that our own lawmakers will take this as a sign. A country that is traditionally more strict than our own and gives fewer rights to its citizens follows our constitution better than our own government.
I have decided I won't be upgrading from XP to VISTA. When my XP usefullness starts to decline I am moving to Linux. I just hope WINE gets updated faster than it does now.
There are a lot of phones out there that you could find useful. the Iphone gets you on the net pretty well for a phone, doubles as an Ipod, gets your e-mail. It only has a 2 megapixel camera, but there are phones out there with better cameras that have ok net interfaces and you can just carry an ipod, or other non apple product for listening to digital music. Not meaning for this post to be an apple commercial.
I agree with zoot. I also think other programs such as firefox are just as susceptible to attack. The bad guys go after IE and activeX because they are more widely used. If the user numbers were switched for IE and FF I think you would have just as bad a time, if not worse, with FF as with IE users now.
The 4 year lifespan in the/. article refers to the amount of time the award money covers for operations costs. So if it finds some others mean s of operation funds it could live longer... of course those funds will probably be from a private organization and the ranger would no longer be open for research.
Although a body isn't NEEDED to go to trial, it is very rare for a murder case without a body to go to trial. Usually requires something like a large pool of the victims blood, or something else that shows that the victim is definately dead. I am surprised this is even going to trial if it is possible that she just flew off back to Russia. Of course there could be evidence that authorities aren't releasing to media. It doesn't sound to me that the prosecution can prove guilt beyond a shadow of a doubt with the evidence that I am aware of.
I think this is a horrible contest to enter if you have any ideas that are actually good. While the applicants maintains ownership of any intellectual property submitted. They give up the rights to charge Clear for any kind of use. If you are the winner that may not be such a big deal with the prize money offered, but all entries are able to be used by Clear, not just the winner's. This reminds me of a contest a while back with Limp Bizkit. You could jam with Limp, anybody could, but you had to bring your own music; and you signed over intellectual rights to anything you brought. This is just a scheme by an unimaginative corporation to take advantage of a gifted inventor.
What a lot of people are missing is that this is already being done by a company that has a networth of 70+ million, national defense and oil contracts, and rakes in a tidy profit every year. I visited the company in question's corporate site and did some research on them. They recently won contracts from the Air Force that google had also bid on. This is often a catalyst that leads to a large company buying a smaller one. There isn't a lot of evidence for google buying out Space Data. I just wanted to point out that they are already succesfully using weather balloons in the corporate and military sectors this would just be a push to residential uses.
Clean Coal is not just pumping the CO2 underground. It is reducing the concentration of CO2 and other pollutants (nitrates and particles) in the exhaust of power plants through the use of various technologies. These include CO2 scrubbing, sequestration, and mixture of the coal with with nitrate absorbing materials prior to consumption. The reason the backing was pulled for this plan was because the actual clean coal technologies have advanced a lot over the past 5 or 6 years and implementation into existing plants is cheap and effective. So people have realised that the very idea of puming the gas underground was dangerous, costly, and ineffective.
If the winters are -10 degrees on the average then the ice shield would also act as an insulator to dampen some that cold.
that our own lawmakers will take this as a sign. A country that is traditionally more strict than our own and gives fewer rights to its citizens follows our constitution better than our own government.
I have decided I won't be upgrading from XP to VISTA. When my XP usefullness starts to decline I am moving to Linux. I just hope WINE gets updated faster than it does now.
There are a lot of phones out there that you could find useful. the Iphone gets you on the net pretty well for a phone, doubles as an Ipod, gets your e-mail. It only has a 2 megapixel camera, but there are phones out there with better cameras that have ok net interfaces and you can just carry an ipod, or other non apple product for listening to digital music. Not meaning for this post to be an apple commercial.
or.. she could give her name and address to a pedophile and get raped and/or murdered.
I agree with zoot. I also think other programs such as firefox are just as susceptible to attack. The bad guys go after IE and activeX because they are more widely used. If the user numbers were switched for IE and FF I think you would have just as bad a time, if not worse, with FF as with IE users now.
It is donating 500M hours to research. Article never says how many total hours are available.
The 4 year lifespan in the /. article refers to the amount of time the award money covers for operations costs. So if it finds some others mean s of operation funds it could live longer... of course those funds will probably be from a private organization and the ranger would no longer be open for research.
Although a body isn't NEEDED to go to trial, it is very rare for a murder case without a body to go to trial. Usually requires something like a large pool of the victims blood, or something else that shows that the victim is definately dead. I am surprised this is even going to trial if it is possible that she just flew off back to Russia. Of course there could be evidence that authorities aren't releasing to media. It doesn't sound to me that the prosecution can prove guilt beyond a shadow of a doubt with the evidence that I am aware of.
I think this is a horrible contest to enter if you have any ideas that are actually good. While the applicants maintains ownership of any intellectual property submitted. They give up the rights to charge Clear for any kind of use. If you are the winner that may not be such a big deal with the prize money offered, but all entries are able to be used by Clear, not just the winner's. This reminds me of a contest a while back with Limp Bizkit. You could jam with Limp, anybody could, but you had to bring your own music; and you signed over intellectual rights to anything you brought. This is just a scheme by an unimaginative corporation to take advantage of a gifted inventor.
What a lot of people are missing is that this is already being done by a company that has a networth of 70+ million, national defense and oil contracts, and rakes in a tidy profit every year. I visited the company in question's corporate site and did some research on them. They recently won contracts from the Air Force that google had also bid on. This is often a catalyst that leads to a large company buying a smaller one. There isn't a lot of evidence for google buying out Space Data. I just wanted to point out that they are already succesfully using weather balloons in the corporate and military sectors this would just be a push to residential uses.
Clean Coal is not just pumping the CO2 underground. It is reducing the concentration of CO2 and other pollutants (nitrates and particles) in the exhaust of power plants through the use of various technologies. These include CO2 scrubbing, sequestration, and mixture of the coal with with nitrate absorbing materials prior to consumption. The reason the backing was pulled for this plan was because the actual clean coal technologies have advanced a lot over the past 5 or 6 years and implementation into existing plants is cheap and effective. So people have realised that the very idea of puming the gas underground was dangerous, costly, and ineffective.