ago, I was inspired to post a group photo from the 1800s and invite all my friends to "false tag" themeselves. It is part of my "digital camouflage" campaign. Nature doesn't really evolve invisibility very often, camouflage and false data is much more common. After reading this post I went to see if my "false tag group" was still on facebook.. and found it has disappeared. But I won't give up. "camouflage" is the answer, not anonymity. We need more bad data on Facebook. False tag a friend today. http://retroworks.blogspot.com/2010/09/simpler-ideas-cookie-camouflage-digital.html
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Re:Sacramento freeway came to a crawl
material you create very useful so I forgot to print out the coupons Kohls and dsw coupons for my shopping. and now I want to print a Toys R Us coupons finished viewing your website. thank you
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Re:Sacramento freeway came to a crawl
material you create very useful so I forgot to print out the coupons Kohls and dsw coupons for my shopping. and now I want to print a Toys R Us coupons finished viewing your website. thank you
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Re:Sacramento freeway came to a crawl
material you create very useful so I forgot to print out the coupons Kohls and dsw coupons for my shopping. and now I want to print a Toys R Us coupons finished viewing your website. thank you
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They posted a shot of the incident
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Re:Probably
There was a huge chav riot in London very recently. Cops couldn't control it - they were practically helpless. The victims were even more fucked. There was even a video where some dude got his pants stolen on the street in broad daylight. On the other hand, you had these guys perched atop the stores that served as their livelihoods during the 1992 LA Riots.
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Re:He just used a German name...
Phew, at least it wasn't the same as the top secret US nuclear missile lock code of 00000000.