Not to mention the hair-splitting the alastronomers use to keep from admitting that the Earth and Moon are a binary planet such that the orbit of either one around Sol has a strong sinusoidal component.
I thought the distinction was that the center of the Earth and Moon's mass was still within the physical circumstance of the planet. While binary planets have that center of mass somewhere between the planet's. That doesn't seem like splitting hairs to me. That seems to be a pretty clear distinction.
Who here can fix a motherboard on a washer or dryer? anyone?
That depends on what component is fried. A dried up or blown electrolytic capacitor, no problem. Some small poorly marked discrete component, might be tough to figure out the proper capacitance (or whatever). Some mystery IC, good luck.
The problem isn't the physical act of replacing the component (except in size constrained devices, like smartphones). The problem is identifying the failed component.
My state alone has 39 countries. Each can add it's own margin to the state ysales tax, and when they're done each city can add it's own margin as well. To make things even more complicated these tax borders don't align with zip codes or the city in the address. And, we have a few cities that even straddle county lines as well.
And yet, we still have small website operators here. They just don't manage their own checkout process. It does sound like you have more strenuous record keeping regulations though, and the tax inclusive price thing would be a pain.
Apparently you missed the fact that the oven was only heated to 340f, which is not hot enough to reflow lead-free solder. Less-free solder melts at 400f+.
All this "fix" probably does is heat and cool the board evenly to cause it to flatten out.
Sorry, I don't count "because the FBI said so" to be convincing evidence.
Relevant quotes from the article you posted:
The FBI said Friday that technical analysis had revealed links to North Korean-developed malware, including lines of code and encryption algorithms.
That is circumstantial evidence. Certainly not a smoking gun.
A White House spokesman said on Thursday that the United States would consider a "proportional response" if it determined that North Korea was behind the hacking. He did not rule out an attack on North Korean computer systems.
Pallets should be used until they are no longer functional and then recycled for the organic matter and iron. Disassembling then for lumber and nails is inefficient and a waste.
This is a terrible idea. First off, the time invested in carefully pulling nails of almost any sort quickly eclipses the cost of new nails. Second, the cheap wire nails (often clipped head nails) may work decently when fired from a pneumatic nail gun, but, unless you're quite competent with a hammer, good luck actually driving them into a 2x4.
My utility certainly does not include distribution costs in the kWh rate. We pay a connection (distribution & administration) fee and per kWh. Ours is a co-op and I've actually read the financial breakdowns (I was under the impression that, as a regulated utility, these documents would be available from any power company). It really only costs about $15 per household to handle distribution costs, and that includes overhead for improvements and emergency repairs.
Isn't the page really the issue? If the information is wrong or out of date then should it be forced to be taken down/edited instead of removing it from Google.
Have you been following this issue at all? The the data doesn't have to be wrong or incorrect, it can also be inadequate, irrelevant, or excessive. That is quite a sweeping definition. This is relevant.
Supposedly, there will be accurate guidelines issued by the end of November.
Disagree and commit is a bullshit philosophy, for government. However it's ideal for corporations to actually get work done without endless internal squabbling.
You're seriously underestimating the cost of a retrofit like that. Commercial doors aren't cheap ($500+) and cutting through what are typically concrete walls is also very expensive. Not to mention, how would second story classrooms would be dealt with?
No, 20k - 100k per school is actually not that expensive for a whole building retrofit.
HCE was implemented mainly to force Google Wallet on Verizon. Verizon refused to active the secure elements on their phones instead ISIS used a secure element on their SIM cards, which they refused to allow Google Wallet to access.
I'm not sure what the civil service laws are in your state, but in Washington they are so laughably vague that all they can reasonably be interpreted to mean is that the director of any particular service must create an employee handbook. Union protections far outstrip what the Washington state civil service laws offer.
Public sector workers have protections that workers in private industry don't, such as the many protections in civil service.
Citation needed, because that statement reeks of pure FUD. I can refute that, at least anecdotally. My local county employees have no additional protections other than their union agreement. Even their union protections are occasionally short circuited as all county employees (including managers) are members of the same union.
Actually watching the video, you're right. It doesn't look like a stuck backspace key. However, you should take note that (due to horrible vertical video) the right side of the keyboard is never even seen. She could easily be pressing the backspace key herself when convenient. That video should in no way be taken as evidence of anything other that the fact that she owns a Mac laptop.
What it will require is the government taking the last mile. Either via eminent domain or regulations requiring the current monopoly holder to lease spectrum. The chance of the first happening is zero and the chance if the second is vanishingly small.
Well, Kentucky using public funds for a religious theme park sounds like they are establishing a government religion in their state. Even if they were doing so unintentionally.
They give most any tourist attraction this same tax break. So, while I personally find this particular attraction distasteful, to refuse them a tax break simply because they are a religious organization is almost certainly unconstitutional.
Not to mention the hair-splitting the alastronomers use to keep from admitting that the Earth and Moon are a binary planet such that the orbit of either one around Sol has a strong sinusoidal component.
I thought the distinction was that the center of the Earth and Moon's mass was still within the physical circumstance of the planet. While binary planets have that center of mass somewhere between the planet's. That doesn't seem like splitting hairs to me. That seems to be a pretty clear distinction.
And they can't identify streaming video in any way other than breaking SSL for their users?
I guess you missed the part where Intel had already made the leap to a 14nm process.
Who here can fix a motherboard on a washer or dryer? anyone?
That depends on what component is fried. A dried up or blown electrolytic capacitor, no problem. Some small poorly marked discrete component, might be tough to figure out the proper capacitance (or whatever). Some mystery IC, good luck.
The problem isn't the physical act of replacing the component (except in size constrained devices, like smartphones). The problem is identifying the failed component.
And yet, we still have small website operators here. They just don't manage their own checkout process. It does sound like you have more strenuous record keeping regulations though, and the tax inclusive price thing would be a pain.
All this "fix" probably does is heat and cool the board evenly to cause it to flatten out.
Therefore, almost assuredly, the big blockbusters will not be available via Kindle Unlimited until their sales begin to taper off.
The silly tangent was comparing it the attack on Pearl Harbor.
Relevant quotes from the article you posted:
The FBI said Friday that technical analysis had revealed links to North Korean-developed malware, including lines of code and encryption algorithms.
That is circumstantial evidence. Certainly not a smoking gun.
A White House spokesman said on Thursday that the United States would consider a "proportional response" if it determined that North Korea was behind the hacking. He did not rule out an attack on North Korean computer systems.
That is a pretty important if.
Also, the Japanese attacked a federal military installation.
By all means, if you want to pull pallets for at best $15 of materials, go for it. I have better uses for my time.
Pallets should be used until they are no longer functional and then recycled for the organic matter and iron. Disassembling then for lumber and nails is inefficient and a waste.
This is a terrible idea. First off, the time invested in carefully pulling nails of almost any sort quickly eclipses the cost of new nails. Second, the cheap wire nails (often clipped head nails) may work decently when fired from a pneumatic nail gun, but, unless you're quite competent with a hammer, good luck actually driving them into a 2x4.
Insured against a studio voluntarily declining to release a finished film? I don't think so.
Granted, our area isn't that suitable for solar.
Isn't the page really the issue? If the information is wrong or out of date then should it be forced to be taken down/edited instead of removing it from Google.
Have you been following this issue at all? The the data doesn't have to be wrong or incorrect, it can also be inadequate, irrelevant, or excessive. That is quite a sweeping definition. This is relevant.
Supposedly, there will be accurate guidelines issued by the end of November.
Disagree and commit is a bullshit philosophy, for government. However it's ideal for corporations to actually get work done without endless internal squabbling.
No, 20k - 100k per school is actually not that expensive for a whole building retrofit.
How many of us cringed at the misspelling of torque? As in, 4 inch-pounds of torque would be appropriate for a DB connector.
HCE was implemented mainly to force Google Wallet on Verizon. Verizon refused to active the secure elements on their phones instead ISIS used a secure element on their SIM cards, which they refused to allow Google Wallet to access.
I'm not sure what the civil service laws are in your state, but in Washington they are so laughably vague that all they can reasonably be interpreted to mean is that the director of any particular service must create an employee handbook. Union protections far outstrip what the Washington state civil service laws offer.
Public sector workers have protections that workers in private industry don't, such as the many protections in civil service.
Citation needed, because that statement reeks of pure FUD. I can refute that, at least anecdotally. My local county employees have no additional protections other than their union agreement. Even their union protections are occasionally short circuited as all county employees (including managers) are members of the same union.
Actually watching the video, you're right. It doesn't look like a stuck backspace key. However, you should take note that (due to horrible vertical video) the right side of the keyboard is never even seen. She could easily be pressing the backspace key herself when convenient. That video should in no way be taken as evidence of anything other that the fact that she owns a Mac laptop.
What it will require is the government taking the last mile. Either via eminent domain or regulations requiring the current monopoly holder to lease spectrum. The chance of the first happening is zero and the chance if the second is vanishingly small.
Well, Kentucky using public funds for a religious theme park sounds like they are establishing a government religion in their state. Even if they were doing so unintentionally.
They give most any tourist attraction this same tax break. So, while I personally find this particular attraction distasteful, to refuse them a tax break simply because they are a religious organization is almost certainly unconstitutional.