You'll find that the high tax areas in general line up with the ones over paying the federal government.
It doesn't seem to be fair that a state like NJ that ends up paying a larger proportion of its funding from local taxes is not able to get a little relief for its citizens as they help fund the low tax states.
Neither of these aesthetic choices should be conveyed with characters.
The hard return indicates a paragraph break. When you say newline character I assume that's what you mean, but the newline (soft return) of a word processor is not for paragraph breaks, it's for forcing a newline within a paragraph (probably should not be used in a word processor, but only in a more advanced layout program).
If people learned to separate aesthetic choices (indents, line spacing, spacing between paragraphs) from their text, they would have an easier time with word processing, and it's likely a logical thought process that would benefit youngins too.
I've never had a problem with structure if it was done intentionally from the start, but it's a disaster for placing anything aside from text.
Additionally it's lack of ligatures (maybe fixed by now) made it useless for a book.
I still think teaching the typical person how to setup and style a consistent document with word is likely going to have better time to benefit than using Latex, most people won't ever get to that level or use it enough to keep fresh with what to do.
Tab is a character, there's no reason to have a meaningless character at the start of every paragraph. The hard return is the important character that signals a new paragraph, not the tab.
The tab is an anachronism like two spaces after a period from when we used monosoaced fonts.
Tabs are for aligning things, not for paragraph starts. Hard return is for paragraph start.
I've skimmed a couple of gas stops/sleeps and I can't tell if it can actually navigate to a parking spot or gas station.
It seems to start and end on limited access highways too. If it cannot get on and off a limited access highway I'd think it's being exaggerated in its abilities.
I'd suspect Tesla could do this too given some tries.
I saw nothing like road work, or even stopped traffic.
1 was perfect, the other had people who were on the edge of he frame, they were counted as background.
I was super impressed though, if it kicked out a full resolution replacement, I'd be willing to pay a small fee for each use (even the bad one would have made life a lot easier).
Something like pay $5 for 20 credits, get to see the low res sample before using a credit.
Yes, destroy us by leveling the playing field, exactly.
Taxes are almost irrelevant (since we pretty much break even, the owners basically have jobs because of the companies existence, nobody is making money not working), and terrible regulations like having healthcare? we did that anyway.
As a small business, our ownership leans progressive.
Private healthcare benefits large business hugely as they can create huge groups and get big discounts.
We want equal footing when competiting, that means no subsidies and universal healthcare (or at the very least all healthcare purchased through the marketplace and no discounts for big companies).
The price difference we pay for healtchcare vs a large company would go a long way towards good times for us.
My understanding was that the shared salt is how the server knows it's speaking to the correct client.
First, to establish a password p with server Steve, client Carol picks a small random salt s, and computes x = H(s, p), v = gx. Steve stores v and s, indexed by I, as Carol's password verifier and salt.
Doesn't that mean any time I login as Carol I'll need access to that salt?
Ignorant question,
is something without an HDMI out a good option for non-gaming?
Seems like using an APU is a better option to save in a non-gaming context.
As someone that has only purchased Chinese phones for the last few years, I can say they're definitely good enough.
BLU phones have been decent and very affordable over that time frame, and OnePlus is excellent.
Why? you benefit more from federal spending, and on balance you come out ahead even (in general, can't actually speak for your state vs NJ).
You'll find that the high tax areas in general line up with the ones over paying the federal government.
It doesn't seem to be fair that a state like NJ that ends up paying a larger proportion of its funding from local taxes is not able to get a little relief for its citizens as they help fund the low tax states.
https://wallethub.com/edu/stat...
Aren't snaps basically just steam for everything?
This is how I understood the concept.
People seem to like steam, why not snaps?
By making them not cans.
I love that the Ball Corp front page has a link for "packaging" and "aerospace".
Bottles are nice for the larger sizes since they are closable.
I haven't seen any 12oz bottles, and even 16oz seems to be the domain of cans.
There are areas where glass bottles are a concern though.
Beaches for example. A broken glass bottle can become quite dangerous.
Plastic bottle took over not only because they are lighter, but also because they can go anywhere.
Seems to me aluminum is the better solution. It's also super recyclable.
First line indent is a paragraph style
Space between paragraphs is a paragraph style.
Neither of these aesthetic choices should be conveyed with characters.
The hard return indicates a paragraph break. When you say newline character I assume that's what you mean, but the newline (soft return) of a word processor is not for paragraph breaks, it's for forcing a newline within a paragraph (probably should not be used in a word processor, but only in a more advanced layout program).
If people learned to separate aesthetic choices (indents, line spacing, spacing between paragraphs) from their text, they would have an easier time with word processing, and it's likely a logical thought process that would benefit youngins too.
I've never had a problem with structure if it was done intentionally from the start, but it's a disaster for placing anything aside from text.
Additionally it's lack of ligatures (maybe fixed by now) made it useless for a book.
I still think teaching the typical person how to setup and style a consistent document with word is likely going to have better time to benefit than using Latex, most people won't ever get to that level or use it enough to keep fresh with what to do.
It's not the same at all.
Tab is a character, there's no reason to have a meaningless character at the start of every paragraph. The hard return is the important character that signals a new paragraph, not the tab.
The tab is an anachronism like two spaces after a period from when we used monosoaced fonts.
Tabs are for aligning things, not for paragraph starts. Hard return is for paragraph start.
Getting the format you want for text with word us hardly any harder than latex.
It takes about a minute to go through the paragraph styles and page setup.
It'd be much more reaosnable to teach them how a word processor works.
There is no reason to tab at the start of a paragraph, the first line indent should be set as a paragraph style.
What if it had 2 cameras in the same direction?
I've skimmed a couple of gas stops/sleeps and I can't tell if it can actually navigate to a parking spot or gas station.
It seems to start and end on limited access highways too. If it cannot get on and off a limited access highway I'd think it's being exaggerated in its abilities.
I'd suspect Tesla could do this too given some tries.
I saw nothing like road work, or even stopped traffic.
Though if it's camera only, that's something.
I think it'd be better to force them to pay the rural carriers to do it.
They should be fined enough to cover the money they were trying to deny competition.
I tried 2.
1 was perfect, the other had people who were on the edge of he frame, they were counted as background.
I was super impressed though, if it kicked out a full resolution replacement, I'd be willing to pay a small fee for each use (even the bad one would have made life a lot easier).
Something like pay $5 for 20 credits, get to see the low res sample before using a credit.
It's almost like I was comparing a revenue tax vs a profit tax.
Our current state and locality does not have one, and no progressives are trying to make it happen.
Yes, destroy us by leveling the playing field, exactly.
Taxes are almost irrelevant (since we pretty much break even, the owners basically have jobs because of the companies existence, nobody is making money not working), and terrible regulations like having healthcare? we did that anyway.
As a small business, our ownership leans progressive.
Private healthcare benefits large business hugely as they can create huge groups and get big discounts.
We want equal footing when competiting, that means no subsidies and universal healthcare (or at the very least all healthcare purchased through the marketplace and no discounts for big companies).
The price difference we pay for healtchcare vs a large company would go a long way towards good times for us.
The other problem with revenue tax is that a struggling business can be destroyed by it.
Perhaps not a problem for the scale they're talking about, but where I work we are -1 to +2 percent profitable every year.
A small revenue tax would put us under.
Note: we are a small business with a physical presence, so we're not really dodging.
Note 2: on the good year the profit tax is rough even and can make us cash flow negative.
I'm not convinced a start up is going to want to start selling things that cost too much to ship online.
Nevermind, it looks like the salt is sent to the client as part of the login.
I swear I read it a few times, and missed that.
I did read the Wikipedia.
My understanding was that the shared salt is how the server knows it's speaking to the correct client.
First, to establish a password p with server Steve, client Carol picks a small random salt s, and computes x = H(s, p), v = gx. Steve stores v and s, indexed by I, as Carol's password verifier and salt.
Doesn't that mean any time I login as Carol I'll need access to that salt?