No it would depend on what you intended to happen when you punched them. If I punch someone really hard and send them flying backwards over the edge of a cliff to their death that is murder.
It is not just intent, but reasonable expectation of what your actions might cause that define murder. I stabbed him with a knife in the chest but did not intend to kill him argument does not wash, as there is a reasonable expectation that stabbing someone in the chest will kill them.
Our beef (that is the U.K.) is now BSE free, despite being the outbreak country. Yours (the USA) is not some 20 years after the outbreak started.
If you want to get rid of BSE in your cattle you need to adopt the measures done in the UK; they are proven to work. It would also be wise to ban all cattle CNS from the human food chain.
In the meantime I don't eat USA beef because I have no guarantee that it is BSE free, where I do for UK or EU beef.
I though the issue was they didn't want RFID tags? The point is that tagging and tracking was a major component of the elimination of BSE in the UK cattle population. We where the outbreak country with more cases than everywhere else put together, yet BSE is now eliminated from the UK cattle population. The rational and sensible person would look at what we did to eliminate BSE and copy it, because it is known to work. The BSE outbreak is over 20 years old now, and any country that has not eliminated it is frankly pissing about.
By the way I am not alleging an imbalance of numbers, as that would suggest it does not exist when it most definitely does exist.
This is all well and good, but how about having some real features
* Robust bullet proof quota system
* Directory quotas
* Shrinkable online
* Clusterable
* DMAPI for HSM with a working implementation.
* Storage pool migration so I can mix SATA and SAS/FC in the same file system and do something useful with it.
* Ability to continue functioning when one or more disks is "gone" temporarily or permanently from the file system
I have personally come to the conclusion that ext3 is a pile of dino droppings. Basically quota support in ext3 is just not robust.enough. Give me XFS, any day of the week. In fact the ability to support "project" quotas and hence directory quota's is much much better than ext3, or ReiserFS or JFS, or even ZFS (which does not do quotas at all).
Because as far as IBM are concerned JFS is not very interesting. I would point out the fact that the DMAPI implementation on JFS has bit rotted, and IBM don't even support HSM on it on Linux. For that you need to buy GPFS, which makes ZFS look completely ordinary.
I would add that all cattle in the U.K. and the rest of the EU have had to be tagged for years, and all the farmers have not gone bust.
The real problem in the USA is that mad cow disease is being hidden. We (aka the UK) know how much infected cattle feed we sold to the USA, we have a *VERY* good idea as to how many cattle would have caught mad cow disease as a result. For some reason that number is *MUCH* higher than the official numbers. There is a problem and it is not with the estimated number of cattle that would get mad cow disease. We know the figures are good because they match every other countries outbreaks that we sold infected cattle feed to.
Personally when I visit the US I refuse to eat beef. Then again last time I checked 164 people in the UK had caught new variant CJD, with a potential for maybe 250 or so more. All less than the more than 1000 excess deaths from salmonella we had when the BSE crisis broke back in 1996. Those zero risk choices:-)
In most Bern convention countries that is not the case. In the U.K. and the rest of the E.U. to my knowledge there is no registration of copyright period.
There are strict guidelines on what constitutes quotation. The basics are the longer the work, the more you get to quote. However you *never* get to quote the whole work.
A very similar scenario has been to the courts in the U.K. Prince Charles sued the Mail on Sunday for breach of copyright (among other things) when it printed extracts from his private journal. He won the case but as there was a whole bunch of other issues such as breach of confidence I am not quite sure what if any ruling was made on the copyright issue.
Remember it is the U.K. and *ANY* copy of material under copyright without the express permission of the copyright holder is breach of copyright. There is no fair use.
Technically if I buy a poster, stick it on the wall in my house, and then take a picture of someone which includes the poster I have broken copyright law. In fact I probably break copyright law just by photographing my wallpaper. There is however a recognition that this needs to change...
Unfortunately a study of the weather across the whole of Europe showed that the number of calm days covering significant areas of Europe are such that we would have several blackouts a year, even taking into account storage of the electricity.
What we need is reliable renewable power, and in the UK that means tidal barrages in the Seven, the Mersey and the Conwy at least.
Problem is that a recent study of calm days across the *whole* of Europe showed that we would be having several blackouts a year if we relied on wind power.
If you are worried about birds and bats, go kill some domestic cats. In the UK alone they kill over 300 million small birds, mammals and reptiles annually.
Re:I stopped reading the summary
on
Best eSATA JBOD?
·
· Score: 1
With modern large capacity drives RAID 5 is just for crazy loons, you need RAID 6.
I would add that RAID anything on a single "shelf" is also playing with fire. I have personally seen an entire shelf of disks failed as a oner, or in *very* rapid succession. Shelf level redundancy is where it's at.
Remember children if it is not offline it is not backed up.
But I still cannot use a GP to modify Firefox's settings. For IE you can change proxy settings, add corporate certificates etc. all through GP. For wider Firefox deployment in large installations, they need to add these features, in addition to provide a MSI install from the source and not some third party.
Offer $$$ though, and most if not all will take it.
At the last university I worked at in the UK, there where a small number of people that for historical reasons got paid in the middle of the month where everyone else was month end. A little application of $$$ in offering all those people a bonus to change to month ending, and you have a simplified payroll you only have to run once a month and everyone is happy.
There is at least $40 million here to ease the pain, plus the lower running costs. There is fundamentally a lack of imagination on behalf of managers here. Not that this surprises me.
It's worse than this. Under the regulatory structure as I understand it BT gets to charge customers in total an amount that is based on the value of their assets. They invest in more bandwidth and the value of their assets go up and they get to charge more. That is somewhat of a simplification but it's the general gist.
Hum, I am not sure that I would describe Montrose as particularly rural. It also helps if you choose a town that just happens to be on the main east coast main line, so getting a train to somewhere as far a field as London can be a single no change journey. One change and I could be in Paris, two and the south of France calls:-)
Perhaps if you tried say Banchory, Peebles, or Galashields your result will not be so impressive.
Or you could "electrify" the lines, and generate that electricity to power the locomotive using whatever zero emission electricity generation method takes your fancy.
This is where the analysis is flawed. It is much easier and possible today to make a train journey that has zero carbon emissions (or put another way is renewable cause oil ain't going to last even if you don't believe in global warming). You cannot realistically do that today or in the foreseeable future in a plane.
My understanding was that Mozilla does have that sort of cash due to it's deals with Google to promote Google search in the browser.
No it would depend on what you intended to happen when you punched them. If I punch someone really hard and send them flying backwards over the edge of a cliff to their death that is murder.
It is not just intent, but reasonable expectation of what your actions might cause that define murder. I stabbed him with a knife in the chest but did not intend to kill him argument does not wash, as there is a reasonable expectation that stabbing someone in the chest will kill them.
The fact that the victim was mentally ill and apparently suicidal, does not in law admonish you for your actions (at least in the UK).
Problem is the dead girl was a minor. Society does not expect the same level of responsibility of minor as it does an adult.
Once you physically touch the person it is no longer assault and becomes battery.
Assault is threatening behaviour towards another person.
Our beef (that is the U.K.) is now BSE free, despite being the outbreak country. Yours (the USA) is not some 20 years after the outbreak started.
If you want to get rid of BSE in your cattle you need to adopt the measures done in the UK; they are proven to work. It would also be wise to ban all cattle CNS from the human food chain.
In the meantime I don't eat USA beef because I have no guarantee that it is BSE free, where I do for UK or EU beef.
I though the issue was they didn't want RFID tags? The point is that tagging and tracking was a major component of the elimination of BSE in the UK cattle population. We where the outbreak country with more cases than everywhere else put together, yet BSE is now eliminated from the UK cattle population. The rational and sensible person would look at what we did to eliminate BSE and copy it, because it is known to work. The BSE outbreak is over 20 years old now, and any country that has not eliminated it is frankly pissing about.
By the way I am not alleging an imbalance of numbers, as that would suggest it does not exist when it most definitely does exist.
This is all well and good, but how about having some real features
* Robust bullet proof quota system
* Directory quotas
* Shrinkable online
* Clusterable
* DMAPI for HSM with a working implementation.
* Storage pool migration so I can mix SATA and SAS/FC in the same file system and do something useful with it.
* Ability to continue functioning when one or more disks is "gone" temporarily or permanently from the file system
Right back to IBM's GPFS it is then...
I have personally come to the conclusion that ext3 is a pile of dino droppings. Basically quota support in ext3 is just not robust.enough. Give me XFS, any day of the week. In fact the ability to support "project" quotas and hence directory quota's is much much better than ext3, or ReiserFS or JFS, or even ZFS (which does not do quotas at all).
Because as far as IBM are concerned JFS is not very interesting. I would point out the fact that the DMAPI implementation on JFS has bit rotted, and IBM don't even support HSM on it on Linux. For that you need to buy GPFS, which makes ZFS look completely ordinary.
So competing against ZFS and ext3/ext4. That is fairly low goals is you ask me.
I would add that all cattle in the U.K. and the rest of the EU have had to be tagged for years, and all the farmers have not gone bust.
The real problem in the USA is that mad cow disease is being hidden. We (aka the UK) know how much infected cattle feed we sold to the USA, we have a *VERY* good idea as to how many cattle would have caught mad cow disease as a result. For some reason that number is *MUCH* higher than the official numbers. There is a problem and it is not with the estimated number of cattle that would get mad cow disease. We know the figures are good because they match every other countries outbreaks that we sold infected cattle feed to.
Personally when I visit the US I refuse to eat beef. Then again last time I checked 164 people in the UK had caught new variant CJD, with a potential for maybe 250 or so more. All less than the more than 1000 excess deaths from salmonella we had when the BSE crisis broke back in 1996. Those zero risk choices :-)
In most Bern convention countries that is not the case. In the U.K. and the rest of the E.U. to my knowledge there is no registration of copyright period.
There are strict guidelines on what constitutes quotation. The basics are the longer the work, the more you get to quote. However you *never* get to quote the whole work.
A very similar scenario has been to the courts in the U.K. Prince Charles sued the Mail on Sunday for breach of copyright (among other things) when it printed extracts from his private journal. He won the case but as there was a whole bunch of other issues such as breach of confidence I am not quite sure what if any ruling was made on the copyright issue.
Remember it is the U.K. and *ANY* copy of material under copyright without the express permission of the copyright holder is breach of copyright. There is no fair use.
Technically if I buy a poster, stick it on the wall in my house, and then take a picture of someone which includes the poster I have broken copyright law. In fact I probably break copyright law just by photographing my wallpaper. There is however a recognition that this needs to change...
Call me stupid but I thought that Nissan was French owned, specifically Renault.
Unfortunately a study of the weather across the whole of Europe showed that the number of calm days covering significant areas of Europe are such that we would have several blackouts a year, even taking into account storage of the electricity.
What we need is reliable renewable power, and in the UK that means tidal barrages in the Seven, the Mersey and the Conwy at least.
Problem is that a recent study of calm days across the *whole* of Europe showed that we would be having several blackouts a year if we relied on wind power.
If you are worried about birds and bats, go kill some domestic cats. In the UK alone they kill over 300 million small birds, mammals and reptiles annually.
With modern large capacity drives RAID 5 is just for crazy loons, you need RAID 6.
I would add that RAID anything on a single "shelf" is also playing with fire. I have personally seen an entire shelf of disks failed as a oner, or in *very* rapid succession. Shelf level redundancy is where it's at.
Remember children if it is not offline it is not backed up.
But I still cannot use a GP to modify Firefox's settings. For IE you can change proxy settings, add corporate certificates etc. all through GP. For wider Firefox deployment in large installations, they need to add these features, in addition to provide a MSI install from the source and not some third party.
Offer $$$ though, and most if not all will take it.
At the last university I worked at in the UK, there where a small number of people that for historical reasons got paid in the middle of the month where everyone else was month end. A little application of $$$ in offering all those people a bonus to change to month ending, and you have a simplified payroll you only have to run once a month and everyone is happy.
There is at least $40 million here to ease the pain, plus the lower running costs. There is fundamentally a lack of imagination on behalf of managers here. Not that this surprises me.
It's worse than this. Under the regulatory structure as I understand it BT gets to charge customers in total an amount that is based on the value of their assets. They invest in more bandwidth and the value of their assets go up and they get to charge more. That is somewhat of a simplification but it's the general gist.
Hum, I am not sure that I would describe Montrose as particularly rural. It also helps if you choose a town that just happens to be on the main east coast main line, so getting a train to somewhere as far a field as London can be a single no change journey. One change and I could be in Paris, two and the south of France calls :-)
Perhaps if you tried say Banchory, Peebles, or Galashields your result will not be so impressive.
Or you could "electrify" the lines, and generate that electricity to power the locomotive using whatever zero emission electricity generation method takes your fancy.
This is where the analysis is flawed. It is much easier and possible today to make a train journey that has zero carbon emissions (or put another way is renewable cause oil ain't going to last even if you don't believe in global warming). You cannot realistically do that today or in the foreseeable future in a plane.
And I will add using pucker binary on the wire MAPI these days. No more web based hacks required.