This coming election is one that I'd love to have voted in. Except I got a letter through the door this week saying that the Ontario Court of Appeals has ruled that expats must wish to return to Canada and must not be gone more than 5 years unless employed by the government.
These restrictions are fucking idiotic. I fully intend to return, I just don't know when exactly. So what if I've been gone 5 years (and 16 days). I still care a great deal about my country. I was born and raised and will always be Canadian, not even dual citizenship will change that in the slightest. I want to at least have the opportunity to have my say about its future or I might not recognise it when I do eventually return.
So unless I can prove I work abroad for the government by the 15th of September, my rights as a citizen will be trampled.
Is there going to be a Supreme Court challenge or have they already declined to consider this?
Your argument is like saying McD's and their hamburger supplier are violating RICO laws since the burger maker gets a kickback overtime McD's sells a burger and you can't buy just the bun without paying for the burger as well.
Actually you can. When I was in school, a classmate got a job at McDonalds. They handed out photocopies of the till buttons to people who were going to be cashiers and told them to go practice a bit with their friends & family.
I had a look at this sheet, there were buttons for everything.. no bun, no pickle, no patty, even a button for socks if you can believe it. We worked out that it was possible to order a hamburger with no bun, no patty, no pickle, no condiments, no onions, nothing. Technically I guess you'd still be charged for it and you'd end up with an empty wrapper. I have no idea if their actual till would allow such a thing, but there were certainly all the right buttons required to fulfil the order.
This was probably about 15 years ago now but I'm sure it hasn't changed that much.
I know some gorillas can stand up, but I don't think they're going to start using the internet any time soon, at least not soon enough that we have to start planning a municipal network for them.
Those average speed cameras are usually only in construction zones on the motorway where the lanes have been narrowed and speed reduced to 50mph, and they have a fairly generous leeway as well. I've never been ticketed for driving 54mph (actual speed, speedo shows 59mph) on cruise through these areas for years, and you're constantly overtaken by people going at least 3-4mph faster... who knows if they get ticketed though. There are also fixed speed cameras, red light cameras and CCTV cameras all over the place for your surveillance pleasure.
Don't pick on the UK too much though, if you drive in France on the Péage (toll) motorways, I've heard they clock your time in and time out, and at the exit tolls your speeding fine is payable on the spot. Most of Europe has on the spot fines, but it's usually tens of Euros, not hundreds of dollars like in the US or Canada.
If you can get TalkTalk Plus, go for it. It's their FTTC offering. Our exchange isn't being updated for quite some time by the looks of things. Check out http://www.samknows.com/broadband/broadband_availability for anything you wanted to know about your exchange.
We've been with Tiscali/TalkTalk for a few years. The best part is the unlimited international calls package (we make good use of it). The DSL speeds have dropped over the past year though. We used to get a solid 3.5mbps down and 800kbps up, which is fine, but it's dropped to 2.5mbps down and 700kbps up... it's tough to stream video on two machines at once. Also, they actively DOS torrents between 6pm and midnight. I say actively DOS because throttling would imply that it's based on need and network congestion, but they just murder the download down to about 1-5k/sec. Upload is unaffected.
The ban on electronic devices in general is for no other reason than to force you to pay attention. Takeoffs and landings are the most critical phases of flight where the most can go wrong. They want your maximum attention during these times in case of an emergency. Yelling brace brace isn't gonna get through if everybody's got their MP3 players turned up to 11. That's why they still let you have your headphones plugged in to the in seat entertainment system, because any announcements pre-empt whatever you're doing and come over the headphones as well. They obviously want to minimize risk as much as possible, so transmitters aren't allowed the entire flight.
Not everyone listens though, myself included... I've been able to send & receive texts during take off but once we got into the clouds I lost the network, whereas a friend of mine managed to send a text in flight over Atlanta on his way to Cuba from Toronto. I've left my phone on for entire flights without realizing as well, as I'm sure thousands of others do every day. I also usually have my MP3 player on, but I do pay attention to what's going on around me. A family friend owns a Cessna 152 float plane and he rigged up a system to use his cell phone over his headset, but when the phone's in use, he says the instruments go wacky. Unfortunately I didn't see it in action.
I've been lucky enough to have had a peek inside one of the cases (as it was being built and having the kinks ironed out) they're going to use to transport the reflector sail things from the manufacturer to the assembly plant, one case per sail. My friend is the shop's computer guy. The case was enormous and had to be perfectly air tight so it could be filled with nitrogen to protect the sail during transport. I saw it in July so I'm pretty sure they've finished and shipped them all by now.
Granted, it wasn't a component of the actual spacecraft, but an important piece of the puzzle nonetheless. I still think it was very cool to have had the privilege of poking my head inside, snapping a few photos and chatting with the guys making it.
Yes, but when the cops enforce the law and you get punished, you go to jail or you get a fine. It's tangible.
When you "do bad stuff" and don't listen to "God" (or whatever term you feel like using), there's no direct punishment. It all takes place after you die. You go to heaven or hell. Very conveniently, no one can confirm their existence, since you have to die to get in. It seems as if the people who invented this nonsense purposely made it so it couldn't be disproven by any living being. Good thing the dead can't talk.
They don't call it the opiate of the masses for nothing.
And to quote Ricky Gervais, "Thank God for making me an atheist."
Really, huh? Last time I checked they still taught "FIRST look left, THEN look right, THEN cross the streets" to our kids, did they forgo that in your country?
Unforunately that's not a universal rule. If people did that where I live, there wouldn't be many left to tell the tale. I've almost stepped out in front of a car before I got used to looking "the wrong way" first. BTW, I'm Canadian and I live in the UK. My wife has done the exact opposite in Canada and Germany. Luckily I was there to stop her and vice versa. "The left side's the right side and the right side's the wrong side" is the saying I think.
The change in traffic handedness really screws people up. It doesn't take me long to get used to it while driving or as a passenger, but if I think about it for too long it really does my head in.
Easily. Even if this company manages to develop the game (I believe the devkits require licenses), it won't be signed by MS, a necessary step to run on an unmodified console. If you had a mod chip, you would likely be able to run it as could then run unsigned code.
If they were smart, they would develop it for the PC. At the same time, they should also devote some devs to improve the open source drivers for the Kinect. That way they have their swingin 3D sex game and, aside from the fact that very few, if any retailers would actually sell it, no one could stop them from selling it. Microsoft might try to do something if they use a Kinect in their advertising, but I'm not sure how that would actually pan out.
This is the only sensible post in this entire discussion.
Thank you for clearly explaining the content and implications of each bill in a coherent manner without resorting to conjecture and hyperbole like most others seem to have done.
Then perhaps those states should mandate that they get the new formula. Any Sudafed I've bought in the UK and Canada no longer contains pseudoephedrine, the offending ingredient.
The box of pills in front of me now lists the active ingredient as phenylephrine and the nasal spray is xylometazoline hydrochloride. These are the UK products.
I was in The George (Wetherspoon pub) on George St in Croydon a couple of weekends ago for breakfast, and in the men's washroom there were cameras with signs underneath explaining that they were there to prevent people using drugs in the washroom. It certainly took me by surprise. They seemed to be pointing at the sinks and the door. Some of the cameras were visible from the urinals so presumably one could be seen on camera using them. It was difficult to tell where they were pointing exactly since they were all the black dome type cameras.
I remember thinking at the time that if anyone wanted to snort some coke or whatever that badly, they could easily take a seat in one of the stalls and do whatever they wanted off camera.
I was issued a UK fiancé visa back in March and had my fingerprints taken digitally and a digital photograph as well for biometrics purposes. I suppose they measure the distance between your lips and nose and eyes and stuff. For fingerprints, the scanner might have looked at the blood vessel structure inside the fingers instead of the prints, but I can't be certain on that.
I'm glad the ID cards are gone now, mainly for privacy reasons, but if I could have used it as an EU travel document (despite my status as a foreign citizen), I would have put up with it for ease of travel.
I know this is kind of a running joke in this thread, but they could go three ways with it.
1) Make it like San Andreas, where you had to eat/work out in order to keep your health up. A lot of people didn't like that because it was too much micromanagement, so they got rid of it in GTA4. They could add the option to pay the charge on to a cashpoint/ATM or something like that. If you didn't pay it within a certain amount of time, you'd get a fine or the cops after you.
2) Set the game in a time period before the congestion charge was introduced, so any time before 2003.
3) Not call it "London" (like Liberty City isn't called "New York") and just not include it in the game at all.
I've been in a bar where someone pepper-sprayed somebody else and the place cleared out in minutes. I'm asthmatic but it's mainly allergy induced, and I was coughing like crazy and I couldn't see because my eyes were stinging and watering like crazy. I wasn't even sprayed directly, it was just in the air. At first I didn't know what was happening until I got outside and my mouth felt like it was on fire.
Not fun for about 5-10 minutes until everything was more or less back to normal. After that, I couldn't imagine being sprayed directly in the face!
It might work if they charged the so-called beta testers an upgrade fee to the end product, so the total outlay of cash is the same or very near the same as if they had just waited and bought the game on release day. The most I would pay extra would be between $0-$5, for the privilege of playing early, but the "demo" had better be awesome. Paying anything more would be rather evil... I'm not paying full price for the finished product AFTER ALREADY HAVING PAID THEM for what amounts to beta testing.. no thanks!!!
The plus side to this is that, like traditional demos, it might be a good metric to see how popular a game will be before release day, but the difference would be that the cash would start flowing in sooner, maybe allowing for better features or something to be developed... but it's EA we're talking about, and I'm sure they'd just "invest" it in a more annoying DRM scheme or something equally stupid.
If I were to claim to be a snob, I'd have to say that I'm more of a beer snob than anything else. As such, I whole-heartedly agree about the beer vs. wine comment. However the "best beer in the world" is also entirely subjective. The only beers I've seen in a large bottle like you describe are Heineken and some Belgian beers (some of which are corked like Champagne!). To some people, that "best beer" might be Labatt Lite. I, for one, do not share the same opinion.
I'm more into the Polish beer at the moment, Tyskie in particular. Of the other Polish varieties available here, I find Zywiec to be too heavy and filling, Lezajsk is alright and Zubr is way too malty for my taste. My previous favourites have been German beers (lived there 2 years) but the selection of German beer is very limited here and it all tastes like it's been sitting on the shelf for 6 months, compared to what it tasted like over there.
It did take some time to adjust my palette from the relatively flavourless swill available here in North America to the more intensely flavoured, hoppy stuff available over there, but I'm enlightened now and will never go back. These days I rarely ever drink more than 2-3 beers in a week so I want to enjoy the taste as much as possible. At $4.25 (compared to $3.50 for a regular sized domestic beer) from the bar we frequent, an ice cold, half litre, Polish beer is exactly what the doctor ordered.
At the end of the day, it comes down to what you can afford. A few years ago, I would never have paid that much for a beer because I couldn't afford to. Cost vs. quality is always an issue in nearly every purchase we make. We love car analogies here, so in brand new cars, the manufacturers have been really focusing on the quality of their interiors. Yeah, the interior in a Mercedes is going to be as good as it gets, but a decently equipped VW is still very nice, comfortable and full of nifty features, with a significant cost savings. Sure you might not get the voice activated back massage or the heated steering wheel and shifter knob, but are those things ALONE really worth the extra 30 grand? Sames goes for buying the latest and greatest iteration of the i7 vs. looking at the prices and finding the best price point for your budget. There's always 1-3 CPUs right at the top of the price ladder and then #4 which is like 1/2-1/4 the price of the top end. That's the one most people, including myself, will buy.
I'm no lawyer, nor do I play one on TV, but I think the principle of law you're thinking of refers to trademark issues, not copyright. I believe you can nail someone any time for copyright infringement, even way after the fact (there might be a statute of limitations though), but if you let a trademark violation slide, you're unable to defend it later on, i.e. you have to act as soon as you're aware of it or you could potentially lose it.
This coming election is one that I'd love to have voted in. Except I got a letter through the door this week saying that the Ontario Court of Appeals has ruled that expats must wish to return to Canada and must not be gone more than 5 years unless employed by the government.
These restrictions are fucking idiotic. I fully intend to return, I just don't know when exactly. So what if I've been gone 5 years (and 16 days). I still care a great deal about my country. I was born and raised and will always be Canadian, not even dual citizenship will change that in the slightest. I want to at least have the opportunity to have my say about its future or I might not recognise it when I do eventually return.
So unless I can prove I work abroad for the government by the 15th of September, my rights as a citizen will be trampled.
Is there going to be a Supreme Court challenge or have they already declined to consider this?
Your argument is like saying McD's and their hamburger supplier are violating RICO laws since the burger maker gets a kickback overtime McD's sells a burger and you can't buy just the bun without paying for the burger as well.
Actually you can. When I was in school, a classmate got a job at McDonalds. They handed out photocopies of the till buttons to people who were going to be cashiers and told them to go practice a bit with their friends & family.
I had a look at this sheet, there were buttons for everything.. no bun, no pickle, no patty, even a button for socks if you can believe it. We worked out that it was possible to order a hamburger with no bun, no patty, no pickle, no condiments, no onions, nothing. Technically I guess you'd still be charged for it and you'd end up with an empty wrapper. I have no idea if their actual till would allow such a thing, but there were certainly all the right buttons required to fulfil the order.
This was probably about 15 years ago now but I'm sure it hasn't changed that much.
Wouldn't they just go back to old fashioned methods like dipping the tanks by hand with a stick if they had to? Any dumbass could do it.
I know some gorillas can stand up, but I don't think they're going to start using the internet any time soon, at least not soon enough that we have to start planning a municipal network for them.
Those average speed cameras are usually only in construction zones on the motorway where the lanes have been narrowed and speed reduced to 50mph, and they have a fairly generous leeway as well. I've never been ticketed for driving 54mph (actual speed, speedo shows 59mph) on cruise through these areas for years, and you're constantly overtaken by people going at least 3-4mph faster... who knows if they get ticketed though. There are also fixed speed cameras, red light cameras and CCTV cameras all over the place for your surveillance pleasure.
Don't pick on the UK too much though, if you drive in France on the Péage (toll) motorways, I've heard they clock your time in and time out, and at the exit tolls your speeding fine is payable on the spot. Most of Europe has on the spot fines, but it's usually tens of Euros, not hundreds of dollars like in the US or Canada.
Depends where you are..
If you can get TalkTalk Plus, go for it. It's their FTTC offering. Our exchange isn't being updated for quite some time by the looks of things. Check out http://www.samknows.com/broadband/broadband_availability for anything you wanted to know about your exchange.
We've been with Tiscali/TalkTalk for a few years. The best part is the unlimited international calls package (we make good use of it). The DSL speeds have dropped over the past year though. We used to get a solid 3.5mbps down and 800kbps up, which is fine, but it's dropped to 2.5mbps down and 700kbps up... it's tough to stream video on two machines at once. Also, they actively DOS torrents between 6pm and midnight. I say actively DOS because throttling would imply that it's based on need and network congestion, but they just murder the download down to about 1-5k/sec. Upload is unaffected.
The ban on electronic devices in general is for no other reason than to force you to pay attention. Takeoffs and landings are the most critical phases of flight where the most can go wrong. They want your maximum attention during these times in case of an emergency. Yelling brace brace isn't gonna get through if everybody's got their MP3 players turned up to 11. That's why they still let you have your headphones plugged in to the in seat entertainment system, because any announcements pre-empt whatever you're doing and come over the headphones as well. They obviously want to minimize risk as much as possible, so transmitters aren't allowed the entire flight.
Not everyone listens though, myself included... I've been able to send & receive texts during take off but once we got into the clouds I lost the network, whereas a friend of mine managed to send a text in flight over Atlanta on his way to Cuba from Toronto. I've left my phone on for entire flights without realizing as well, as I'm sure thousands of others do every day. I also usually have my MP3 player on, but I do pay attention to what's going on around me. A family friend owns a Cessna 152 float plane and he rigged up a system to use his cell phone over his headset, but when the phone's in use, he says the instruments go wacky. Unfortunately I didn't see it in action.
I've been lucky enough to have had a peek inside one of the cases (as it was being built and having the kinks ironed out) they're going to use to transport the reflector sail things from the manufacturer to the assembly plant, one case per sail. My friend is the shop's computer guy. The case was enormous and had to be perfectly air tight so it could be filled with nitrogen to protect the sail during transport. I saw it in July so I'm pretty sure they've finished and shipped them all by now.
Granted, it wasn't a component of the actual spacecraft, but an important piece of the puzzle nonetheless. I still think it was very cool to have had the privilege of poking my head inside, snapping a few photos and chatting with the guys making it.
Yes, but when the cops enforce the law and you get punished, you go to jail or you get a fine. It's tangible.
When you "do bad stuff" and don't listen to "God" (or whatever term you feel like using), there's no direct punishment. It all takes place after you die. You go to heaven or hell. Very conveniently, no one can confirm their existence, since you have to die to get in. It seems as if the people who invented this nonsense purposely made it so it couldn't be disproven by any living being. Good thing the dead can't talk.
They don't call it the opiate of the masses for nothing.
And to quote Ricky Gervais, "Thank God for making me an atheist."
Really, huh? Last time I checked they still taught "FIRST look left, THEN look right, THEN cross the streets" to our kids, did they forgo that in your country?
Unforunately that's not a universal rule. If people did that where I live, there wouldn't be many left to tell the tale. I've almost stepped out in front of a car before I got used to looking "the wrong way" first. BTW, I'm Canadian and I live in the UK. My wife has done the exact opposite in Canada and Germany. Luckily I was there to stop her and vice versa. "The left side's the right side and the right side's the wrong side" is the saying I think.
The change in traffic handedness really screws people up. It doesn't take me long to get used to it while driving or as a passenger, but if I think about it for too long it really does my head in.
Easily. Even if this company manages to develop the game (I believe the devkits require licenses), it won't be signed by MS, a necessary step to run on an unmodified console. If you had a mod chip, you would likely be able to run it as could then run unsigned code.
If they were smart, they would develop it for the PC. At the same time, they should also devote some devs to improve the open source drivers for the Kinect. That way they have their swingin 3D sex game and, aside from the fact that very few, if any retailers would actually sell it, no one could stop them from selling it. Microsoft might try to do something if they use a Kinect in their advertising, but I'm not sure how that would actually pan out.
This is the only sensible post in this entire discussion.
Thank you for clearly explaining the content and implications of each bill in a coherent manner without resorting to conjecture and hyperbole like most others seem to have done.
Then perhaps those states should mandate that they get the new formula. Any Sudafed I've bought in the UK and Canada no longer contains pseudoephedrine, the offending ingredient.
The box of pills in front of me now lists the active ingredient as phenylephrine and the nasal spray is xylometazoline hydrochloride. These are the UK products.
And the customary link to Sudafed's Wikipedia page for your reference.
You'd think so, but...
I was in The George (Wetherspoon pub) on George St in Croydon a couple of weekends ago for breakfast, and in the men's washroom there were cameras with signs underneath explaining that they were there to prevent people using drugs in the washroom. It certainly took me by surprise. They seemed to be pointing at the sinks and the door. Some of the cameras were visible from the urinals so presumably one could be seen on camera using them. It was difficult to tell where they were pointing exactly since they were all the black dome type cameras.
I remember thinking at the time that if anyone wanted to snort some coke or whatever that badly, they could easily take a seat in one of the stalls and do whatever they wanted off camera.
Here's one 5-way (light controlled) and one 6-way (stop sign controlled) within two blocks of one another no less. Hooray for diagonal streets running through a grid!
There's also this one. It's called Confusion Corner, but it's not bad at all once you know how it works, which lanes go where, etc.
No I don't believe retina scans were part of it.
I was issued a UK fiancé visa back in March and had my fingerprints taken digitally and a digital photograph as well for biometrics purposes. I suppose they measure the distance between your lips and nose and eyes and stuff. For fingerprints, the scanner might have looked at the blood vessel structure inside the fingers instead of the prints, but I can't be certain on that.
I'm glad the ID cards are gone now, mainly for privacy reasons, but if I could have used it as an EU travel document (despite my status as a foreign citizen), I would have put up with it for ease of travel.
Fly with Air Canada next time. They offer the same amenities as Lufthansa.
I know this is kind of a running joke in this thread, but they could go three ways with it.
1) Make it like San Andreas, where you had to eat/work out in order to keep your health up. A lot of people didn't like that because it was too much micromanagement, so they got rid of it in GTA4. They could add the option to pay the charge on to a cashpoint/ATM or something like that. If you didn't pay it within a certain amount of time, you'd get a fine or the cops after you.
2) Set the game in a time period before the congestion charge was introduced, so any time before 2003.
3) Not call it "London" (like Liberty City isn't called "New York") and just not include it in the game at all.
I've been in a bar where someone pepper-sprayed somebody else and the place cleared out in minutes. I'm asthmatic but it's mainly allergy induced, and I was coughing like crazy and I couldn't see because my eyes were stinging and watering like crazy. I wasn't even sprayed directly, it was just in the air. At first I didn't know what was happening until I got outside and my mouth felt like it was on fire.
Not fun for about 5-10 minutes until everything was more or less back to normal. After that, I couldn't imagine being sprayed directly in the face!
It might work if they charged the so-called beta testers an upgrade fee to the end product, so the total outlay of cash is the same or very near the same as if they had just waited and bought the game on release day. The most I would pay extra would be between $0-$5, for the privilege of playing early, but the "demo" had better be awesome. Paying anything more would be rather evil... I'm not paying full price for the finished product AFTER ALREADY HAVING PAID THEM for what amounts to beta testing.. no thanks!!!
The plus side to this is that, like traditional demos, it might be a good metric to see how popular a game will be before release day, but the difference would be that the cash would start flowing in sooner, maybe allowing for better features or something to be developed... but it's EA we're talking about, and I'm sure they'd just "invest" it in a more annoying DRM scheme or something equally stupid.
If I were to claim to be a snob, I'd have to say that I'm more of a beer snob than anything else. As such, I whole-heartedly agree about the beer vs. wine comment. However the "best beer in the world" is also entirely subjective. The only beers I've seen in a large bottle like you describe are Heineken and some Belgian beers (some of which are corked like Champagne!). To some people, that "best beer" might be Labatt Lite. I, for one, do not share the same opinion.
I'm more into the Polish beer at the moment, Tyskie in particular. Of the other Polish varieties available here, I find Zywiec to be too heavy and filling, Lezajsk is alright and Zubr is way too malty for my taste. My previous favourites have been German beers (lived there 2 years) but the selection of German beer is very limited here and it all tastes like it's been sitting on the shelf for 6 months, compared to what it tasted like over there.
It did take some time to adjust my palette from the relatively flavourless swill available here in North America to the more intensely flavoured, hoppy stuff available over there, but I'm enlightened now and will never go back. These days I rarely ever drink more than 2-3 beers in a week so I want to enjoy the taste as much as possible. At $4.25 (compared to $3.50 for a regular sized domestic beer) from the bar we frequent, an ice cold, half litre, Polish beer is exactly what the doctor ordered.
At the end of the day, it comes down to what you can afford. A few years ago, I would never have paid that much for a beer because I couldn't afford to. Cost vs. quality is always an issue in nearly every purchase we make. We love car analogies here, so in brand new cars, the manufacturers have been really focusing on the quality of their interiors. Yeah, the interior in a Mercedes is going to be as good as it gets, but a decently equipped VW is still very nice, comfortable and full of nifty features, with a significant cost savings. Sure you might not get the voice activated back massage or the heated steering wheel and shifter knob, but are those things ALONE really worth the extra 30 grand? Sames goes for buying the latest and greatest iteration of the i7 vs. looking at the prices and finding the best price point for your budget. There's always 1-3 CPUs right at the top of the price ladder and then #4 which is like 1/2-1/4 the price of the top end. That's the one most people, including myself, will buy.
That's actually pretty good typing with your fists. Do you have a comically large keyboard?
He must have learned how to do it from Strongbad!
My initial thoughts were "Why on earth would you use the engine from an LTD?"
My ambiguous Wikipedia search revealed that you were in fact referring to a Stirling engine (aka. a low temperature difference engine).
esclavagism
Am I right in guessing that you meant slavery? Based on the word, I'd say that you're French, or at the very least a speaker of a Romantic language.
13 years of almost forgotten French immersion isn't all lost!
I'm no lawyer, nor do I play one on TV, but I think the principle of law you're thinking of refers to trademark issues, not copyright. I believe you can nail someone any time for copyright infringement, even way after the fact (there might be a statute of limitations though), but if you let a trademark violation slide, you're unable to defend it later on, i.e. you have to act as soon as you're aware of it or you could potentially lose it.