Not that I am a Labour voter but I would point out that while the debt at the beginning of 2008 was higher in real terms, importantly as a percentage of the GDP it was lower than it was in May 1997 when Labour came to power.
It is like getting a new job with a higher salary and using the extra income to take out a larger mortgage and buy a bigger house. Could easily be that while the total debt goes up, as a percentage of your income it has gone down. Is that a bad thing? You might argue that it is, but it is not as clear cut as you would like to make out.
No problem come live in my house. Some ferrous/magnetic material in the bricks that make the walls means no phone signal in the house unless you are right by a window and we can "fix" that by replacing the sealed units with ones that have "energy saving" glass. I have to use a femtocell for a reliable mobile signal:-)
Except for example Israel is quite keen on solar power give that it is hot and sunny there to the point where they have deserts. Also not relying on hostile neighbours for fossil fuel is seen as being a "good" thing.
The suggestion is that Israel could meet all it's power generation using solar in the Negev. Heck the Tesla S almost has the range to drive from any point to any other point in the country. Given the hostile nature of it's neighbours, that they control much of the worlds oil sounds like an excellent place for electric vehicles using solar power for generation.
A league match is 90 minutes with 15 minutes for half time, plus any extra time for stoppages. As we are talking about the English Premiership you are not going to get to even two hours unless something rather dramatic happened on pitch which stopped play for an extended period. Something like the Fabrice Muamba indecent and they are exceptionally rare and in this case it was an F.A. Cup match not a Premiership game, and the match was abandoned as a result.
There have been a few compound fracture incidents, in particular the 1996 one with David Busst, took 12 minutes to clear the blood from the pitch and Manchester United keeper Peter Schmeichel vomit on the pitch as a result of the incident.
Finding legal advice in the U.K. won't cut it either, it specifically has to be in England as there is a different legal system in Scotland and with a devolved assembly in Wales they are also very subtly different. Complicating matters is that some Welsh clubs play in the English Premiership and home matches take place in Wales.
That said I believe that Copyright is a reserved power, aka only the Westminster (aka U.K. wide government) can legislate on it.
I was just pointing out that the original football management game, the one that started the whole concept had graphical displays of the match almost from the beginning.
Before the SWAT team arrives at your door someone will have reviewed the image to confirm that it not a hash collision. If they don't then they are going to be in big trouble and a large compensation payment will be coming your way. In addition any remotely competent judge will not issue a search warrant based on a hash or more specifically Microsoft's PhotoDNA, because if they do and it turns out to be a hash collision then again they are going to be in big trouble.
Not true. A single yellow line means there are restrictions which will be on a plate near by; usually 08:00 to 18:00. Double yellow lines are no parking unless you happen to be displaying a disabled parking badge, which allows three hours parking. Then it gets more complicated in London with red lines, with double red lines meaning no stopping or parking period unless you happen to have a disabled parking badge at which point you can drop off or pick up provided you move off immediately.
There are also dashed lines, and some roads have single while lines to mark the edge of the carriageway.
Problem is that in the U.K. school I.T. is for the most part appalling. I work in I.T. support in the University sector and I see for first hand the difference between that and school I.T. that my sister has to suffer as a teacher as I supplement the rubbish I.T. support with actually useful support that is not a bunch of lies and half truths.
The difference is that pay rate of the staff involved. The university sector pays significantly more than the school sector for the same skills, easily £10k more. I know I have read job adverts for school I.T. support and would not bother applying for the money they offer.
To put it succinctly "pay peanuts get monkies" and £16k for a I.T. admin is going to get you a monkey that is only capable of doing the bare basic desktop support tasks. If you do get lucky and get someone capable of more they will quickly move on because you get better pay elsewhere.
Not true, the E.U. would like to not buy gas from Russia, just at the moment there is no viable alternative for certain countries. The biggest thing that could change that is a commitment from the USA to export some of it's fracked gas.
I was not aware that the French Revolutionary government was a communist one. In fact I don't think communism even existed when the metric system was invented.
Except the problem is that parental controls done by the ISP are a sledgehammer approach. If you turn on TalkTalk's maximum level of filtering the internet becomes severely restricted to the point where for an adult it is almost unusable.
The way to do the filtering is to do it in the router. Have multiple wireless networks, with different rules because internet filtering requirements for a five year old is different from that for a 10 year old.
Except the long term existence of Scientific Linux is now in doubt with Cern jumping ship to CentOS.
To be honest since the introduction of being able to use extra repositories at install time the requirement for a separate CentOS and Scientific Linux mostly evaporated.
Rather than searching for tunnels into Israel they could just drop GBU-57A/B and collapse all the tunnels at close to zero risk of Israel casualties and lower financial cost, but at almost certain massive Palestinian casualties. Even old WWII design Tallboy or Grand Slam bombs would probably be just as effective.
If Israel where not trying to minimize casualties they would just carpet bomb the whole of the Gaza strip back to the stone age. Would be a lot cheaper than the current effort.
For specifically the Liberal Democrats it is the only time they have been in government. However if you see the Liberal Democrats as the successors to the old Liberal party and they themselves to the Wigs then they have been in government many many times in the past. It was just a long gap from the 1930's to 2010.
Given that neither Leuchars or Kinloss are in the Hebrides I am not quite sure what this is supposed to mean. They are also both pre-exisiting military bases with runways that are now disused.
Because both Leuchars and Kinloss are such cold spots that you regularly need to do deicing. Living just a couple of miles/kilometres from Leuchars I can tell you now deicing would be less of a problem than at Cape Canaveral.
You don't even need two strands. A single strand and a BX GBIC (different wavelengths up and down over the same fibre) will see you good for 100Mbps, 1Gbps or 10Gbps depending on how much you want to spend on your optics. You can get 40km and 80km versions of all three as well.
Given the big cost in fibre is splicing and termination, halving the number of strands is going to make a big dint in the role out cost. There is a slight cost premium for BX GBIC's at the moment but I am sure if you made telco sized purchase you would narrow that gap substantially.
Then you did not read the instructions, and there was no need to link his Kindle Fire HD to a credit card. You just link it to a new Amazon identity and any purchases have to be made with credit from Amazon gift vouchers you purchased for their account. It's dead simple and how both my nieces have had their Kindle Fires setup from day one. They can make in app purchases but only from a limited pool of credit.
You can buy a Kindle Fire HD from Amazon delivered to your door for 89GBP if you have Amazon Prime, and there have been plenty of times where you have been able to buy a new Kindle Fire for under 100GBP.
Where he given a Kindle Fire he would be perfectly able to work his way around it. He loves the CBeebies app, particularly Andys Dinosaurs, and will spend ages browsing through all the photos on his parents iPad, and found and started the CBeebies app my my Kindle Fire HD all by himself.
Heck a Lego Disney Cinderella castle is 60GBP, and a Lego Cargo train is 140GBP and these are targeted at children from age six.
Now please explain the part where a Kindle Fire HD is an expensive toy, because you clearly have zero idea what constitutes an expensive toy in 2014. Oh I see you don't actually have any kids of your own, and I am am going to hazard a guess that you don't have any nephews or nieces either as otherwise as your current knowledge of toy prices for children would not be so woefully out of date.
Not that I am a Labour voter but I would point out that while the debt at the beginning of 2008 was higher in real terms, importantly as a percentage of the GDP it was lower than it was in May 1997 when Labour came to power.
It is like getting a new job with a higher salary and using the extra income to take out a larger mortgage and buy a bigger house. Could easily be that while the total debt goes up, as a percentage of your income it has gone down. Is that a bad thing? You might argue that it is, but it is not as clear cut as you would like to make out.
No problem come live in my house. Some ferrous/magnetic material in the bricks that make the walls means no phone signal in the house unless you are right by a window and we can "fix" that by replacing the sealed units with ones that have "energy saving" glass. I have to use a femtocell for a reliable mobile signal :-)
Except for example Israel is quite keen on solar power give that it is hot and sunny there to the point where they have deserts. Also not relying on hostile neighbours for fossil fuel is seen as being a "good" thing.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
The suggestion is that Israel could meet all it's power generation using solar in the Negev. Heck the Tesla S almost has the range to drive from any point to any other point in the country. Given the hostile nature of it's neighbours, that they control much of the worlds oil sounds like an excellent place for electric vehicles using solar power for generation.
Neither is traditional postal mail, for example
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
I doubt that any mechanism for anything anywhere is 100% reliable as that is a hugely high barrier.
A league match is 90 minutes with 15 minutes for half time, plus any extra time for stoppages. As we are talking about the English Premiership you are not going to get to even two hours unless something rather dramatic happened on pitch which stopped play for an extended period. Something like the Fabrice Muamba indecent and they are exceptionally rare and in this case it was an F.A. Cup match not a Premiership game, and the match was abandoned as a result.
There have been a few compound fracture incidents, in particular the 1996 one with David Busst, took 12 minutes to clear the blood from the pitch and Manchester United keeper Peter Schmeichel vomit on the pitch as a result of the incident.
So basically stop exaggerating.
Finding legal advice in the U.K. won't cut it either, it specifically has to be in England as there is a different legal system in Scotland and with a devolved assembly in Wales they are also very subtly different. Complicating matters is that some Welsh clubs play in the English Premiership and home matches take place in Wales.
That said I believe that Copyright is a reserved power, aka only the Westminster (aka U.K. wide government) can legislate on it.
I was just pointing out that the original football management game, the one that started the whole concept had graphical displays of the match almost from the beginning.
What do you mean add in simulation of the matches? That was an integral feature right from the ZX Spectrum version in 1982.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
Before the SWAT team arrives at your door someone will have reviewed the image to confirm that it not a hash collision. If they don't then they are going to be in big trouble and a large compensation payment will be coming your way. In addition any remotely competent judge will not issue a search warrant based on a hash or more specifically Microsoft's PhotoDNA, because if they do and it turns out to be a hash collision then again they are going to be in big trouble.
Not true. A single yellow line means there are restrictions which will be on a plate near by; usually 08:00 to 18:00. Double yellow lines are no parking unless you happen to be displaying a disabled parking badge, which allows three hours parking. Then it gets more complicated in London with red lines, with double red lines meaning no stopping or parking period unless you happen to have a disabled parking badge at which point you can drop off or pick up provided you move off immediately.
There are also dashed lines, and some roads have single while lines to mark the edge of the carriageway.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
Problem is that in the U.K. school I.T. is for the most part appalling. I work in I.T. support in the University sector and I see for first hand the difference between that and school I.T. that my sister has to suffer as a teacher as I supplement the rubbish I.T. support with actually useful support that is not a bunch of lies and half truths.
The difference is that pay rate of the staff involved. The university sector pays significantly more than the school sector for the same skills, easily £10k more. I know I have read job adverts for school I.T. support and would not bother applying for the money they offer.
To put it succinctly "pay peanuts get monkies" and £16k for a I.T. admin is going to get you a monkey that is only capable of doing the bare basic desktop support tasks. If you do get lucky and get someone capable of more they will quickly move on because you get better pay elsewhere.
Not true, the E.U. would like to not buy gas from Russia, just at the moment there is no viable alternative for certain countries. The biggest thing that could change that is a commitment from the USA to export some of it's fracked gas.
I was not aware that the French Revolutionary government was a communist one. In fact I don't think communism even existed when the metric system was invented.
Except the problem is that parental controls done by the ISP are a sledgehammer approach. If you turn on TalkTalk's maximum level of filtering the internet becomes severely restricted to the point where for an adult it is almost unusable.
The way to do the filtering is to do it in the router. Have multiple wireless networks, with different rules because internet filtering requirements for a five year old is different from that for a 10 year old.
Except the long term existence of Scientific Linux is now in doubt with Cern jumping ship to CentOS.
To be honest since the introduction of being able to use extra repositories at install time the requirement for a separate CentOS and Scientific Linux mostly evaporated.
Rather than searching for tunnels into Israel they could just drop GBU-57A/B and collapse all the tunnels at close to zero risk of Israel casualties and lower financial cost, but at almost certain massive Palestinian casualties. Even old WWII design Tallboy or Grand Slam bombs would probably be just as effective.
If Israel where not trying to minimize casualties they would just carpet bomb the whole of the Gaza strip back to the stone age. Would be a lot cheaper than the current effort.
For specifically the Liberal Democrats it is the only time they have been in government. However if you see the Liberal Democrats as the successors to the old Liberal party and they themselves to the Wigs then they have been in government many many times in the past. It was just a long gap from the 1930's to 2010.
If the Shuttle had been using liquid boosters then the Challenger accident would not have happened in the first place...
Given that neither Leuchars or Kinloss are in the Hebrides I am not quite sure what this is supposed to mean. They are also both pre-exisiting military bases with runways that are now disused.
Because both Leuchars and Kinloss are such cold spots that you regularly need to do deicing. Living just a couple of miles/kilometres from Leuchars I can tell you now deicing would be less of a problem than at Cape Canaveral.
You don't even need two strands. A single strand and a BX GBIC (different wavelengths up and down over the same fibre) will see you good for 100Mbps, 1Gbps or 10Gbps depending on how much you want to spend on your optics. You can get 40km and 80km versions of all three as well.
Given the big cost in fibre is splicing and termination, halving the number of strands is going to make a big dint in the role out cost. There is a slight cost premium for BX GBIC's at the moment but I am sure if you made telco sized purchase you would narrow that gap substantially.
I would add in the Rome and Vienna airport attacks by the PLO some 26 years earlier
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/R...
Then you did not read the instructions, and there was no need to link his Kindle Fire HD to a credit card. You just link it to a new Amazon identity and any purchases have to be made with credit from Amazon gift vouchers you purchased for their account. It's dead simple and how both my nieces have had their Kindle Fires setup from day one. They can make in app purchases but only from a limited pool of credit.
My 36 month year old nephew has a 100GBP early learning centre train table
http://www.elc.co.uk/Big-City-...
You can buy a Kindle Fire HD from Amazon delivered to your door for 89GBP if you have Amazon Prime, and there have been plenty of times where you have been able to buy a new Kindle Fire for under 100GBP.
Where he given a Kindle Fire he would be perfectly able to work his way around it. He loves the CBeebies app, particularly Andys Dinosaurs, and will spend ages browsing through all the photos on his parents iPad, and found and started the CBeebies app my my Kindle Fire HD all by himself.
Heck a Lego Disney Cinderella castle is 60GBP, and a Lego Cargo train is 140GBP and these are targeted at children from age six.
Now please explain the part where a Kindle Fire HD is an expensive toy, because you clearly have zero idea what constitutes an expensive toy in 2014. Oh I see you don't actually have any kids of your own, and I am am going to hazard a guess that you don't have any nephews or nieces either as otherwise as your current knowledge of toy prices for children would not be so woefully out of date.