Don't worry, they'll implement the encryption to keep the owner locked out so they can continue charging high fees for simple things like turning the service engine light off. They'll make sure it provides no actual security from infections spreading from a DVD to the engine controller or ABS to make it easier for someone who has paid them the appropriate annual 'certification' fees to diagnose the car.
I would say the QR code would be mush more likely to deliver the message. Many people recognize them and know how to read them. Few would guess about the stamps even if they happened to have one of each handy.
My suggestion was for something teachers should do. Something which they must be capable of doing if school is at all effective (and yes, it is).
The TEACHERS should plan their lessons to emphasize reinforcement over new material in the latter part of the school year.
Kids do have a sort of natural civilization to them, it's just not always in the form adults would like. It is, nevertheless when they revert to that for a while that they learn the life lessons that really will stick with them forever. As I recall, it generally took about a week (OMG, not a WHOLE WEEK) to settle back into the school routine. Of course, that week is a good opportunity to find out some of those life lessons learned over the summer and incorporate them into the classroom.
I didn't say there was no public good in that, just that it does permit the power company to exist in the first place. Given that, it is reasonable to expect them to tread lightly.
For example, rather than suing claiming only they may generate power, they could put the figures together for the cost of the grid vs. the power that moves through it and work with their PSC to come to a fair and balanced solution.
Your whole point seems to be that whatever you learn will leak out of your brain if you take 3 months off. So if you ever stop going to school, surely it will all leak out, yes?
If it only takes 3 months to forget it, there's no point in having schools shove it in in the first place.
I maintain that if you have actually LEARNED it, that is, you went from merely remembering it as a fact in isolation to incorporating it into your understanding of the world, you won't forget it over a summer vacation.
Since the teachers can easily anticipate summer, the latter part of the school year should be dedicated to that reinforcement rather than introducing new material. Then the kids won't forget things over the break.
The answer is to remove the corruption. If the problem is that political and business motivations are the very same and ignoble, how is surrendering to it going to make it go away?
They don't have to have just one office. In fact, many of them do have offices elsewhere that do have staff. They would emphasize those if they were serious about cutting costs. They would also give more consideration to older programmers.
I didn't miss the word 'potential' there. If they weren't potential, they would either already be hired by them or wouldn't matter to the conversation.
Just because I can'tr buy a new Ferrari for $10,000 doesn't mean there's a shortage.
And those currents constantly mix at the boundaries with the rest of the water. If the water has barely detectable concentrations by the time it gets to the U.S. it will have undetectable concentrations by the time it makes it back to Japan. That's pretty good dispersion.
Enenews.com decided to load for me now. Those do discuss the ocean, but they are talking about minute traces of radiation and actually demonstrate my point. If the stuff didn't disburse, it wouldn't ever make it to the U.S. west coast from Japan.
To give you a good scale, banannas have about 30,000 times the radiation of the fish. A Bq is a truly tiny amount.
It's right there in the quote. It is dispersing into the ocean quite well. Unfortunately, they appear to have failed to prevent further contamination. If they will do the right thing there, the levels will fall right off.
They had the ability to enter into a contract and otherwise conduct business as a legal fiction. They had no Constitutional rights until a few blunders by the Supreme Court granted them, but that was years later.
Or in other words, you could no longer purchase stock X and have it in your retirement only knowing you have stock X as an investment. You could no longer purchase a mutual fund for the same without knowing all the ins and outs of each and every company and listening to their pitch on what might harm them and adjust your speech accordingly
Good. Absentee owners are a problem we would be better off without. If you can't be bothered to read a newsletter every 2 years and understand the issues, you should probably abstain from voting anyway. Really though, there are only two likely states. In one, you already agree with what teh corporation wants and so you vote accordingly. In the other you believe differently and it is best if the corporation you own part of doesn't act against you.
You chose to refer to the authority of the founding fathers, and claim they appointed corporations to run the states. I pointed out that it was bollocks.
The states did grant charters, but they included revocation clauses with real teeth and mandated that the corporation operate only within it's charter AND for the public good (or have it revoked). This was quite different from the crown charters.
Actually, no. I am well aware of that. It's called supply and demand and it's part of the market. It's funny how free market capitalists suddenly like regulated markets when they might have to pay employees better. What they call a shortage is actually more like the lack of a glut.
If you don't think there is a shortage of software developers in the US, why are developers in the US paid so much more than ones in Europe?
Probably because the U.S. companies insist on being located in the most expensive place in the country. If they were serious about cutting costs, they'd move development to cheaper cities and just maintain a sales office in SV.
Actually, no I didn't but you may have. An actual shortage would mean they couldn't find enough people to maximize their own productivity. They would be leaving money on the table for a lack of employees necessary to do the needed work.
In such a case, they will prefer to pay a bit more for the employees so they can scoop up that money on the table.
At the same time, they would also be more flexible about hiring older engineers, offering scholarships, more telecommute opportunities, etc. If, that is, there was an actual shortage.
There is a very high probability that the team has received many valuable considerations from the local government including having the stadium built for them. It's not so unreasonable that the local citizens might expect a return on the investment.
Don't worry, they'll implement the encryption to keep the owner locked out so they can continue charging high fees for simple things like turning the service engine light off. They'll make sure it provides no actual security from infections spreading from a DVD to the engine controller or ABS to make it easier for someone who has paid them the appropriate annual 'certification' fees to diagnose the car.
I would say the QR code would be mush more likely to deliver the message. Many people recognize them and know how to read them. Few would guess about the stamps even if they happened to have one of each handy.
My suggestion was for something teachers should do. Something which they must be capable of doing if school is at all effective (and yes, it is).
The TEACHERS should plan their lessons to emphasize reinforcement over new material in the latter part of the school year.
Kids do have a sort of natural civilization to them, it's just not always in the form adults would like. It is, nevertheless when they revert to that for a while that they learn the life lessons that really will stick with them forever. As I recall, it generally took about a week (OMG, not a WHOLE WEEK) to settle back into the school routine. Of course, that week is a good opportunity to find out some of those life lessons learned over the summer and incorporate them into the classroom.
I didn't say there was no public good in that, just that it does permit the power company to exist in the first place. Given that, it is reasonable to expect them to tread lightly.
For example, rather than suing claiming only they may generate power, they could put the figures together for the cost of the grid vs. the power that moves through it and work with their PSC to come to a fair and balanced solution.
Your whole point seems to be that whatever you learn will leak out of your brain if you take 3 months off. So if you ever stop going to school, surely it will all leak out, yes?
If it only takes 3 months to forget it, there's no point in having schools shove it in in the first place.
I maintain that if you have actually LEARNED it, that is, you went from merely remembering it as a fact in isolation to incorporating it into your understanding of the world, you won't forget it over a summer vacation.
Since the teachers can easily anticipate summer, the latter part of the school year should be dedicated to that reinforcement rather than introducing new material. Then the kids won't forget things over the break.
I certainly agree with continuing education. It should be encouraged from an early age.
It's too bad it's used as a punishment for children, it kinda sours them on it.
The answer is to remove the corruption. If the problem is that political and business motivations are the very same and ignoble, how is surrendering to it going to make it go away?
At the same time, they sure do like the granted right-of-way that allows their grid to exist.
That's a bit disturbing but all too believable.
There are many thousand in any large metro area.
They don't have to have just one office. In fact, many of them do have offices elsewhere that do have staff. They would emphasize those if they were serious about cutting costs. They would also give more consideration to older programmers.
I didn't miss the word 'potential' there. If they weren't potential, they would either already be hired by them or wouldn't matter to the conversation.
Just because I can'tr buy a new Ferrari for $10,000 doesn't mean there's a shortage.
And those currents constantly mix at the boundaries with the rest of the water. If the water has barely detectable concentrations by the time it gets to the U.S. it will have undetectable concentrations by the time it makes it back to Japan. That's pretty good dispersion.
...and because there are a lot of potential employees in the area.
So now you're saying there isn't a shortage?
So we shouldn't ever actually graduate from school?
It's been days since I had to name an Emperor of the Roman Empire.
Enenews.com decided to load for me now. Those do discuss the ocean, but they are talking about minute traces of radiation and actually demonstrate my point. If the stuff didn't disburse, it wouldn't ever make it to the U.S. west coast from Japan.
To give you a good scale, banannas have about 30,000 times the radiation of the fish. A Bq is a truly tiny amount.
It's right there in the quote. It is dispersing into the ocean quite well. Unfortunately, they appear to have failed to prevent further contamination. If they will do the right thing there, the levels will fall right off.
Those articles are not even about nuclear contamination in the ocean.
Note on the 3rd link, the Cs measures in West Coast soil is a TINY amount and is most likely left over from our own atomic testing.
I would say 15 years is just a wee bit longer than three months.
They had the ability to enter into a contract and otherwise conduct business as a legal fiction. They had no Constitutional rights until a few blunders by the Supreme Court granted them, but that was years later.
If they forget it over the summer, they never actually learned it.
Or in other words, you could no longer purchase stock X and have it in your retirement only knowing you have stock X as an investment. You could no longer purchase a mutual fund for the same without knowing all the ins and outs of each and every company and listening to their pitch on what might harm them and adjust your speech accordingly
Good. Absentee owners are a problem we would be better off without. If you can't be bothered to read a newsletter every 2 years and understand the issues, you should probably abstain from voting anyway. Really though, there are only two likely states. In one, you already agree with what teh corporation wants and so you vote accordingly. In the other you believe differently and it is best if the corporation you own part of doesn't act against you.
You chose to refer to the authority of the founding fathers, and claim they appointed corporations to run the states. I pointed out that it was bollocks.
The states did grant charters, but they included revocation clauses with real teeth and mandated that the corporation operate only within it's charter AND for the public good (or have it revoked). This was quite different from the crown charters.
Actually, no. I am well aware of that. It's called supply and demand and it's part of the market. It's funny how free market capitalists suddenly like regulated markets when they might have to pay employees better. What they call a shortage is actually more like the lack of a glut.
If you don't think there is a shortage of software developers in the US, why are developers in the US paid so much more than ones in Europe?
Probably because the U.S. companies insist on being located in the most expensive place in the country. If they were serious about cutting costs, they'd move development to cheaper cities and just maintain a sales office in SV.
Actually, no I didn't but you may have. An actual shortage would mean they couldn't find enough people to maximize their own productivity. They would be leaving money on the table for a lack of employees necessary to do the needed work.
In such a case, they will prefer to pay a bit more for the employees so they can scoop up that money on the table.
At the same time, they would also be more flexible about hiring older engineers, offering scholarships, more telecommute opportunities, etc. If, that is, there was an actual shortage.
There is a very high probability that the team has received many valuable considerations from the local government including having the stadium built for them. It's not so unreasonable that the local citizens might expect a return on the investment.
you insensitive clod.
It's predicted to be cloudy and rainy for the next 7 days. I guess I know why now.