But the longer you wait,the harder it'll be for you to quit, so if you're thinking of maybe quitting later, you should assume that you don't want to quit your job period.
Unfortunately, this technology probably won't get to far after people read the word 'radioactive', even though I'd hazard to guess that 8g of Thorium probably has less environmental and health impact than 7,500 gallons of gasoline. Otherwise it sounds awesome. Is there another word for 'radioactive' we can use to get rid of the negative connotation?
He actually was a KDE user before hand and switched to GNOME 2 when KDE4 came out. The question is what will he switched to after Xfce gets a big upgrade?
Exactly. They aren't random at all. Laugh if you want but there is actually a RPS strategy guide. Its mostly determining what kind of person your opponent is and knowing what that person is likely to pick from what they know of you.
it's much more like the battle of wits in The Princess Bride than random guessing.
Looking at Wikipedia, it seems Capslock is very important to Japanese keyboards as well as its used to toggle the alphanumeric characters instead of hirigana or katakana. I can't speak from experience but I would assume that key is used a lot.
Hopefully, Google is smart enough to realize that that key is useful in other languages and includes that button on languages that need them. With French I can see fixing the input to allow shift-letter-ctrl-accent (or however it works) and everyone being happy, but with a non-latin alphabet telling people to use some other key because the key causes people using a different keyboard layout to yell won't make people too happy.
Poaching is already a big black market and chances are they might kill a few people who come in their way. They probably violate so many other laws that it isn't necessary to do this in the first place. This is true everywhere, I've heard that in the Canadian Department of Fisheries and Oceans give some of their inspectors guns for investigating possible fishing violations.
Sadly, it looks like all the drones would seem to do is make the poachers charge more for rhino horns or whatever to offset the cost of them using a bullet to shoot down the Drone and/or the ranger who comes to the location of the fallen drone.
According to the article the replacement is 'elevated' and 'imminent'. With imminent they have to say why it is imminent and give a reasonably specific reason why. So you were right about the switch, but it sounds like they are going to at least toggle the switch once or twice before it gets stuck.
If the people at SQLNinja really want a to have it easy to use/install on a redhat machine all they have to do is make their own RPM file and host it themselves. Currently, it looks like all they have available is the source code available. Although I don't know why they made such a request when they don't have any 'easy' (RPM/DEB file) installation process available yet. I'd think RH would tell them to make a RPM file to submit before rejecting them on philosophical grounds.
The big problem with that is that you'd have to respond very quickly to the order before Amazon ships it out. The instantaneous approach has the advantage that if your Aunt does actually try to send something good, well you have a gift certificate for exactly enough to get it and it'll only be a bit late. Also I doubt you want to confirm the correct size for a gifted shirt and miss the deadline to change it and get an XXL instead of and XXS.
And this isn't for all presents anyways - its just for the probably bad ones... I know I wouldn't want Amazon to spoil my X-mas morning by telling me what I got beforehand.
My understanding of them suing was not for the free advertisement but rather the fact that the lawsuit will happen in Texas rather than a "Facebook-friendly" court. And Facebook was probably going to sue them anyways, so they took the initiative and did something to improve their chances of winning. I don't see anything wrong with survival instincts and I give them credit for sticking up for their 1st amendment rights.
If you don't have to worry about the environment on the moon, how much gold (or rare earth metals or whatever) do you need to make a robotic lunar mining mission viable?
I'd think it's more of a network carrier issue than an *AA issue. If Comcast detests BitTorrent traffic over cable, imagine how much a wireless carrier would love it when a bunch of users are doing this wirelessly.
It's the easiest way to put a picture of a penguin in the summary. Why put a special picture of a penguin in when linux automagically gives you a penguin picture?
It's Malcolm Gladwell. Like most of his works, you can tell that he did his research. And he addresses why your point isn't how the world actually works. Your idea seems like common sense, but he shows that it turns out it that it just isn't true. Basically it turns out that revolutions/demonstrations work better when you ask a few people who you know well than thousands of people you barely know.
The demo didn't address a few very important things about the robot (the only word I understood in that was 'watashi'). One, it showed it can move its hands but it didn't hold anything, so that's a bit suspect. The other thing that big since its bipedal rather than wheeled is that is has to worry more about falling over. It showed off its nice balance, but can it get up by itself?
So it's kind of cool, but the only work I can see it doing is showing off is fashion related.
Well the thing about that snippet, is that it uses some defensive wording like "But Apple's comment would suggest that the incident involved someone other than the chief executive" and it confirms that someone did try to bring shuriken through security. So it's not completely bunk, just the part about who it was is only possibly Steve and the whole comment about never returning to Japan was probably exaggerated or made up. Ignoring those two major details (the parts that made the story awesome) it is sort of true.
IIRC, the whole reason why the geocentric theory doesn't work is because of Venus. Before that both theories were pretty good at explaining the motions of the planets (the geocentric was actually a bit better) but Venus has phases like the moon (or something like that, all I remember is that Venus did something weird). The geocentric theory has no way of explaining this phenomenon, so the heliocentric theory was more correct. So no, the model changed because the heliocentric theory can't properly account for Venus, not because it was easier or more accurate.
It's better to look at programming as an art rather than a science in this situation. writing a for loop is a building block for creating an actual program. Now combining the building blocks into a design and how you document the design is really the final result. So to use a bad art analogy, the prof tells the class paint an apple still life. Student A and B both draw in an impressionist style, but B uses slightly different lighting, placement, and other clear stylistic differences. Student C draws A's painting in exactly the same style (except probably a much worse job, or with just the stem pointing the other direction). All the paintings are doing the same thing but A and C would get in trouble for cheating / C for plagairism.
FTFS: . While the cached file might be in a "place" over which the computer user has control, in order to establish possession, it is necessary to satisfy mens rea or fault requirements as well. Thus, it must be shown that the file was knowingly stored and retained through the cache.'"
No jury/judge will see it as accidently having muliple CP images. So that's 4. Jail Time!
Freakonomics Radio had a relevant podcast about this recently "The upside of Quitting".
http://freakonomicsradio.com/the-upside-of-quitting.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+freakonomicsradio+%28Freakonomics+Radio%29
But the longer you wait,the harder it'll be for you to quit, so if you're thinking of maybe quitting later, you should assume that you don't want to quit your job period.
This was a defense contractor they hacked.
If they wanted Gundam, they would have hacked a contractor for the ministry of agriculture...
Unfortunately, this technology probably won't get to far after people read the word 'radioactive', even though I'd hazard to guess that 8g of Thorium probably has less environmental and health impact than 7,500 gallons of gasoline. Otherwise it sounds awesome. Is there another word for 'radioactive' we can use to get rid of the negative connotation?
He actually was a KDE user before hand and switched to GNOME 2 when KDE4 came out. The question is what will he switched to after Xfce gets a big upgrade?
Exactly. They aren't random at all. Laugh if you want but there is actually a RPS strategy guide. Its mostly determining what kind of person your opponent is and knowing what that person is likely to pick from what they know of you. it's much more like the battle of wits in The Princess Bride than random guessing.
This fortune was so close to being in this article:
COBOL is for morons. -- E.W. Dijkstra
Too bad this article wasn't posted sooner
Looking at Wikipedia, it seems Capslock is very important to Japanese keyboards as well as its used to toggle the alphanumeric characters instead of hirigana or katakana. I can't speak from experience but I would assume that key is used a lot. Hopefully, Google is smart enough to realize that that key is useful in other languages and includes that button on languages that need them. With French I can see fixing the input to allow shift-letter-ctrl-accent (or however it works) and everyone being happy, but with a non-latin alphabet telling people to use some other key because the key causes people using a different keyboard layout to yell won't make people too happy.
Poaching is already a big black market and chances are they might kill a few people who come in their way. They probably violate so many other laws that it isn't necessary to do this in the first place. This is true everywhere, I've heard that in the Canadian Department of Fisheries and Oceans give some of their inspectors guns for investigating possible fishing violations. Sadly, it looks like all the drones would seem to do is make the poachers charge more for rhino horns or whatever to offset the cost of them using a bullet to shoot down the Drone and/or the ranger who comes to the location of the fallen drone.
According to the article the replacement is 'elevated' and 'imminent'. With imminent they have to say why it is imminent and give a reasonably specific reason why. So you were right about the switch, but it sounds like they are going to at least toggle the switch once or twice before it gets stuck.
If the people at SQLNinja really want a to have it easy to use/install on a redhat machine all they have to do is make their own RPM file and host it themselves. Currently, it looks like all they have available is the source code available. Although I don't know why they made such a request when they don't have any 'easy' (RPM/DEB file) installation process available yet. I'd think RH would tell them to make a RPM file to submit before rejecting them on philosophical grounds.
The big problem with that is that you'd have to respond very quickly to the order before Amazon ships it out. The instantaneous approach has the advantage that if your Aunt does actually try to send something good, well you have a gift certificate for exactly enough to get it and it'll only be a bit late. Also I doubt you want to confirm the correct size for a gifted shirt and miss the deadline to change it and get an XXL instead of and XXS. And this isn't for all presents anyways - its just for the probably bad ones... I know I wouldn't want Amazon to spoil my X-mas morning by telling me what I got beforehand.
My understanding of them suing was not for the free advertisement but rather the fact that the lawsuit will happen in Texas rather than a "Facebook-friendly" court. And Facebook was probably going to sue them anyways, so they took the initiative and did something to improve their chances of winning. I don't see anything wrong with survival instincts and I give them credit for sticking up for their 1st amendment rights.
http://xkcd.com/644/
If you don't have to worry about the environment on the moon, how much gold (or rare earth metals or whatever) do you need to make a robotic lunar mining mission viable?
I'd think it's more of a network carrier issue than an *AA issue. If Comcast detests BitTorrent traffic over cable, imagine how much a wireless carrier would love it when a bunch of users are doing this wirelessly.
It's the easiest way to put a picture of a penguin in the summary. Why put a special picture of a penguin in when linux automagically gives you a penguin picture?
It's Malcolm Gladwell. Like most of his works, you can tell that he did his research. And he addresses why your point isn't how the world actually works. Your idea seems like common sense, but he shows that it turns out it that it just isn't true. Basically it turns out that revolutions/demonstrations work better when you ask a few people who you know well than thousands of people you barely know.
The demo didn't address a few very important things about the robot (the only word I understood in that was 'watashi'). One, it showed it can move its hands but it didn't hold anything, so that's a bit suspect. The other thing that big since its bipedal rather than wheeled is that is has to worry more about falling over. It showed off its nice balance, but can it get up by itself? So it's kind of cool, but the only work I can see it doing is showing off is fashion related.
Well the thing about that snippet, is that it uses some defensive wording like "But Apple's comment would suggest that the incident involved someone other than the chief executive" and it confirms that someone did try to bring shuriken through security. So it's not completely bunk, just the part about who it was is only possibly Steve and the whole comment about never returning to Japan was probably exaggerated or made up. Ignoring those two major details (the parts that made the story awesome) it is sort of true.
IIRC, the whole reason why the geocentric theory doesn't work is because of Venus. Before that both theories were pretty good at explaining the motions of the planets (the geocentric was actually a bit better) but Venus has phases like the moon (or something like that, all I remember is that Venus did something weird). The geocentric theory has no way of explaining this phenomenon, so the heliocentric theory was more correct. So no, the model changed because the heliocentric theory can't properly account for Venus, not because it was easier or more accurate.
Umm, wouldn't killing mirix's _mother_ be the only way to be sure?
It's better to look at programming as an art rather than a science in this situation. writing a for loop is a building block for creating an actual program. Now combining the building blocks into a design and how you document the design is really the final result. So to use a bad art analogy, the prof tells the class paint an apple still life. Student A and B both draw in an impressionist style, but B uses slightly different lighting, placement, and other clear stylistic differences. Student C draws A's painting in exactly the same style (except probably a much worse job, or with just the stem pointing the other direction). All the paintings are doing the same thing but A and C would get in trouble for cheating / C for plagairism.
Except the US's train system is nowhere as good as Europe's ... so this is going to be worse for the US if it reaches us.
FTFS: . While the cached file might be in a "place" over which the computer user has control, in order to establish possession, it is necessary to satisfy mens rea or fault requirements as well. Thus, it must be shown that the file was knowingly stored and retained through the cache.'"
No jury/judge will see it as accidently having muliple CP images. So that's 4. Jail Time!
Then points don't really matter all that much in life...