If we want information on such minor questions as "how often repeated?", "Just how hard?", "Are the effects merely additive, or does one hit make the next more dangerous?", "Are hits with no clinicially observable effects safe or do they add up?".
It has never been news that hits hard enough to produce immediate, observable, effects are a bad plan. That hits with no effect, or from which you appear to recover, are a very serious risk for degeneration in the mid to long term? That isn't immediately obvious.
Darwin would have you losing to these guys since by the time their disease develops they have already slept with plenty of desirable women. If jumping off a cliff would make you more attractive to the opposite sex, Darwinism would make us all cliff jumpers.
The larger damage was not to manslaughter but to destroying a complete ecosystem - Privatizing profits and socializing losses in action. Companies trifle with natural resources because they know if it all fails, we will have to pull together to get out of it.
On the same note, why can people put a price on a pirated mp3, but not on a long-term damaged ecosystem?
Nowhere near that much. I know someone who was a rater. Pay rate was ok for someone in Idaho who needs part time work (something like $15 an hour), but there are limits on the number of hours you can work (both over and under), and you're often limited by the number of tasks available.
Small potatoes, and certainly not the potato on tour.
This is why it is being done in Germany. Countries with socialized health care systems are putting a lot of funding into permanent cures. It is why when I graduate I will probably end up going to another country to work for a while. If you want to want to do permanent cures for disease then the USA is not currently the place to do it, the profit motive of medicine in the USA basically works against it happening.
An example:
Albert Sabin was ready for large-scale tests, but he could not carry them out in the United States. A rival polio vaccine developed by Dr. Jonas Salk (1914–1995) in 1954 was then being tested for its ability to prevent the disease among American school children. Salk's approach was to create a vaccine using a killed form of the virus.
Some foreign virologists, especially those from the Soviet Union, were convinced of the superiority of the Sabin vaccine. It was first tested widely in Russia, Latvia, Estonia, Czechoslovakia, Poland, Hungary, and East Germany from 1957 to 1959. A much smaller group of persons living in Sweden, England, Singapore, and the United States received Sabin's vaccine by the end of 1959.
In addition, I have a cross-cut shredder at my home. I've looked at the bits of paper that come out of it, and it's nigh impossible to get any meaningful information off of them -- certainly not "Pete Jones is an undercover police officer, yes that Pete Jones, the one who buys his cocaine at the Acme Bar, the guy with the weird mustache." And mine is pretty old, too. They have ones that slice and dice the paper much finer than mine.
So, while I'm not saying it's impossible that somebody picked up some confetti at a parade and realized to their horror that it contained sensitive, confidential information; but if that did in fact happen, it was clearly an intentional act by someone.
Cue the dramatic organ music... and now let's start talking Occam's Razor. Do we believe this story, really?
From the article : Furthermore, to increase the number of calculated time steps increases exponentially the computation time with the CPU while the computation time increases only linearly with the Graphic Processor Unit.
So maybe she had a reason, maybe she didn't, hell maybe grandpa did it and the daughter covered it up, who the fuck knows, that is why she got not guilty. Watching the trial it was obvious there was reason to believe it could be EITHER the mom (didn't want the kid) or grandpa (molestation) and the cops simply couldn't ever pin down one way or another who did it beyond a reasonable doubt. But to try to pin complex motives to most of these cases simply won't work, because frankly there are a LOT of truly right on the edge of rubber room batshit crazy people out there and frankly if they go off? The only "motive' might be as simple as "I didn't like his shirt".
While filming in a prison, Richard Pryor asked a prisoner "Why did you kill all those people."
No, the magic of radio waves made it possible and the US government had no way to stop it, whether the US thought he had any "right" to do so is irrelevant. New technology usually trumps individual states from controlling what people can and can't hear or say. This is a bad thing if you presume the public in general will always believe what they hear - which, it turns out, they don't. German propaganda broadcasts to the UK during WWII were generally a source of amusement for the British public.
If the tail lights hadn't burned out.
If we can see your tail lights, then it is still under warranty.
Or, alternately, he did a murder.
Not every technology figure is an innocent victim hounded by the man. Christ, look at Reiser.
A victim of Faull* play.
* Its pronounced Fah'-uhl
If he's extradited to North Korea you know exactly what is happening here.
Jong Uns is having trouble with porno pop ups.
.. 95 murders a week and the police are still 'inexperienced'?
The criminals are experienced too.
Escape goat? I like that, I'll have to start using that. It's a scapegoat, by the way.
Escape Goat. This is Guatemala after all.
In Guatemala goat escape you.
John McAfree?
What a clever pun considering the situation. Surely it was intentional!
Virus McAfree.
If we want information on such minor questions as "how often repeated?", "Just how hard?", "Are the effects merely additive, or does one hit make the next more dangerous?", "Are hits with no clinicially observable effects safe or do they add up?".
It has never been news that hits hard enough to produce immediate, observable, effects are a bad plan. That hits with no effect, or from which you appear to recover, are a very serious risk for degeneration in the mid to long term? That isn't immediately obvious.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2754260/
They started with tackling lab rats. Repeated insults to the brain were helped with mild hypothermia. Clinical trials followed.
Darwin would have you losing to these guys since by the time their disease develops they have already slept with plenty of desirable women. If jumping off a cliff would make you more attractive to the opposite sex, Darwinism would make us all cliff jumpers.
Athletic Darwinism has its supporters.
First the Samsung judgement, now this... its open season with litigation out there.
The information superhighway needs fences to keep the liti-gators off the road.
Censorship. He didn't say mass murder.
Editorship of mass deception.
The illegitimate child of a mixed couple from Poland and Ireland?
Think of the poleprods.
I'm gonna print me a woman!
http://news.yahoo.com/photos/dilbert-slideshow/20121105-dt121105-gif-photo-050640732.html
in soviet russia they did stuff like that by hand
And they were good at it. There were pictures of people standing next to Stalin who were later Sovietshopped out.
The larger damage was not to manslaughter but to destroying a complete ecosystem - Privatizing profits and socializing losses in action. Companies trifle with natural resources because they know if it all fails, we will have to pull together to get out of it.
On the same note, why can people put a price on a pirated mp3, but not on a long-term damaged ecosystem?
Copyright or patent the Gulf of Mexico then.
http://www.mcgonagall-online.org.uk/gems/the-tay-bridge-disaster
The more the upper echelon saved in work and money on labor, the more they could afford on themselves.
From the era :
We pretend to work, and they pretend to pay us.
As a matter of fact, I am an expert on this topic.
As a matter of fact, I drove by a Holiday Inn Express once.
Nowhere near that much. I know someone who was a rater. Pay rate was ok for someone in Idaho who needs part time work (something like $15 an hour), but there are limits on the number of hours you can work (both over and under), and you're often limited by the number of tasks available.
Small potatoes, and certainly not the potato on tour.
Amazon probably does the same to improve their suggestions model.
There is a suggestion bot?
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It is now safe to turn your computer on.
let's hope they won't dig up any shoggoths...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_Shoggoth_on_the_Roof
This is why it is being done in Germany. Countries with socialized health care systems are putting a lot of funding into permanent cures.
It is why when I graduate I will probably end up going to another country to work for a while. If you want to want to do permanent cures for disease then the USA is not currently the place to do it, the profit motive of medicine in the USA basically works against it happening.
An example:
Albert Sabin was ready for large-scale tests, but he could not carry them out in the United States. A rival polio vaccine developed by Dr. Jonas Salk (1914–1995) in 1954 was then being tested for its ability to prevent the disease among American school children. Salk's approach was to create a vaccine using a killed form of the virus.
Some foreign virologists, especially those from the Soviet Union, were convinced of the superiority of the Sabin vaccine. It was first tested widely in Russia, Latvia, Estonia, Czechoslovakia, Poland, Hungary, and East Germany from 1957 to 1959. A much smaller group of persons living in Sweden, England, Singapore, and the United States received Sabin's vaccine by the end of 1959.
Read more: http://www.notablebiographies.com/Ro-Sc/Sabin-Albert.html#ixzz2DNmMbwbD
In addition, I have a cross-cut shredder at my home. I've looked at the bits of paper that come out of it, and it's nigh impossible to get any meaningful information off of them -- certainly not "Pete Jones is an undercover police officer, yes that Pete Jones, the one who buys his cocaine at the Acme Bar, the guy with the weird mustache." And mine is pretty old, too. They have ones that slice and dice the paper much finer than mine.
So, while I'm not saying it's impossible that somebody picked up some confetti at a parade and realized to their horror that it contained sensitive, confidential information; but if that did in fact happen, it was clearly an intentional act by someone.
Cue the dramatic organ music... and now let's start talking Occam's Razor. Do we believe this story, really?
This document was shreded by Occam's Razor.
From the article : Furthermore, to increase the number of calculated time steps increases exponentially the computation time with the CPU while the computation time increases only linearly with the Graphic Processor Unit.
Eh?
P=NP?
So maybe she had a reason, maybe she didn't, hell maybe grandpa did it and the daughter covered it up, who the fuck knows, that is why she got not guilty. Watching the trial it was obvious there was reason to believe it could be EITHER the mom (didn't want the kid) or grandpa (molestation) and the cops simply couldn't ever pin down one way or another who did it beyond a reasonable doubt. But to try to pin complex motives to most of these cases simply won't work, because frankly there are a LOT of truly right on the edge of rubber room batshit crazy people out there and frankly if they go off? The only "motive' might be as simple as "I didn't like his shirt".
While filming in a prison, Richard Pryor asked a prisoner "Why did you kill all those people."
Answer : "They was at home."
No, the magic of radio waves made it possible and the US government had no way to stop it, whether the US thought he had any "right" to do so is irrelevant. New technology usually trumps individual states from controlling what people can and can't hear or say. This is a bad thing if you presume the public in general will always believe what they hear - which, it turns out, they don't. German propaganda broadcasts to the UK during WWII were generally a source of amusement for the British public.
Lord Hawhaw was a comedian?
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Some chicken; some neck.