While being fat does appear to have a correlation with type2 diabetes, genetics appears to have a greater effect. I am not fat, but have suffered from type2 for a number of years. Any medical advances dealing with this are most welcome.
A birth certificate is a primary source document for a passport. Without one, you must prove birth in the US with several witnesses and sworn statements.
I'm not so sure this would be any different than just randomly hooking up an electrical generator to the power grid. Yes, you can set up a back feed to the power grid, and your supplier must pay you some small amount of money for the power you generate. They can however, require you to meet certain standards and pass an inspection before you are permitted to connect.
That doesn't seem that much different from blocking port 25. The net effect is the same; protect the rest of the users/customers.
Feb-Mar1975, off the Alleutian Islands on a ship rigged for tropical waters. No cold weather gear, no working heaters when we first got there, wind chills so low our on deck watches were rotated back inside every 10 minutes. Never been really cold since. Everything is relative.
Generally built by Spanish explorers & paid for by the King. Well, I guess really built by slave labor, but you get my drift. I think you will find them in most 'Spanish discovered' areas.
When I was on active duty in the Navy (back in the dark ages) we just torched the drive with a standard oxy-acetaline cutting torch. 20 inch platters would slag in about 15 seconds. The whole platter would be gone in under a minute. Great Fun!!!
We used thermite grenades for 'emergency' destruction.
I would prefer to see the unabridged version as a daily listing. It's a fasinating look at English history. It give special insight into the Royal Navy as well.
This was a great way to travel....40 years ago. Todays merchant ships spend almost no time in port, a day or so at most. Time in port is lost money, the lines want to keep the ships moving. Newer automated unloading facilities make for very short turn around times.
Google for 'Wing in Ground Effect', There's a ton of stuff available. It's pretty old technology, and at the prices these guys are charging, I don't think it will be too successful. I don't know if there are any kits available for 'wig's, but there are plans available for the homebuilder. The major problem with these things is the extreme difference in ground speed between them and surface ships. Since there are very few highways laid out on the water, and sail craft would have the right of way, you would be hard put to find a place to make them practical. They are only able to handle 6 foot waves, would eliminate real open water use. Perhaps in the Caribean, or similar waters.
Burning kerosene does indeed float on water, however it can readily put out with water. The US Navy has been doing it for years. The trick is to cool the fuel below it's combustion temperature. BTW, steam will smother/cool the fire just fine. Unpressurized steam is about 212 degrees, well below the temps needed to sustain combustion. Talk to anyone who has been through US Navy boot camp, they can tell you of training on live jet fuel fires (basically kerosene).
It doesn't surprise me in the least that Microsoft would blame others for their woes. A simple look at their business practices will show that they only care about the short term bottom line. When will they ever learn? Surely not any time soon. How long do you think it will be before XP has to be repurchased (licensed) on an annual basis, at full price?
And these achievements would be what? Reinventing the government? The internet? The economy?
How about none of the above.
The government has grown since he and Bill have been in office, the only part that has been "shrunk" is the military.
He didn't have jack to do with the internet.
The economy growth that we were enjoying is due to Ronny and the Republican congress. Read your economics texts and pay attention to how long it takes for top level inputs to actually affect the economy.
We have suffered through the most corrupt administration in the last 100 years.
You make the point that I have been trying to make to some of my tree hugging friends for years. We must take into account engery density. Petroleum products have the highest density, until a radically different technology becomes available, we must exploit that. I would really like to have a really cheap,compfortable,energy efficient vehecle to commute to work, but it isn't here yet.
PS, it should be available as a single seater. I can't carpool due to my strange working hours.
These people were not busted for just having the cracking software, but for using it to steal proprietary data. Customer lists are a business' lifeblood. The software possesion charges are secondary.
Not sure where you found your misinformation, but in most of Switzerland, it is not uncommon to see men riding their bikes to the local range with their assault rifles strapped to their backs. It is completely legal, and frequent practice is encouraged. The myth you hear about having to account for every round of ammo is just that. The ammo that must be accounted for is the block issued for use in time of defense. You are free to buy and shoot as much of your own ammo as you choose.
I have not been to NZ, so I cannot comment on that.
While being fat does appear to have a correlation with type2 diabetes, genetics appears to have a greater effect. I am not fat, but have suffered from type2 for a number of years. Any medical advances dealing with this are most welcome.
What makes any of you think this thing is a radar? It's a radar display. RTFA. This thing radiates in precisely the same manner as any laptop.
A birth certificate is a primary source document for a passport. Without one, you must prove birth in the US with several witnesses and sworn statements.
PeterT
I'm not so sure this would be any different than just randomly hooking up an electrical generator to the power grid. Yes, you can set up a back feed to the power grid, and your supplier must pay you some small amount of money for the power you generate. They can however, require you to meet certain standards and pass an inspection before you are permitted to connect.
That doesn't seem that much different from blocking port 25. The net effect is the same; protect the rest of the users/customers.
Feb-Mar1975, off the Alleutian Islands on a ship rigged for tropical waters. No cold weather gear, no working heaters when we first got there, wind chills so low our on deck watches were rotated back inside every 10 minutes. Never been really cold since. Everything is relative.
The Royal Road....
Generally built by Spanish explorers & paid for by the King. Well, I guess really built by slave labor, but you get my drift. I think you will find them in most 'Spanish discovered' areas.
The National Archives (USA) has a great collection of photos and documents online. www.archives.gov
When I was on active duty in the Navy (back in the dark ages) we just torched the drive with a standard oxy-acetaline cutting torch. 20 inch platters would slag in about 15 seconds. The whole platter would be gone in under a minute. Great Fun!!!
We used thermite grenades for 'emergency' destruction.
I would prefer to see the unabridged version as a daily listing. It's a fasinating look at English history. It give special insight into the Royal Navy as well.
This was a great way to travel....40 years ago. Todays merchant ships spend almost no time in port, a day or so at most. Time in port is lost money, the lines want to keep the ships moving. Newer automated unloading facilities make for very short turn around times.
Google for 'Wing in Ground Effect', There's a ton of stuff available. It's pretty old technology, and at the prices these guys are charging, I don't think it will be too successful. I don't know if there are any kits available for 'wig's, but there are plans available for the homebuilder. The major problem with these things is the extreme difference in ground speed between them and surface ships. Since there are very few highways laid out on the water, and sail craft would have the right of way, you would be hard put to find a place to make them practical. They are only able to handle 6 foot waves, would eliminate real open water use. Perhaps in the Caribean, or similar waters.
Burning kerosene does indeed float on water, however it can readily put out with water. The US Navy has been doing it for years. The trick is to cool the fuel below it's combustion temperature. BTW, steam will smother/cool the fire just fine. Unpressurized steam is about 212 degrees, well below the temps needed to sustain combustion. Talk to anyone who has been through US Navy boot camp, they can tell you of training on live jet fuel fires (basically kerosene).
Yeah, the 6 are in the NOVA-MD area, but at least two of them are more than 50 Miles apart. It would take a bunch of nukes to get them all.
But then, when the nukes start dropping,who counts. One is more than enough.
p.
It doesn't surprise me in the least that Microsoft would blame others for their woes. A simple look at their business practices will show that they only care about the short term bottom line. When will they ever learn? Surely not any time soon. How long do you think it will be before XP has to be repurchased (licensed) on an annual basis, at full price?
A pox on them!
And these achievements would be what? Reinventing the government? The internet? The economy?
How about none of the above.
The government has grown since he and Bill have been in office, the only part that has been "shrunk" is the military.
He didn't have jack to do with the internet.
The economy growth that we were enjoying is due to Ronny and the Republican congress. Read your economics texts and pay attention to how long it takes for top level inputs to actually affect the economy.
We have suffered through the most corrupt administration in the last 100 years.
P.
Hasdi,
You make the point that I have been trying to make to some of my tree hugging friends for years. We must take into account engery density. Petroleum products have the highest density, until a radically different technology becomes available, we must exploit that. I would really like to have a really cheap,compfortable,energy efficient vehecle to commute to work, but it isn't here yet.
PS, it should be available as a single seater. I can't carpool due to my strange working hours.
V/R
Peter Theune
These people were not busted for just having the cracking software, but for using it to steal proprietary data. Customer lists are a business' lifeblood. The software possesion charges are secondary.
PeterT
Not sure where you found your misinformation, but in most of Switzerland, it is not uncommon to see men riding their bikes to the local range with their assault rifles strapped to their backs. It is completely legal, and frequent practice is encouraged. The myth you hear about having to account for every round of ammo is just that. The ammo that must be accounted for is the block issued for use in time of defense. You are free to buy and shoot as much of your own ammo as you choose.
I have not been to NZ, so I cannot comment on that.
P.
Duh.... Which police state do you live in? Speed
limits do not apply to private property. Period.
I can drive as fast as I wish on _My_ property.
PeterT
You are absolutely right, Spammers shouldn't be jailed, they should be shot.
;-)
PeterT
You bet, I wonder what kind of beowulf cluster I
could build with a half dozen of these?
PeterT
We aren't really surprised by this are we?
PeterT
Too cool! Let's see what it looks like. I just made a mobile out of 50 or so. It casts nice little rainbows.
Peter
Hey I've got enough old gear laying around to try this. Maybe it will be my 15 minutes of fame.
Peter
HP-UX supports large uids, clustering, passwd db's.
Linux is free. yah takes your choice and write the check.
Peter.