If Amazon, B&N and friends don't want that business, I'm sure these folks and others will be happy to
have the extra customers. The nice thing about shopping on the internet is that all the stores are equally close.
This is the perfect plan. The Slashdot configuration tool. It'll be like a secret clubhouse. If some random person loads the site for the first time, they'll see crap and think "why does anyone bother?" Only the initiates who have customized Slashdot into a useful configuration will get a site to which they want to return.
I think fun can be different for different people. I experience more pleasure looking down into the finder on my Rollei than I ever have using something smaller. I started out with 35mm and developing my own slides, and quickly learned that what I enjoyed most is looking at the slides themselves, and I wanted to look at bigger ones. I'm glad I switched to medium format. It has been and continues to be a pleasure in my life. That said, I think making images to please someone other than myself wouldn't be fun at all. I can certainly understand how professional photography wouldn't be enjoyable.
But, after a fashion, doesn't this make the opposite argument? If you're a pro, then you don't need to buy a fancy camera because your talent can compensate for whatever gear you happen to be using. If you have more money than time and don't plan to learn to be a pro, then leveraging the time invested by design engineers might benefit you more.
Regardless of her attack's effect on patent trolls, look at its effect on us. Attacking them increases her personal popularity, which in turn enhances her brand.
You're describing a lot of infrastructure investment in order to convert concealed carry into open carry. Places that permit open carry still generally prefer that people who carry do so concealed (with the appropriate permit).
If it's going to run Windows, it should look big enough to handle the slow. (It may be faster now, but if looking at it makes me think Windows, then I'll think slow and resource hungry.) One way they could use all their cash to differentiate themselves from the crowd is to make a tablet with a 17" screen. What OS is behind my browser is less important than not having to squint. I have both a fancy (Motion Computing) tablet with a powerful processor and a ~12" screen and a cheap HP made-for-Walmart laptop, and I use the laptop for my browsing because it has a larger screen. They should use Motion Computing's idea of hot swappable dual batteries, though. That works nicely.
I agree. I want all the radios and doodads (GPS, camera, motion sensor, etc) in the phone and generous quantities of the basics (screen real estate, processing power, ram, nonvolatile storage, battery) in the tablet/laptop.
I think Yahoo wants the non-terrorist/murderer majority of their customers to know that in any conflict between the aggregate of those customers and the government, the sympathetic intent and ideological loyalty of Yahoo is on the side of the customers even while the actions of Yahoo will be whatever the government forces them to be. It's likely quite true, but it also comes across like the person about to behead me saying "Sorry about this. I think you got a bum deal," before proceeding to do his job.
So the number of requests disclosed and the number of requests you might expect from agencies that don't have the ability to force Yahoo not to disclose their requests kind of match?
I don't feel particularly paranoid, but I find it relatively difficult to feel much in the way of trust. Also, getting first ever transparency shortly after seeing lots of news highlighting the reason to believe there's a large possibility of transparency theater feels like the decision making of a committee in a PR department.
From tfa I read, "As a result, the expectation is that park rangers can pinpoint the location of poachers and intervene immediately, the firm said." As I understand it, Kenyan park rangers intervene by shooting the people they think are poachers on sight. Interesting that UK doesn't extradite if the person to stand trial might get the death penalty, but exporting this stuff that facilitates the death penalty without trial is ok. I suppose it's the same as exporting firearms - or rather, firearm optics.
Also, no: I don't know better than the people in Kenya about how to solve their poaching problem, although I have to wonder if horn farming wouldn't reduce the economic pressure.
In a fantasy story, there is a mechanism of causation (or the results of such a mechanism), most commonly called magic, which is indifferent to, if not in direct violation of those rules of causation considered to be science. Theres a list of some sub-genres here. I remember reading interesting words written by Algis Budrys in F&SF about the difference between descriptive fiction and speculative fiction and the difference between science fiction and fantasy being not as great. I haven't found a link directly to those words, but I did find that you can buy them by following links from here. Be warned, however, that in these books, those particular words are collected among many others.
With HDMI out and an IR receiver, it looks like something you get with an HD-PVR and a programmable remote for the parents and set it up to download a DPG and record/play television shows.
I imagine that next it will become more difficult to share your data between Win8 & Android (for 'security' reasons), and enough consumers will ditch their laptop and just have a tablet and keep their data in the cloud that MS will be able to (try to) argue that their dominance with desktops and laptops is no longer important because the people stupid enough to need government protection from monopolistically engineered difficulty have moved on to tablets. Then, the small company with the patents starts lawsuits against everyone who isn't MS. So, MS ends up selling lots of phones to people who need for their phone to easily interoperate with computers at work (unless the system at work has moved to some Google designed "communicate via our cloud" service). Eventually, governments force MS to share a method for interoperating with the new security, but by then they'll have their reliable user base of people who had to learn the MS way and don't want to learn anything different.
There are unquantified risks to people on the ground if it isn't super-convenient to shoot the private concerns having rocks at the top of the well. You could sell the asteroid, but if you sell protection from it, you can keep the asteroid and sell protection from it again.
Re:If by "looking good", you mean "looking like iO
on
Inside OS X Mavericks
·
· Score: 1
OS X Bastet - I think I'll call it that anyways. If they had, then they could make a variant called OS X Ubasti
My guess is that someone said "it doesn't matter that it works, because the energy it takes to heat that ceramic could be used more productively in many different other ways." However, it looks like the technology for making whatever you like from cobalt-ferrite is coming along all right, so it might be possible for someone to order a ceramic ring and build a setup of this sort on their own. OT: Here's a kind of interesting abstract I ran across when looking for what ever happened to this tech: Flower shaped assembly of cobalt ferrite nanoparticles: application as T2 contrast agent in MRI.
I just did a quick search for "erotica ebook store" and came up with:
www.ellorascave.com
www.ebook-eros.com
www.sirenpublishing.com
and of course, literotica.com is still free.
If Amazon, B&N and friends don't want that business, I'm sure these folks and others will be happy to have the extra customers. The nice thing about shopping on the internet is that all the stores are equally close.
Do a search using ex-girlfriend & tumblr and prepare to look at dirty mirrors.
This is the perfect plan. The Slashdot configuration tool. It'll be like a secret clubhouse. If some random person loads the site for the first time, they'll see crap and think "why does anyone bother?" Only the initiates who have customized Slashdot into a useful configuration will get a site to which they want to return.
I think fun can be different for different people. I experience more pleasure looking down into the finder on my Rollei than I ever have using something smaller. I started out with 35mm and developing my own slides, and quickly learned that what I enjoyed most is looking at the slides themselves, and I wanted to look at bigger ones. I'm glad I switched to medium format. It has been and continues to be a pleasure in my life. That said, I think making images to please someone other than myself wouldn't be fun at all. I can certainly understand how professional photography wouldn't be enjoyable.
But, after a fashion, doesn't this make the opposite argument? If you're a pro, then you don't need to buy a fancy camera because your talent can compensate for whatever gear you happen to be using. If you have more money than time and don't plan to learn to be a pro, then leveraging the time invested by design engineers might benefit you more.
Regardless of her attack's effect on patent trolls, look at its effect on us. Attacking them increases her personal popularity, which in turn enhances her brand.
Just out of curiosity, how efficient are the mirrors? Or, should I be asking, how expensive are the efficient mirrors?
You're describing a lot of infrastructure investment in order to convert concealed carry into open carry. Places that permit open carry still generally prefer that people who carry do so concealed (with the appropriate permit).
If it's going to run Windows, it should look big enough to handle the slow. (It may be faster now, but if looking at it makes me think Windows, then I'll think slow and resource hungry.) One way they could use all their cash to differentiate themselves from the crowd is to make a tablet with a 17" screen. What OS is behind my browser is less important than not having to squint. I have both a fancy (Motion Computing) tablet with a powerful processor and a ~12" screen and a cheap HP made-for-Walmart laptop, and I use the laptop for my browsing because it has a larger screen. They should use Motion Computing's idea of hot swappable dual batteries, though. That works nicely.
I agree. I want all the radios and doodads (GPS, camera, motion sensor, etc) in the phone and generous quantities of the basics (screen real estate, processing power, ram, nonvolatile storage, battery) in the tablet/laptop.
3D printed ploughshares!
Read this and see if you think the people who award the prize would agree with that sentence.
I think Yahoo wants the non-terrorist/murderer majority of their customers to know that in any conflict between the aggregate of those customers and the government, the sympathetic intent and ideological loyalty of Yahoo is on the side of the customers even while the actions of Yahoo will be whatever the government forces them to be. It's likely quite true, but it also comes across like the person about to behead me saying "Sorry about this. I think you got a bum deal," before proceeding to do his job.
Dominar Rygel XVI
So the number of requests disclosed and the number of requests you might expect from agencies that don't have the ability to force Yahoo not to disclose their requests kind of match?
I don't feel particularly paranoid, but I find it relatively difficult to feel much in the way of trust. Also, getting first ever transparency shortly after seeing lots of news highlighting the reason to believe there's a large possibility of transparency theater feels like the decision making of a committee in a PR department.
From tfa I read, "As a result, the expectation is that park rangers can pinpoint the location of poachers and intervene immediately, the firm said." As I understand it, Kenyan park rangers intervene by shooting the people they think are poachers on sight. Interesting that UK doesn't extradite if the person to stand trial might get the death penalty, but exporting this stuff that facilitates the death penalty without trial is ok. I suppose it's the same as exporting firearms - or rather, firearm optics.
Also, no: I don't know better than the people in Kenya about how to solve their poaching problem, although I have to wonder if horn farming wouldn't reduce the economic pressure.
In a fantasy story, there is a mechanism of causation (or the results of such a mechanism), most commonly called magic, which is indifferent to, if not in direct violation of those rules of causation considered to be science. Theres a list of some sub-genres here. I remember reading interesting words written by Algis Budrys in F&SF about the difference between descriptive fiction and speculative fiction and the difference between science fiction and fantasy being not as great. I haven't found a link directly to those words, but I did find that you can buy them by following links from here. Be warned, however, that in these books, those particular words are collected among many others.
With HDMI out and an IR receiver, it looks like something you get with an HD-PVR and a programmable remote for the parents and set it up to download a DPG and record/play television shows.
I imagine that next it will become more difficult to share your data between Win8 & Android (for 'security' reasons), and enough consumers will ditch their laptop and just have a tablet and keep their data in the cloud that MS will be able to (try to) argue that their dominance with desktops and laptops is no longer important because the people stupid enough to need government protection from monopolistically engineered difficulty have moved on to tablets. Then, the small company with the patents starts lawsuits against everyone who isn't MS. So, MS ends up selling lots of phones to people who need for their phone to easily interoperate with computers at work (unless the system at work has moved to some Google designed "communicate via our cloud" service). Eventually, governments force MS to share a method for interoperating with the new security, but by then they'll have their reliable user base of people who had to learn the MS way and don't want to learn anything different.
There are unquantified risks to people on the ground if it isn't super-convenient to shoot the private concerns having rocks at the top of the well. You could sell the asteroid, but if you sell protection from it, you can keep the asteroid and sell protection from it again.
OS X Bastet - I think I'll call it that anyways. If they had, then they could make a variant called OS X Ubasti
A watt is a joule per second. A joule is approximately the energy required to raise 100 grams a distance of 1 meter.
I don't believe I mentioned putting electricity in water, but, please, call this one a win and enjoy the lovely bricks.
My guess is that someone said "it doesn't matter that it works, because the energy it takes to heat that ceramic could be used more productively in many different other ways." However, it looks like the technology for making whatever you like from cobalt-ferrite is coming along all right, so it might be possible for someone to order a ceramic ring and build a setup of this sort on their own. OT: Here's a kind of interesting abstract I ran across when looking for what ever happened to this tech: Flower shaped assembly of cobalt ferrite nanoparticles: application as T2 contrast agent in MRI.
Well, enjoy your bricks, then.