I'm kind of surprised that the drone didn't have a set of emergency flight instructions to revert to in case of signal loss. Have it turn around and make a landing attempt on a predetermined patch of flat land near a US base. Best case scenario you salvage a drone, worst case scenario you salvage drone wreckage. Either result keeps it out of enemy hands.
This reminds me of something one of the teacher's assistants at my college had said. He'd done a paid internship at Zynga and the president at one point had said to the developers (it's been a few years so I'm paraphrasing) "You are not smart. Your ideas are not innovative. You're not here to make the next greatest thing, you're here to rip off what already works and tweak it so we can maximize profits."
Apparently you can decline to get a SSN, but I couldn't find out if you can actually disassociate yourself from it if you already have one. Also while you can legally open a bank account without a SSN, it seems to make the whole process a lot more complicated. My guess is that it's like that for most things; legally allowed, but five times the hassle.
I thought only public schools had actual police, private schools had private security? Boston College appears to be a private school so they may be rent-a-cops.
The Nuremberg trials predate the experiment I linked. While it's obvious that it's never alright to torture someone, there's nothing wrong with reviewing the level of responsibility of people following orders vs those who issue them given new insight, rather than blindly following a legal precedent half a century old.
This is not necessarily the case. I move my 360 around about once every six months and my 2nd one just went bad on me this weekend. The reason? Both had begun to scratch discs after playing for about 30-60 minutes. I lost two discs in a week the first time, and lost another just a few days ago with the 360 they sent me with the warranty program. My three year warranty has since expired and now I'm faced with getting it repaired or buying a new one and hoping that one too doesn't decide to start scratching discs a year from now.
It's pretty common for members of the US military to have the American flag and/or their service's branch displayed behind them in portrait photos like that. As for Americans surrounding themselves with flags, that's not really true. You only really see them every once in a while.
It's a relief to see that someone else has had a similar experience to my own. I was always pressured into college and to pursue a technical degree. While math and science classes have never been much of a challenge, I've never outwardly enjoyed them and it wasn't until I'd already been in college for a year that I discovered an aptitude and love of art.
Now, after four years and nearly failing out, I've managed to avoid the situation by taking a paid internship and am now facing the choice of just finishing school for the sake of being done or going deeper into debt to do something I enjoy.
You're making it sound as if people who spend years writing books or music shouldn't expect to be paid for their work. While the RIAA's excessive response to piracy is more of a desperate move to make a defunct business model work, let's not forget that piracy is still a bad thing and, at least in theory, hurts the artists and their craft.
I'm kind of surprised that the drone didn't have a set of emergency flight instructions to revert to in case of signal loss. Have it turn around and make a landing attempt on a predetermined patch of flat land near a US base. Best case scenario you salvage a drone, worst case scenario you salvage drone wreckage. Either result keeps it out of enemy hands.
This reminds me of something one of the teacher's assistants at my college had said. He'd done a paid internship at Zynga and the president at one point had said to the developers (it's been a few years so I'm paraphrasing) "You are not smart. Your ideas are not innovative. You're not here to make the next greatest thing, you're here to rip off what already works and tweak it so we can maximize profits."
I dbuot scietncestis put mcuh stcok in the torehy taht our bainrs 'sunod out' ecah wrod ecah tmie we see tehm.
Apparently you can decline to get a SSN, but I couldn't find out if you can actually disassociate yourself from it if you already have one. Also while you can legally open a bank account without a SSN, it seems to make the whole process a lot more complicated. My guess is that it's like that for most things; legally allowed, but five times the hassle.
640K is more memory than anyone will ever need.
I thought only public schools had actual police, private schools had private security? Boston College appears to be a private school so they may be rent-a-cops.
The Nuremberg trials predate the experiment I linked. While it's obvious that it's never alright to torture someone, there's nothing wrong with reviewing the level of responsibility of people following orders vs those who issue them given new insight, rather than blindly following a legal precedent half a century old.
"It's orders" is a justifiable defense. Studies have shown that people follow orders from authority figures remarkably well.
Milgram experiment
This is not necessarily the case. I move my 360 around about once every six months and my 2nd one just went bad on me this weekend. The reason? Both had begun to scratch discs after playing for about 30-60 minutes. I lost two discs in a week the first time, and lost another just a few days ago with the 360 they sent me with the warranty program. My three year warranty has since expired and now I'm faced with getting it repaired or buying a new one and hoping that one too doesn't decide to start scratching discs a year from now.
It's pretty common for members of the US military to have the American flag and/or their service's branch displayed behind them in portrait photos like that. As for Americans surrounding themselves with flags, that's not really true. You only really see them every once in a while.
It's a relief to see that someone else has had a similar experience to my own. I was always pressured into college and to pursue a technical degree. While math and science classes have never been much of a challenge, I've never outwardly enjoyed them and it wasn't until I'd already been in college for a year that I discovered an aptitude and love of art. Now, after four years and nearly failing out, I've managed to avoid the situation by taking a paid internship and am now facing the choice of just finishing school for the sake of being done or going deeper into debt to do something I enjoy.
They could even start spending some of that money the government keeps giving them to upgrade their infrastructure.
You're making it sound as if people who spend years writing books or music shouldn't expect to be paid for their work. While the RIAA's excessive response to piracy is more of a desperate move to make a defunct business model work, let's not forget that piracy is still a bad thing and, at least in theory, hurts the artists and their craft.