With regular use it is not hard to switch back and forth, and you end up with muscle memory for both. You have different muscle memory for each physically different sized keypad that you use and your body knows which to use based on physical context.
I see no provision in the amendment that reduces from felony to misdemeanor, only language that exempts ToS violations etc. from whatever it is the bill stipulates in the section being amended. There not being a link to the law itself, I haven't seen it, but I sincerely doubt the original law says that ToS violations can alternately be considered misdemeanors, thus I deem it probably the law simply states that unauthorized access is a felony, without mentioning ToS etc. Since the amendment states that ToS etc. are exempted, then the amendment does NOT create them misdemeanors, and since AFAIK nothing else creates ToS violations as crimes, I don't think the amendment leaves them a crime of any kind at all.
I'm not. Or at least, their decision will mean I don't buy their product. I've considered getting an Xbox 360 but decided that the make or break feature is Blu-ray support so that I can yank out the LG player I have. I guess it's a space issue.
The reason is that it takes time to design and manufacture a console, and the contracts with hardware providers are for specific parts. They can't change the hardware mid-stream without starting over, nor can they base their software design on what will be available years later at project completion. They have to work with what they have when they have it.
If this is accurate and such a partial assignment is invalid, does this leave Righthaven open to lawsuits for fraudulent representation by those who were threatened?
But that's all it really is. This is the online equivalent of those newspaper ads where an Amish craftsman oh so tenderly puts the finishing touches on the wood cabinet of an electric fireplace, while the fireplace is inside and running.
Moreover, I don't recall ever buying a gaming mouse so that I could perform a "500-click series of randomly generated commands" in the fastest possible time. I buy them because of the control I get over the mouse motion, leading to smoothness and accuracy in pointing.
This American finds it odd to see anyone thinking that shop is not in our general lexicon. Shop is common American parlance, even with store the more dominant synonym. And yes, I do mean as a noun.
When I switched POTS carriers recently, I faced losing my phone number of 14 years due to porting issues. I took the route of porting my number to a prepaid mobile service, then porting it to Google Voice. Ran me $55 all told, but worth it to me to keep that number.
I think the real irony here is that these legislators have resorted to indoctrinating children with political propaganda, for all that it is rather inane. Oh that's right. Propaganda is all right as long as it's our propaganda.
Amen. I don't even think corporations should have free speech rights. All the shareholders and employees already possess that right themselves. I think it is perfectly reasonable to create regulations if needed on corporate speech, especially political donations by the corporations as opposed to the individual shareholders. If a corporation thinks it needs to spend money lobbying, it can distribute the allocated money to shareholders with a request that they donate it to whatever politician will wax their log.
I've wondered. What if the universe is actually much smaller, so that light from the earliest galaxies has already traversed the entire length of the universe, possibly several times. That would mean that for any particular galaxy, we may have several images of it reaching us now from different points of space, for illustrative example how a particular galaxy was 4 billion years ago, looped two times around, 2.5 billion years ago, looped once, and finally 1 billion years ago, direct without having looped. This would presume that space is topographically analogous in three dimensions to the surface of a sphere in two dimensions so that light undiverted from its course would return to its starting point eventually.
What observational characteristics would this impart to the universe, how would we detect it if it were there? Have the experiments been done that would discover this?
They become law by passing both the Senate and the House, and then either being signed by the President, or with his veto being overridden.
Once something is law, the courts have the power to find it violates the Constitution and strike it down, in whole or in part. That's not part of the lawmaking process, however. Any court has that power, but only the Supreme Court has final say that cannot potentially be overridden.
With regular use it is not hard to switch back and forth, and you end up with muscle memory for both. You have different muscle memory for each physically different sized keypad that you use and your body knows which to use based on physical context.
An explanation compatible with this new idea would be they may planets in a system not be old enough for the process to have completed.
thing I ask is, who appointed this IG?
I see no provision in the amendment that reduces from felony to misdemeanor, only language that exempts ToS violations etc. from whatever it is the bill stipulates in the section being amended. There not being a link to the law itself, I haven't seen it, but I sincerely doubt the original law says that ToS violations can alternately be considered misdemeanors, thus I deem it probably the law simply states that unauthorized access is a felony, without mentioning ToS etc. Since the amendment states that ToS etc. are exempted, then the amendment does NOT create them misdemeanors, and since AFAIK nothing else creates ToS violations as crimes, I don't think the amendment leaves them a crime of any kind at all.
No, what he really meant was that the Cubs would win the Superbowl.
The reason so many firmwares support the GL is because the manufacturer firmware they are based on was open source.
You keep using that word. I do not think it means what you think it means.
I'm not. Or at least, their decision will mean I don't buy their product. I've considered getting an Xbox 360 but decided that the make or break feature is Blu-ray support so that I can yank out the LG player I have. I guess it's a space issue.
Nice handle, BTW.
The reason is that it takes time to design and manufacture a console, and the contracts with hardware providers are for specific parts. They can't change the hardware mid-stream without starting over, nor can they base their software design on what will be available years later at project completion. They have to work with what they have when they have it.
We need to develop economic models of prosperity that are not dependent upon economic growth.
If this is accurate and such a partial assignment is invalid, does this leave Righthaven open to lawsuits for fraudulent representation by those who were threatened?
Especially if GameStop can afford larger discounts for the sales. Impulse never let anything go at prices as attractive as Steam.
He's not referring to entrapment, he's talking about actual traps. Such as booby traps.
But that's all it really is. This is the online equivalent of those newspaper ads where an Amish craftsman oh so tenderly puts the finishing touches on the wood cabinet of an electric fireplace, while the fireplace is inside and running.
Moreover, I don't recall ever buying a gaming mouse so that I could perform a "500-click series of randomly generated commands" in the fastest possible time. I buy them because of the control I get over the mouse motion, leading to smoothness and accuracy in pointing.
This American finds it odd to see anyone thinking that shop is not in our general lexicon. Shop is common American parlance, even with store the more dominant synonym. And yes, I do mean as a noun.
When I switched POTS carriers recently, I faced losing my phone number of 14 years due to porting issues. I took the route of porting my number to a prepaid mobile service, then porting it to Google Voice. Ran me $55 all told, but worth it to me to keep that number.
that democracy is a dirty word. I am stunned.
I think the real irony here is that these legislators have resorted to indoctrinating children with political propaganda, for all that it is rather inane. Oh that's right. Propaganda is all right as long as it's our propaganda.
Amen. I don't even think corporations should have free speech rights. All the shareholders and employees already possess that right themselves. I think it is perfectly reasonable to create regulations if needed on corporate speech, especially political donations by the corporations as opposed to the individual shareholders. If a corporation thinks it needs to spend money lobbying, it can distribute the allocated money to shareholders with a request that they donate it to whatever politician will wax their log.
Hitting the shareholders' pocketbooks is what should motivate them to keep douchebags out of leadership positions in the company.
An anti-laser would emit light in every direction except for a tightly focused beam.
I've wondered. What if the universe is actually much smaller, so that light from the earliest galaxies has already traversed the entire length of the universe, possibly several times. That would mean that for any particular galaxy, we may have several images of it reaching us now from different points of space, for illustrative example how a particular galaxy was 4 billion years ago, looped two times around, 2.5 billion years ago, looped once, and finally 1 billion years ago, direct without having looped. This would presume that space is topographically analogous in three dimensions to the surface of a sphere in two dimensions so that light undiverted from its course would return to its starting point eventually.
What observational characteristics would this impart to the universe, how would we detect it if it were there? Have the experiments been done that would discover this?
Amen.
Bands cannot control who does cover versions so long as the musicians doing the cover pay the fees. There is no copyright veto against it.
They become law by passing both the Senate and the House, and then either being signed by the President, or with his veto being overridden.
Once something is law, the courts have the power to find it violates the Constitution and strike it down, in whole or in part. That's not part of the lawmaking process, however. Any court has that power, but only the Supreme Court has final say that cannot potentially be overridden.
I heard that a wheel sized sample of the lunar surface was successfully recovered and delivered to earth.