Yes. And biology is just applied chemistry and physics so we can go from F=ma to the functions of the lymphatic nodes just like that...
I admit I may be applying some creative misremembering myself but I definitely recall whether things were bonds or anti-bonds to be somewhat arbitrary and bond energies and lengths were certainly never presented as something that could be derived from first principles. This was not some pre-med degree either but a chemistry degree at a well-respected UK university (Bristol as it happens). I actually did reasonably well in the organic chemistry labs.
The Nokia 8110 (Banana phone) was very popular in its time. It has always surprised me that it's a design that hasn't been revisited. Perhaps this is its time.
It depends on your definition of good. I had satellite once and for my purposes, it was more than adequate. Download speeds were even pretty respectable.
It ceased to be "good" in my book when the device went from being a fully fledged package to a winmodem.
Absolutely not. I learned the concepts and how to reason things through and was able to build each new concept on concepts that had come before. My weak points in physics *were* the rote learning items (laser frequencies, etc). I had something of a bad habit of working things through from first principles when I hadn't remembered an equation or factoid.
I started out doing a chemistry degree and this was my biggest complaint (I don't know if it was specifically with organic but I think so). There are the rules then there are exceptions to the rules and then there are exceptions to the exceptions. After I dropped out (for unrelated reasons), when I went back, it was for a physics degree and I was much more comfortable with that. Reason, not rote learning.
The simple truth is that Ben Franklin had a hard-on for people getting up early ("Early to bed, early to rise...") and this was his way of making people get up an hour earlier in the summer without their consent. Anyone who is a night owl should curse him each spring.
His method uses the client in listen mode though. This is the solution I was going to suggest. It's simple to write a small self-extracting executable that contains the VNC server and launches it with parameters telling it to connect to the client. I even had it integrated with our helpdesk software so that the helpdesk people could choose to pick up the connections (the software I wrote to launch the server would actually wait until one of the helpdesk people "accepted" the user before launching the server).
I must have watched nearly every Spitting Image and I don't recall that. Which isn't to say it wasn't there but if it was, it was a rare clip. Are you sure it wasn't another show?
Yes. And biology is just applied chemistry and physics so we can go from F=ma to the functions of the lymphatic nodes just like that...
I admit I may be applying some creative misremembering myself but I definitely recall whether things were bonds or anti-bonds to be somewhat arbitrary and bond energies and lengths were certainly never presented as something that could be derived from first principles. This was not some pre-med degree either but a chemistry degree at a well-respected UK university (Bristol as it happens). I actually did reasonably well in the organic chemistry labs.
They take Bitcoin donations. I'm in.
The Nokia 8110 (Banana phone) was very popular in its time. It has always surprised me that it's a design that hasn't been revisited. Perhaps this is its time.
It depends on your definition of good. I had satellite once and for my purposes, it was more than adequate. Download speeds were even pretty respectable.
It ceased to be "good" in my book when the device went from being a fully fledged package to a winmodem.
Absolutely not. I learned the concepts and how to reason things through and was able to build each new concept on concepts that had come before. My weak points in physics *were* the rote learning items (laser frequencies, etc). I had something of a bad habit of working things through from first principles when I hadn't remembered an equation or factoid.
I started out doing a chemistry degree and this was my biggest complaint (I don't know if it was specifically with organic but I think so). There are the rules then there are exceptions to the rules and then there are exceptions to the exceptions. After I dropped out (for unrelated reasons), when I went back, it was for a physics degree and I was much more comfortable with that. Reason, not rote learning.
Whoosh.
Interesting idea for an app there...
People would be able to point at people and say "He's as old as time" and not be far wrong.
And then in physics, you aren't supposed to separate quantities from units. The distance traveled in 3 seconds at 6m/s is not 18.
The simple truth is that Ben Franklin had a hard-on for people getting up early ("Early to bed, early to rise...") and this was his way of making people get up an hour earlier in the summer without their consent. Anyone who is a night owl should curse him each spring.
The VNC server *is* portable. So you can, indeed just roll it up into a launcher.
His method uses the client in listen mode though. This is the solution I was going to suggest. It's simple to write a small self-extracting executable that contains the VNC server and launches it with parameters telling it to connect to the client. I even had it integrated with our helpdesk software so that the helpdesk people could choose to pick up the connections (the software I wrote to launch the server would actually wait until one of the helpdesk people "accepted" the user before launching the server).
It could have been much worse. He could have invented an annoying dance to a mindless-yet-catchy pop tune.
That wouldn't even cover the donuts.
Rats, AZ is mountain.
Three hours, Eastern to Pacific.
Stay for the misinformed banter and the awkward shoe-horning of AGW or Obamacare issues.
Yes, it is distracting and yes, people die and kill others whilst using them inappropriately. What's your point?
If you could cite a *credible* authority, that might go a bit further.
Though of course, Ian Flemming based James Bond on a real living person, Al Gore.
I must have watched nearly every Spitting Image and I don't recall that. Which isn't to say it wasn't there but if it was, it was a rare clip. Are you sure it wasn't another show?
Though there is a Hazzard county in Kentucky.
I mentioned it to someone. His reply?
"Never go there".
Free federal money? LOL.
Perhaps. So what's your point? Soros didn't run.