Has anyone considered the possibility that he was killed by someone other than the Guatemalan president? Like, say, a family member with an axe to grind?
This frees up farm laborers to attend to other intellectual pursuits, or other tasks which robots are as-yet unable to do. You incorrectly assume that those humans will suddenly stop consuming food if they are not employed in the fields.
You're forced to create an account and then send pdfs and text files to an email associated with the account for a fee ($0.20 per file or something like that). It's difficult, and Amazon has everything locked down.
They don't filter bacteria or viruses either, and you'll rapidly chew up through the predicted lifetime if you attempt to filter large particles (like, say, dirt or very hard water). They're neat and novel devices, but not terribly practical.
Not all Asian nations are intent on suppressing their media, and it is ignorant to think so. $600 million is a lot of money, and developing Asian countries surely need that money injected into their economies.
I'm sorry to disappoint you, but the USAF rarely misses when it's bombing places. As a poster noted, it tends to be the intelligence supplied about the targeted location that's awry.
It would be most appreciated if OpenOffice was sped up to the point where it doesn't take ten seconds to load up and then periodically halt every couple of minutes on a P4.
Yeah, but not all the ice in the world sits on the water. The water could also be displaced by going through another route or emptying into another location... like the Indian Ocean.
Yeah... I don't think being able to use [insert search engine here] to look for web proxies, being able to paste it in a little box in the Options, check a box, and then click Ok is going to create a hacker army.
This argument is moot. The nuke requires very specific arming procedures and protocols to be followed before it can be properly detonated. Only thing that's going to happen in a crash (or train accident) is spread some radioactive material into the vicinity. Some warheads have even survived a hard crash intact.
Not sure how it works in QM, but it becomes exponentially more difficult to manage and transmit and read when it becomes trinary. There is a lot more accuracy required for an "in between" state, and our hardware would probably need to double in size to handle it.
They'd call a local CSS office, get transferred, and talk to the section chief.
There aren't any patent laws against improvement on a device.
Has anyone considered the possibility that he was killed by someone other than the Guatemalan president? Like, say, a family member with an axe to grind?
Applesauce.
This frees up farm laborers to attend to other intellectual pursuits, or other tasks which robots are as-yet unable to do. You incorrectly assume that those humans will suddenly stop consuming food if they are not employed in the fields.
bobblehead
You're forced to create an account and then send pdfs and text files to an email associated with the account for a fee ($0.20 per file or something like that). It's difficult, and Amazon has everything locked down.
Yes.
Damn nature, you scary!
Some people call that socialism, and are very fearful of it.
They don't filter bacteria or viruses either, and you'll rapidly chew up through the predicted lifetime if you attempt to filter large particles (like, say, dirt or very hard water). They're neat and novel devices, but not terribly practical.
Not all Asian nations are intent on suppressing their media, and it is ignorant to think so. $600 million is a lot of money, and developing Asian countries surely need that money injected into their economies.
I'm sorry to disappoint you, but the USAF rarely misses when it's bombing places. As a poster noted, it tends to be the intelligence supplied about the targeted location that's awry.
I think you missed the sarcasm in GP's post, sir
Not if it output the excess amount of power in the form of heat, which seems like what they're doing now.
There still are a lot of these. There's always DoD money to go around, you see...
It'll get used up fast, with the introduction of Blu-Ray and HDTV movies/tv shows.
It would be most appreciated if OpenOffice was sped up to the point where it doesn't take ten seconds to load up and then periodically halt every couple of minutes on a P4.
Yeah, but not all the ice in the world sits on the water. The water could also be displaced by going through another route or emptying into another location... like the Indian Ocean.
Yeah... I don't think being able to use [insert search engine here] to look for web proxies, being able to paste it in a little box in the Options, check a box, and then click Ok is going to create a hacker army.
You just had to throw in that comment defending the French, didn't you...
For shame.
This argument is moot. The nuke requires very specific arming procedures and protocols to be followed before it can be properly detonated. Only thing that's going to happen in a crash (or train accident) is spread some radioactive material into the vicinity. Some warheads have even survived a hard crash intact.
Nothing for you to see here. Please move along.
Not sure how it works in QM, but it becomes exponentially more difficult to manage and transmit and read when it becomes trinary. There is a lot more accuracy required for an "in between" state, and our hardware would probably need to double in size to handle it.
misogynist.