Do we really want to commit all future electrics to have battery packs like present day Tesla's? Does Tesla even want to commit to that?
I'm not trying to be contrairian, I just dont want to standardize too soon, the time will obviously come, but I dont know that it's now yet.
Perhaps something similar to the current slower chargers, with a plug that the physical dimensions are enough to move enough amps at a reasonable voltage to do the charge, and then allow the negotiating to handle future compatibility.
I think the battery packs are the wrong place to standardize, because I can see benefits to them being odd shapes that contour to the car.
I watch people waste lots of tune processing information all the time, I think, they should learn rudimentary programming to help (for example a batch file to convert file formats, nothing too fancy).
There was a book every day programming that o think demonstrated why everybody should pretty well (the white collar workforce at least).
I doubt people would have the initiative or the thinking to do it though, just as I watch people baffled by ratios and other basic math, in a field where resizing things to a size happens frequently.
Interesting, I don't recall the government replacing all of the private health industry with government employees. That's what did happen (in real life even) with airport security. One of the largest socializations to ever happen in this nation, the health industry is still very much private (I have choices of for profit insurance, to get for profit medical care, maybe you're on medicaid or medicare, so it's different for you).
The risk Microsoft faces is that people leave them even before Office is available. Every desktop without Office is likely to forever be a lost sale for Office (we only have about 50% Office saturation where I am, and it's not a problem).
They don't really sell Win7 from what o can tell. Not to people anyway.
I downloaded the copy that's on the net (digital river I think?), thinking I could go buy Win7 from the link in activation. The pages aren't even archived, all the links to buying Win7 go to a generic landing page with only references to 8.
If you have a trust already, I'm pretty sure you can have the trust define where it goes rather than your will, this will speed things along and reduce fees.
All of our whole life policies are in irrevocable trusts to assure that they stay put.
I actually got it from Harry Browne's website in the 2000 election, and from interviews. He very much seemed to think that spillover costs were to be handled by the courts.
The free market involves making people pay for the costs they inflict, the government making decisions removes that's cost (EPA license to pollute, government deciding to keep the city open), the business owner doesn't have incentive to make the right choice for society (not having people drive in dangerous conditions), the torte system is part of how you align their interests, eliminating the corporation, and lawsuits are how libertarians would disinsentivise bad behavior, as I gather from reading their writings.
Does it occur to you that there may not be pre salting, because the salt often doesn't work?
Maybe there are regions (like where I live for example) that they are salt, because it's not so cold perhaps? The is placed as a bunch of lines going down the road, and lasts up to a week (it's applied as a gel that hardens).
We pre salt, there's a gel (I think) they put down that hardens on the broad and lasts for up to a week. It helps a lot, by making the roads better when the snow just starts, allowing people to get home.
I assume this is a troll, but the reason the free market doesn't handle snow is that the damages of being open on a snow day aren't particularly recoverable by employees. You risk your job if you sue for the boss making you come in, though that law suit is the free market solution to having the market predict weather.
The unpleasantness of the 18 hour commute is not felt by the owner.
You must be in a quite cold area, we definitely pre salt our roads here, not because the 2-3 inches is so bad (we usually wouldn't plow that), but because meltband refreeze would happen.
Not at all, Motorola seems to be making better phones now, and Google has the parents. I assume the purchase was very hedging, in case android as an ecosystem didn't take off, they could try to make them alone. The need to hedge is over, Google gets some money, and a company that has proven it's ability to manage american brands is in the mix.
Google can now release moto based nexus items (if they dream moto to be good for it), without threatening the ecosystem.
The hedge on android probably was worth it to them.
For me, the PS3s killer feature was the $60/year play station plus membership.
Lots of decent games for free (a handful of indie games, x-com when it was still $40 and BioShock infinite when $30 come to mind off the top of my head). I have all the games o can play for a very low price.
It's not a donation if it's a transaction, yes, that was my point.
I've read that 13k/kidney would wipe the problem out, which is about a funeral I think, so it makes sense. I think the reality is that it would shake out to a little bit more, but still a good idea.
I think they should do it, the people worried about exploitation I think are going at it wrong, an oppurtunity to come up with 5 figures is significant to a lot of people. The price is low enough the purchase could be worked into the insurance system even.
When I read TFS it sounded a lot like what ok cupid does already. And of the people I've met on it (probably around ten), at least half would of thought it was cool I augmented the site to waste less time with people I didn't like. What online dating suffers from is 75% of the participants are dudes, so the girls get tons of messages, get overwhelmed, and leave. This keeps the problem going.
Do we really want to commit all future electrics to have battery packs like present day Tesla's? Does Tesla even want to commit to that?
I'm not trying to be contrairian, I just dont want to standardize too soon, the time will obviously come, but I dont know that it's now yet.
Perhaps something similar to the current slower chargers, with a plug that the physical dimensions are enough to move enough amps at a reasonable voltage to do the charge, and then allow the negotiating to handle future compatibility.
I think the battery packs are the wrong place to standardize, because I can see benefits to them being odd shapes that contour to the car.
What power brick? I have an 18" USB cord plugged into my TV.
I'd recommend a Zuni connect zr301.
That plus my chromecast were the best $80 I've ever spent for work travel.
It works with ethernet or will connect to the hotels WiFi, and give you a separate private network and NAT you onto the hotels for internet.
Everybody knows you need blindingly bright blue LEDs for that.
I think they need to wait until they come up with a method that gets a 200+ mile pack charged in 15 minutes before they standardize.
I watch people waste lots of tune processing information all the time, I think, they should learn rudimentary programming to help (for example a batch file to convert file formats, nothing too fancy).
There was a book every day programming that o think demonstrated why everybody should pretty well (the white collar workforce at least).
I doubt people would have the initiative or the thinking to do it though, just as I watch people baffled by ratios and other basic math, in a field where resizing things to a size happens frequently.
Interesting, I don't recall the government replacing all of the private health industry with government employees. That's what did happen (in real life even) with airport security. One of the largest socializations to ever happen in this nation, the health industry is still very much private (I have choices of for profit insurance, to get for profit medical care, maybe you're on medicaid or medicare, so it's different for you).
The risk Microsoft faces is that people leave them even before Office is available. Every desktop without Office is likely to forever be a lost sale for Office (we only have about 50% Office saturation where I am, and it's not a problem).
They don't really sell Win7 from what o can tell. Not to people anyway.
I downloaded the copy that's on the net (digital river I think?), thinking I could go buy Win7 from the link in activation. The pages aren't even archived, all the links to buying Win7 go to a generic landing page with only references to 8.
I had to buy through a random Amazon seller.
If you have a trust already, I'm pretty sure you can have the trust define where it goes rather than your will, this will speed things along and reduce fees.
All of our whole life policies are in irrevocable trusts to assure that they stay put.
I actually got it from Harry Browne's website in the 2000 election, and from interviews. He very much seemed to think that spillover costs were to be handled by the courts.
The free market involves making people pay for the costs they inflict, the government making decisions removes that's cost (EPA license to pollute, government deciding to keep the city open), the business owner doesn't have incentive to make the right choice for society (not having people drive in dangerous conditions), the torte system is part of how you align their interests, eliminating the corporation, and lawsuits are how libertarians would disinsentivise bad behavior, as I gather from reading their writings.
Does it occur to you that there may not be pre salting, because the salt often doesn't work?
Maybe there are regions (like where I live for example) that they are salt, because it's not so cold perhaps? The is placed as a bunch of lines going down the road, and lasts up to a week (it's applied as a gel that hardens).
We pre salt, there's a gel (I think) they put down that hardens on the broad and lasts for up to a week. It helps a lot, by making the roads better when the snow just starts, allowing people to get home.
I assume this is a troll, but the reason the free market doesn't handle snow is that the damages of being open on a snow day aren't particularly recoverable by employees. You risk your job if you sue for the boss making you come in, though that law suit is the free market solution to having the market predict weather.
The unpleasantness of the 18 hour commute is not felt by the owner.
You must be in a quite cold area, we definitely pre salt our roads here, not because the 2-3 inches is so bad (we usually wouldn't plow that), but because meltband refreeze would happen.
Not at all, Motorola seems to be making better phones now, and Google has the parents. I assume the purchase was very hedging, in case android as an ecosystem didn't take off, they could try to make them alone. The need to hedge is over, Google gets some money, and a company that has proven it's ability to manage american brands is in the mix.
Google can now release moto based nexus items (if they dream moto to be good for it), without threatening the ecosystem.
The hedge on android probably was worth it to them.
Yeah, the article started the confusion.
Even at 0f it should be fine if the battery isn't fucked.
I've never heard it used that way, though freezing can mean as high as 45f in my experience, below zero is clearly below 0f
Perhaps in areas where it never gets that cold things are different (we get 1-3 nights below 0f in a typical year here).
In what world is zero f negative thirty two c though? The plot thickens.
For me, the PS3s killer feature was the $60/year play station plus membership.
Lots of decent games for free (a handful of indie games, x-com when it was still $40 and BioShock infinite when $30 come to mind off the top of my head). I have all the games o can play for a very low price.
I guess that tells us which way OK Cupid trends...
http://www.rooshvforum.com/thr...
Yeah, I misread the last summary about said rock. I was baffled when I read it the way I did, but it makes more sense now.
It's not a donation if it's a transaction, yes, that was my point.
I've read that 13k/kidney would wipe the problem out, which is about a funeral I think, so it makes sense. I think the reality is that it would shake out to a little bit more, but still a good idea.
I think they should do it, the people worried about exploitation I think are going at it wrong, an oppurtunity to come up with 5 figures is significant to a lot of people. The price is low enough the purchase could be worked into the insurance system even.
When I read TFS it sounded a lot like what ok cupid does already. And of the people I've met on it (probably around ten), at least half would of thought it was cool I augmented the site to waste less time with people I didn't like.
What online dating suffers from is 75% of the participants are dudes, so the girls get tons of messages, get overwhelmed, and leave. This keeps the problem going.
My understanding is that they've never seen the underside of a Martian rock.