It doesn't seem like the definition of a scientific term is something that should be left to a democratic vote. Public opinion with regards to science is never a good thing to rely on (creation vs evolution, naturalistic healing, etc).
It's not really a scientific term. No theories depend on the definition of a galaxy.
Because the attack is quite general - it applies to any system that stores password hashes. And it's only applicable when you have the password hashes, so limiting attempts per IP isn't relevant.
Do you have a reference for this decrease in US traffic deaths and some indication that the decrease was caused by these safety features?
I ask because I've previously read (in a book called "Risks" that I can't find on amazon) that only seat belts clearly increased safety, all the others were marginal, statistically insignificant or made things worse. Their hypothesis was that people drove more recklessly to compensate.
When they brought it to market is irrelevant. It looks like they filed this patent in 2007, which predates foursquare.
However it was filed after dodgeball. From wikipedia, dodgeball required you to text your location rather than auto-detecting it from the gps. The claims in the facebook patent specify auto-detecting your location so it doesn't sound like dodgeball is prior art.
Was there something prior to 2007 that was already doing this? Maybe brightkite or loopt?
I migrated all my old personal emails to gmail using IMAP. You can use this to migrate between different on-disk formats like maildir, mbox and pst. I had all my email in yahoo and pulled it down using POP to a maildir, then used an IMAP mail client to copy it across to gmail. Then I regularly back them up from gmail to an on-disk maildir format using mbsync.
I picked maildir because it's open and seemed better designed than the alternative, mbox. It's not completely standardized though. I've seen PSTs become corrupt so I try and stay away.
This _should_ be a cash cow for the shareholders. If these companies can't invest this money profitably then they are morally obligated to return it to the shareholders.
There's less incentive for the wealthy to start new businesses if their customers in the bottom 50% don't have any money to spend on the service.
People in the top strata always have money. They're currently "investing" it in low-interest low-risk investments like treasury bonds. We need them to invest in high-return/high-risk ventures like new businesses. Giving them more money doesn't help the situation because they already have money, we need to give them more customers.
I think we're on the other side of the Laffer curve.
It's not intellect, it's prosperity. And those 6-7 kids are more prosperous than their parents were and will almost certainly have much fewer children as well.
The only ID that's really important to the hosting company is who's authorizing the monthly payments. You should be able to get an authoritative answer from the credit card owner (or whatever).
There's a scarcity here - you get an assigned slot/frequency band to use when you call, so they can't really go to flat rate.
Then again...how does Cricket do it?
In this case, the extra choices are not there because different people want to do different things. They're there because the software and/or hardware doesn't work optimally.
e.g. Why wouldn't you want to hibernate rather than standby if your machine has been sitting idle in standby for a few minutes? Maybe because your hardware, your drivers or your software doesn't support recovering from it. Similar unsatisfactory reasons apply for all the other choices.
Maybe they should specify an open VM API next time, rather than a language. The LLVM VM instruction set is open. What's the downside of that?
It doesn't seem like the definition of a scientific term is something that should be left to a democratic vote. Public opinion with regards to science is never a good thing to rely on (creation vs evolution, naturalistic healing, etc).
It's not really a scientific term. No theories depend on the definition of a galaxy.
Because the attack is quite general - it applies to any system that stores password hashes. And it's only applicable when you have the password hashes, so limiting attempts per IP isn't relevant.
Income tax is on income, not capital gains. He wouldn't have been paying income tax on his share sale anyway.
In the very summary, Brad Smith claims that this tax applies to capital gains as well as dividends and other income
You're probably talking about life expectancy at birth.
Life expectancy at age 70 is 85.11 in the UK and 85.51 in the USA according to WolframAlpha
Do you have a reference for this decrease in US traffic deaths and some indication that the decrease was caused by these safety features?
I ask because I've previously read (in a book called "Risks" that I can't find on amazon) that only seat belts clearly increased safety, all the others were marginal, statistically insignificant or made things worse. Their hypothesis was that people drove more recklessly to compensate.
It's the migration that's the problem. We already have the roads whereas building rail to every house runs into the chicken-egg problem.
Also, if you end up building rail to every house, the trains or pods will still have to deal with people crossing in front of them
When they brought it to market is irrelevant. It looks like they filed this patent in 2007, which predates foursquare.
However it was filed after dodgeball. From wikipedia, dodgeball required you to text your location rather than auto-detecting it from the gps. The claims in the facebook patent specify auto-detecting your location so it doesn't sound like dodgeball is prior art.
Was there something prior to 2007 that was already doing this? Maybe brightkite or loopt?
I migrated all my old personal emails to gmail using IMAP. You can use this to migrate between different on-disk formats like maildir, mbox and pst. I had all my email in yahoo and pulled it down using POP to a maildir, then used an IMAP mail client to copy it across to gmail. Then I regularly back them up from gmail to an on-disk maildir format using mbsync. I picked maildir because it's open and seemed better designed than the alternative, mbox. It's not completely standardized though. I've seen PSTs become corrupt so I try and stay away.
I would aim for the non-rotating parts
This _should_ be a cash cow for the shareholders. If these companies can't invest this money profitably then they are morally obligated to return it to the shareholders.
Here's my theory...
There's less incentive for the wealthy to start new businesses if their customers in the bottom 50% don't have any money to spend on the service.
People in the top strata always have money. They're currently "investing" it in low-interest low-risk investments like treasury bonds. We need them to invest in high-return/high-risk ventures like new businesses. Giving them more money doesn't help the situation because they already have money, we need to give them more customers.
I think we're on the other side of the Laffer curve.
True - after all, Debian has had an ARM port for years and that didn't have any earthshaking impact.
mainly hydro, some natural gas - http://www.eia.doe.gov/cneaf/electricity/st_profiles/oregon.pdf
Or maybe they'll just build dikes, like the Dutch.
Wuala is doing exactly this
The Last Legionary Quartet by Douglas Hill
It's not intellect, it's prosperity. And those 6-7 kids are more prosperous than their parents were and will almost certainly have much fewer children as well.
Ironically, there are 2 themes co-existing in comments in this thread...
1) Support for Ron Paul
2) Proposing that the president do a bunch of stuff that he has no power to do (stepping on Congress' toes)
The only ID that's really important to the hosting company is who's authorizing the monthly payments. You should be able to get an authoritative answer from the credit card owner (or whatever).
It's probably not in plaintext in the exe, but they do have to have it in plaintext before they use it.
There's a scarcity here - you get an assigned slot/frequency band to use when you call, so they can't really go to flat rate. Then again...how does Cricket do it?
The FCC doesn't have power over these companies - that's why Howard Stern went there in the first place
In this case, the extra choices are not there because different people want to do different things. They're there because the software and/or hardware doesn't work optimally.
e.g. Why wouldn't you want to hibernate rather than standby if your machine has been sitting idle in standby for a few minutes? Maybe because your hardware, your drivers or your software doesn't support recovering from it. Similar unsatisfactory reasons apply for all the other choices.
it's odd that he put in a network and then transfers his new movie to his thinkpad by sneakernet (thumbdrive)