18 U.S. Code section 793, Subsection (f) Whoever, being entrusted with or having lawful possession or control of any document, writing, code book, signal book, sketch, photograph, photographic negative, blueprint, plan, map, model, instrument, appliance, note, or information, relating to the national defense, (1) through gross negligence permits the same to be removed from its proper place of custody or delivered to anyone in violation of his trust, or to be lost, stolen, abstracted, or destroyed, or (2) having knowledge that the same has been illegally removed from its proper place of custody or delivered to anyone in violation of its trust, or lost, or stolen, abstracted, or destroyed, and fails to make prompt report of such loss, theft, abstraction, or destruction to his superior officer—
Shall be fined under this title or imprisoned not more than ten years, or both.
Good luck with this. You need to prove either 1) GROSS negligence (not just the regular kind - see legal texts for differences) or 2) or she delivered email to someone she did not trust. And then IF you can prove one of those things, She gets fined. Ooooh. Ahhh. Whatever.
If this is the statute they conspiracy theorists are pinning their hats on, it is pretty pathetic!
2) That's not quite what the science says anyway. The science says: If a studio releases a DVD in region A, but then waits ten days to releases it in Region B they lose 2-3% of the sales. The science simply used the Region A release data and called it the "piracy date" as an anchor point in their study. They have not in anyway proven (or even attempted to prove) that piracy is the actual cause of the drop.
India also has 'policies' in place that prevent their "industries from maturing". They will never be mature. They'll never have large scale factories, infrastructure, power etc. because of those very same policies. That's why everything is made ABI (Anywhere But India).
They have to either a) drop the policies preventing manufacturing or b) drop the policies about local content. They can't have it both ways.
Why would code.org, a registered charity with a goal of introducing Computer science to all kids, set up one hour sessions on plumbing?
If the plumbing industry wants to generate more interest in plumbing they are more than welcome to set up a similar program. Nothing is stopping them. As far as I know they have not done this. Perhaps they see no need.
Donors to code.org that support this program DO see a need, and they are fulfilling it with this program.
How hard is this to understand? It's one hour on something kids can't see being done around the house, or when the plumber visits to fix something.
The course she is criticizing is called "one hour of code". Guess what? It's one hour long. It is not meant to teach the full CS curriculum, it is meant to generate interest in computer science. That is all.
You can't learn music in one hour (it can take months, per your friend) but you can get interested in it in one hour.
It's called "hour of code" and the idea is to get kids interested in computer coding. Kids already have exposure to music, they can bang a drum, squawk a plastic recorder from the dollar store. They have exposure to sports, they can throw a ball around easily. They don't have exposure to coding in the same way. So give them an hour. It's not a PhD, but have you heard the noise those plastic instruments make?
Wait 5 years, or until a viable competitor emerges. Microsoft will then announce - with great fanfare - that they are creating a brand new super awesome video chat tool. Microsoft lovers will trip over themselves to be the first to herald the arrival of a new age. What they won't remember, what no one ever seems to remember is that Microsoft was responsible for screwing it up in the first place.
I am still waiting for Active Directory to do what NDS used to do in the 1990's. And I can't wait until powershell finally replaces what UNIX has been doing since the 1970's. Remember this FACT: We would not have had graphical desktops without Microsoft! We'd still be using DOS!
Yes, indeed it will be a great day when Microsoft invents, easy, universal video chat...I'm so excited!
Or you could start with something the size of the Germany, like, say the North east ( Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and Vermont; and the Mid-Atlantic states of New Jersey, New York, and Pennsylvania.) Same size, roughly the same population density and the same variation of climate and topology.
Thanks...short of miracle batteries this is an issue...
I was also curious and looked up what a Tesla weighs - at 2100kg it weighs more than the equivalent gas car (E-class mercedes) and ~63% of the weight is batteries and motors. So we have an example of a ground up gas to electric design and it doesn't come out ahead on weight.
but aren't you starting with less mass too? Those 4 giant engines, the fuel system itself, all the monitors and sensor system to manage fuel flow, pressure in lines etc...could all be simplified and lightened? If wing didn't have to carry fuel could it be more efficient? We're still thinking in terms of "buy gas powered X, replace gas parts with batteries" That method is never efficient, you need a clean sheet design not a fuel tank for battery cell swap out.
Still way off, sure, but the future sometimes surprises...
Hello, CPA here, totally wrong...How about the oil industry ONLY credits that only they get? (IDC, depletion, 2yr geological exploration, there's billions of these special exemptions). How about oil companies drilling in government land, and off shore, for free? Did Elon get the land for his battery factory for free? How about the 'rights' for oil granted to them for next to nothing? How about all the infrastucture gas stations for delivery etc that the oil companies need, but have zero responsibility for? Thank you cities for issuing permits for all those gas stations! Pipelines? Lets not even go there....
These are all subsidies that have been around for a long, long time. I don't think anyone is saying they were a bad idea at the time - there is a public good aspect here - but if the same service (personal transportation) can be delivered differently, do we really need to keep subsidizing oil and gas?
It should at least be discussed. I know having an adult conversation is hard for someone who uses phrases like "looney left" but try. Or , just be quiet and let the grown ups handle this one.
Those are trivial compared to the subsidies the oil/gas industry gets. Everything from free land to drill on, free rights to drill, massive 'exploratory' tax credits making exploration risk free, government cleanup of oil spills, government permission to pollute, etc. And that has been going on for a century now.
It will take a long, long time for solar wind subsidies to catch up to what oil/gas have already received!
Not iTunes, I just checked wifes laptop, everything still physically present, our trial expired months ago. I am sure there is some combination of switches that would cause OP's scenario, but out of the box it does not do what he described...sounds to me like he tried to do something more sophisticated than apple music could handle.
I hate sharepoint, but the versioning and real time co-authoring is one of the things they got right - it's a few clicks to turn it on (per library) and it works very very well...
There were indeed many simple CMS platforms out there, and a number of really good, simple intranet hosting platforms - they are dying off as the sharepoint monster takes over (except reddot, opentext killed that one) and distorts the original meaning of what a CMS was. Sharepoint is not a good CMS, isn't that good of a DMS and is horrible intranet/web site. It's the solution to a problem no one had.
I've also seen 10+ sharepoint server farms with 700k in consultant fees, and 3 full time employees to manage it...replace a 30k a year CMS. Works great! Happy customers all around!
end of the year, end of the year, coming soon....really! don't sign up for Slack yet! Wait! We have a chat tool too*
FUD
* not integrated, requires separate per-seat license and a few more servers to manage
It cant be worse than setting an alarm on a common Timex Ironman:
1) Press SETRECALL. Hour flashes. Press + or – to change hour; hold button to scan values.
2) Press NEXT. Minutes flash. Press + or – to change minutes.
3) Press NEXT. AM/PM flashes if in 12-hour time format. Press + or – to change.
4) Press NEXT. Alarm day setting flashes. Press + or – to select DAILY, WKDAYS, or WKENDS.
5) Press DONE at any step when done setting.
To turn alarm on/off, press STARTSPLIT.
Oh, by the way you can't set an alarm to go off once, like tomorrow. You have to pick EVERY day, EVERY weekday or EVERY weekend day. If you just want one day, remember to repeat the above to turn it OFF after it goes off tomorrow. Need a birthday reminder? Good luck - it can be done.
So is the iWatch worse than a Timex, or just worse than the iPhone?
That would be a centuries old tradition from old spain that was brought to new spain.
If you a) plan on driving the same car for 10 years and b) listen to a lot of music in it, it would be a worthwhile investment.
yes just like at the airport. been that way for years now.
Good luck with this. You need to prove either 1) GROSS negligence (not just the regular kind - see legal texts for differences) or 2) or she delivered email to someone she did not trust. And then IF you can prove one of those things, She gets fined. Ooooh. Ahhh. Whatever.
If this is the statute they conspiracy theorists are pinning their hats on, it is pretty pathetic!
2) That's not quite what the science says anyway. The science says: If a studio releases a DVD in region A, but then waits ten days to releases it in Region B they lose 2-3% of the sales. The science simply used the Region A release data and called it the "piracy date" as an anchor point in their study. They have not in anyway proven (or even attempted to prove) that piracy is the actual cause of the drop.
It was released July 29th. So it's been 10 months....guess it's time for you to upgrade!
India also has 'policies' in place that prevent their "industries from maturing". They will never be mature. They'll never have large scale factories, infrastructure, power etc. because of those very same policies. That's why everything is made ABI (Anywhere But India). They have to either a) drop the policies preventing manufacturing or b) drop the policies about local content. They can't have it both ways.
If the plumbing industry wants to generate more interest in plumbing they are more than welcome to set up a similar program. Nothing is stopping them. As far as I know they have not done this. Perhaps they see no need.
Donors to code.org that support this program DO see a need, and they are fulfilling it with this program.
How hard is this to understand? It's one hour on something kids can't see being done around the house, or when the plumber visits to fix something.
The course she is criticizing is called "one hour of code". Guess what? It's one hour long. It is not meant to teach the full CS curriculum, it is meant to generate interest in computer science. That is all. You can't learn music in one hour (it can take months, per your friend) but you can get interested in it in one hour.
So after a one hour music lesson, I can compose my own works?
It's called "hour of code" and the idea is to get kids interested in computer coding. Kids already have exposure to music, they can bang a drum, squawk a plastic recorder from the dollar store. They have exposure to sports, they can throw a ball around easily. They don't have exposure to coding in the same way. So give them an hour. It's not a PhD, but have you heard the noise those plastic instruments make?
I am still waiting for Active Directory to do what NDS used to do in the 1990's. And I can't wait until powershell finally replaces what UNIX has been doing since the 1970's. Remember this FACT: We would not have had graphical desktops without Microsoft! We'd still be using DOS!
Yes, indeed it will be a great day when Microsoft invents, easy, universal video chat...I'm so excited!
Or you could start with something the size of the Germany, like, say the North east ( Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and Vermont; and the Mid-Atlantic states of New Jersey, New York, and Pennsylvania.) Same size, roughly the same population density and the same variation of climate and topology.
I was also curious and looked up what a Tesla weighs - at 2100kg it weighs more than the equivalent gas car (E-class mercedes) and ~63% of the weight is batteries and motors. So we have an example of a ground up gas to electric design and it doesn't come out ahead on weight.
Still way off, sure, but the future sometimes surprises...
OT: I am impressed a 2ton electric plane can fly.
Wrong. Start your google search with IDC intangible drilling costs and see where that leads you....
These are all subsidies that have been around for a long, long time. I don't think anyone is saying they were a bad idea at the time - there is a public good aspect here - but if the same service (personal transportation) can be delivered differently, do we really need to keep subsidizing oil and gas?
It should at least be discussed. I know having an adult conversation is hard for someone who uses phrases like "looney left" but try. Or , just be quiet and let the grown ups handle this one.
It will take a long, long time for solar wind subsidies to catch up to what oil/gas have already received!
Not iTunes, I just checked wifes laptop, everything still physically present, our trial expired months ago. I am sure there is some combination of switches that would cause OP's scenario, but out of the box it does not do what he described...sounds to me like he tried to do something more sophisticated than apple music could handle.
Get off 2010, MSFT gave up on the forced IE thing in SP2013...
I hate sharepoint, but the versioning and real time co-authoring is one of the things they got right - it's a few clicks to turn it on (per library) and it works very very well...
There were indeed many simple CMS platforms out there, and a number of really good, simple intranet hosting platforms - they are dying off as the sharepoint monster takes over (except reddot, opentext killed that one) and distorts the original meaning of what a CMS was. Sharepoint is not a good CMS, isn't that good of a DMS and is horrible intranet/web site. It's the solution to a problem no one had.
I've also seen 10+ sharepoint server farms with 700k in consultant fees, and 3 full time employees to manage it...replace a 30k a year CMS. Works great! Happy customers all around!
end of the year, end of the year, coming soon....really! don't sign up for Slack yet! Wait! We have a chat tool too* FUD * not integrated, requires separate per-seat license and a few more servers to manage
It cant be worse than setting an alarm on a common Timex Ironman: 1) Press SETRECALL. Hour flashes. Press + or – to change hour; hold button to scan values. 2) Press NEXT. Minutes flash. Press + or – to change minutes. 3) Press NEXT. AM/PM flashes if in 12-hour time format. Press + or – to change. 4) Press NEXT. Alarm day setting flashes. Press + or – to select DAILY, WKDAYS, or WKENDS. 5) Press DONE at any step when done setting. To turn alarm on/off, press STARTSPLIT. Oh, by the way you can't set an alarm to go off once, like tomorrow. You have to pick EVERY day, EVERY weekday or EVERY weekend day. If you just want one day, remember to repeat the above to turn it OFF after it goes off tomorrow. Need a birthday reminder? Good luck - it can be done. So is the iWatch worse than a Timex, or just worse than the iPhone?