Further reading leads me to believe a "Kibble Balance" is what I have in the past read as being described as an electric scale.
The Kibble Balance looks to be essentially a very precise scale plus gravimeter, which is what I thought would succeed in being the first practical and precise enough option.
Sure, the pay is better, but is the rent THAT much better down this way?
I figure your saving 20k/year or so (after considering Amtrak vs Subway prices, maybe car ownership vs no need etc.).
I guess in Delco there's some good schools, and maybe North Wilmington, but in the city where the apartments are getting filled, the Schools are pretty bad.
I can see taking an NYC job for 40k/year extra (though I wouldn't, and that's a huge portion of what I make here), but to then commute hours each way every day.
I figure your at least 2.5 each way door to door for home to SEPTA to Amtrak to Subway to Office, at least if one lived in NYC it'd be closer to 45-75 minutes door to door.
I've edited hundreds of depositions to use as court testimony specifically because the witness was outside of court jurisdiction and couldn't be compelled to testify in person.
Not only were they valid for discovery, but they were also valid for use as evidence.
There's apartments where I live (Wilmington, DE) and they are mostly going to people that take the Amtrak daily (or at least quite frequently). It's quite surprising, but I guess it's worth 20k/year to some people for the commute.
The author slightly is pro the DLS year round, so that maybe skews the polls, but it is not the overwhelming pro standard time year round I would have expected.
Here's a bug report for the same issue (I think, at the bottom).
Additionally there was a period when the process scheduler was designed very poorly for interactivity around then and patches to make it selectable or more interactive were poo pooed.
Shortly after Linus spoke out strongly against spinning rust. It was pretty clear that was the use case being designed for wasn't me, both in experience and rhetoric.
Linux went from a decent solution for me in the late 90s early 2000s (still played some games on windows), to a great one and my only desktop in the mid to late 00s, then to unusable on my hardware for a while.
After a decade or so of rapid improvement in the desktop experience (under the hood and more in ones face) there was a multi year stint where both regressed.
I'm sure it's great again, but so is everything else from a desktop user perspective. I used cygwin and now Linux on Windows to fill the gaps Windows leaves me missing.
I really liked having thumb-nailed windows, easily adjusted transparency and things coming and going from their proper locations when minimizing and maximizing.
3x3 desktop wall and a slight non rigidity when dragging windows was nice too.
Desktop Linux peaked a little earlier even, I stopped using it somewhere in the 2.6 kernels when there was a bug/feature with the IO scheduler that caused lots of hangs starting with Ubuntu 8.04 or 8.10 (I forget). Windows 7 came out and I didn't really look back.
Windows 7's application bar remains my favorite I have used, and side by side window snapping was included. The only features I find really missing are the abilities to pin windows on top and to lampshade them for a quick peak behind.
I suspect things are better now in KDE world, and I never really messed with Gnome3, but Gnome2 seemed perfection to me. Sun spent a lot of money doing UI research, and I think it showed.
I suspect this is very effective corporate propaganda happening right now.
It's being clothed as consumer protection, but really this is about making class actions harder to settle and harder to enforce in the long run.
Imagine 2 scenarios: In the first, the company gives 15 million to watchdogs that help keep an eye on things in the second, the company gives each of 1.5 million people $10, but to get that $10 each person has to put out half an hour of effort.
Which one is going to more properly act as a private check on corporate abuse (after all, a large purpose of the torte system is to replace overbearing government with a system of self regulation).
No, only WRT to a food truck (which is already a huge PITA).
Still, it's easier to move a kitchen than it is a storefront + a kitchen (does not apply to food trucks).
There's also potential to lease from a place that does breakfast lunch and then you do deliveries dinner late night.
When I was in nola there was a pop-up restaurant space (nola was obsessed with pop-ups, there were pop-up festivals around every corner in the garden district) that basically offered daily kitchen rentals, I can't speak to the legality, but it was clearly in a commercial space and the owner seemed like a stickler for rules.
Nope, I'm and idiot that overthought it...
If their PE is 4x that of Intel's, doesn't that imply the market is betting on them failing, at least 4:1?
Further reading leads me to believe a "Kibble Balance" is what I have in the past read as being described as an electric scale.
The Kibble Balance looks to be essentially a very precise scale plus gravimeter, which is what I thought would succeed in being the first practical and precise enough option.
I assumed that it would be an electric scale + gravity measurement and not a balance that would ultimately determine the Kilogram.
Sure, the pay is better, but is the rent THAT much better down this way?
I figure your saving 20k/year or so (after considering Amtrak vs Subway prices, maybe car ownership vs no need etc.).
I guess in Delco there's some good schools, and maybe North Wilmington, but in the city where the apartments are getting filled, the Schools are pretty bad.
I can see taking an NYC job for 40k/year extra (though I wouldn't, and that's a huge portion of what I make here), but to then commute hours each way every day.
I figure your at least 2.5 each way door to door for home to SEPTA to Amtrak to Subway to Office, at least if one lived in NYC it'd be closer to 45-75 minutes door to door.
I would lean on agreeing with you, they won't allow a proper deposition.
But they certainly could. I doubt either decision (to allow or to block) would be reversible, it's pretty much up to the judge.
That is completely untrue.
I've edited hundreds of depositions to use as court testimony specifically because the witness was outside of court jurisdiction and couldn't be compelled to testify in person.
Not only were they valid for discovery, but they were also valid for use as evidence.
They could choose to allow a deposition, a remote one even.
Do you have any citation for that?
I don't think Gallop polls elections, and the polls in general showed a very close race (and were about as accurate as any given year).
No, but I personally watched conservatives (the traditional check on this type of thing) quickly become pro mass surveillance.
And it wasn't until the Snownden leaks that anyone really seemed to care.
There's apartments where I live (Wilmington, DE) and they are mostly going to people that take the Amtrak daily (or at least quite frequently). It's quite surprising, but I guess it's worth 20k/year to some people for the commute.
It may be a cost worth paying in exchange for sunny mornings. Especially if the DLS year round crowd have their way.
Interesting, not what I would have expected.
The author slightly is pro the DLS year round, so that maybe skews the polls, but it is not the overwhelming pro standard time year round I would have expected.
Also, it makes me almost want to move to Alabama.
What country do you live in where a single car accident isn't an almost certain ticket?
Wouldn't standard time year round improve the bus stop situation?
I bet most people would prefer to wake up with the sun more days rather than the extra sun after work.
The terms of the Greek bailout worked pretty well.
Here's a bug report for the same issue (I think, at the bottom).
Additionally there was a period when the process scheduler was designed very poorly for interactivity around then and patches to make it selectable or more interactive were poo pooed.
Shortly after Linus spoke out strongly against spinning rust. It was pretty clear that was the use case being designed for wasn't me, both in experience and rhetoric.
Linux went from a decent solution for me in the late 90s early 2000s (still played some games on windows), to a great one and my only desktop in the mid to late 00s, then to unusable on my hardware for a while.
After a decade or so of rapid improvement in the desktop experience (under the hood and more in ones face) there was a multi year stint where both regressed.
I'm sure it's great again, but so is everything else from a desktop user perspective. I used cygwin and now Linux on Windows to fill the gaps Windows leaves me missing.
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubu...
No idea, I stopped using Linux on the desktop when the IO scheduler caused frequent lookups and it was implied I should buy an SSD to fix the problem.
I really liked having thumb-nailed windows, easily adjusted transparency and things coming and going from their proper locations when minimizing and maximizing.
3x3 desktop wall and a slight non rigidity when dragging windows was nice too.
Desktop Linux peaked a little earlier even, I stopped using it somewhere in the 2.6 kernels when there was a bug/feature with the IO scheduler that caused lots of hangs starting with Ubuntu 8.04 or 8.10 (I forget). Windows 7 came out and I didn't really look back.
Windows 7's application bar remains my favorite I have used, and side by side window snapping was included. The only features I find really missing are the abilities to pin windows on top and to lampshade them for a quick peak behind.
I suspect things are better now in KDE world, and I never really messed with Gnome3, but Gnome2 seemed perfection to me. Sun spent a lot of money doing UI research, and I think it showed.
Gnome 2 was awesome.
I miss the clean thin top and bottom panels with some nice effects from Compiz.
The only way that is net positive in CO2 is deforestation for growing land. Which certainly happens but could be avoided.
Isn't essentially all human breathing CO2 from molecules that were recently pulled from the atmosphere?
It seems that human breathing can't possibly have a huge impact.
I suspect this is very effective corporate propaganda happening right now.
It's being clothed as consumer protection, but really this is about making class actions harder to settle and harder to enforce in the long run.
Imagine 2 scenarios:
In the first, the company gives 15 million to watchdogs that help keep an eye on things
in the second, the company gives each of 1.5 million people $10, but to get that $10 each person has to put out half an hour of effort.
Which one is going to more properly act as a private check on corporate abuse (after all, a large purpose of the torte system is to replace overbearing government with a system of self regulation).
No, only WRT to a food truck (which is already a huge PITA).
Still, it's easier to move a kitchen than it is a storefront + a kitchen (does not apply to food trucks).
There's also potential to lease from a place that does breakfast lunch and then you do deliveries dinner late night.
When I was in nola there was a pop-up restaurant space (nola was obsessed with pop-ups, there were pop-up festivals around every corner in the garden district) that basically offered daily kitchen rentals, I can't speak to the legality, but it was clearly in a commercial space and the owner seemed like a stickler for rules.