It will not, most likely. Ruling in favor of Damore would have huge implications for 'right to work' statutes. It would make it harder for businesses to fire at will -- there's no way a conservative court would do that.
i don't hate FIOS. wish they didn't require me to use their awful Quantum gateway, but am otherwise happy with them (once i disabled their DNS, which shows ads)
I'm really tired of this thread of thought. A degree in the humanities is not useless. I have a BA in English Literature and a master's degree in information science. I am a very well regarded virtualization and cloud engineer. A good education is a good education.
micro is way better for one reason: its unsquishable. not a month goes by that one of my 200 blackberry users don't need a replacement mini usb charger because they rolled over it with their office chair.
my library (the new york public library) has thousands of ebooks. Most are currently in PDF format, but ePub is becoming very common (the PDFs are ok to use, the epubs are just like the purchased books from the Sony store). My wife uses her the nypl.org website to download them to her sony reader. They do not work (as far as I am aware) on the kindle, but are supposed to work in the nook as well. Its super convenient. The books expire in something like 20-21 days. The biggest snafu is that they only can lend out $num of copies at a time, but you can 'reserve' them like regular books. I'm thinking of getting the nook once it becomes widely available, because of the ease of the whole system.
Additionally, most larger library systems will allow out of area residents to purchase a membership for the use of materials. I think the NYPL charges $100 for the privilege, which may or may not be worth it depending on what one likes to read and how much.
it doesn't, at least on the Droid variant, support remote wipe, making it against the regulations for most company's exchange/activesync policies. Even my company which allows users to have nearly whatever they want) will not allow android because of this
ferrets can be litterbox trained, and don't really need cages once trained. though, in my experience it helps to give them multiple litterbox options, since they have a natural tendency to poop in corners.
to a certain extent, I think you are correct. That being said as an "Information Scientist" of sorts (cough *MLIS*), there is a certain amount of 'real' science going on in both fields, by which i mean, rather than inventing new tools, or refining them, research is actually being done on new theories, which will, indeed, turn into new or improved tools.
why would he pick guilani? Unless I am mistaken, he can't deliver McCain anything he needs, as evidenced by his horrible primary showing. McCain is going to pick a conservative, possibly Huckabee to shore up his support amongst the conservatives who might stay home if he's not running against the "Hilary-devil"
xmljpg isn't such a terrible idea, frankly, since it would allow for richer metadata than is currently allowed (inside the file, not in an indexing DB), although --yes-- there are certainly easier ways to get around that.
well, co-incidence is probably the most likely explanation, although your idea is, admittedly, much cooler. from wikipedia: "The Phoenicians from Tyre founded the city Malaka here, in about 1000 BC. The name Malaka is probably derived from the Phoenician word for salt because fish was salted near the harbour; in other Semitic languages the word for salt is still Hebrew méla or Arabic mil." The Phoenicians were a mediteranian people and getting from Lebanon to Spain is far from an act of master seamanship
I swear to god, it is a store that sells nothing. Its, instead, a showcase of the current samsung products available at any store that sells electronics in New York City. I went there once trying to buy a wireless adaptor for my sasmung DVD receiver, and I couldn't buy it there. Why would i waste my time going there?
My wife was a teacher in a poverty stricken school in inner city pittsburgh (where she chose to teach after being accepted to teach in pittsburgh's magnet elementary school {for high achievers]. After 2-3 years of awful administration and lack of support from parents, she decided to quit teaching. Now she writes textbooks. It's a shame on a certain level -- she was a truly excellent teacher. The number one problem in teaching is, I feel, administration -- find a school with good, supportive, fair administrators and you'll find one that can retain good teachers.
Considering that the two primary means of scholarly communication between academic researchers in nearly all disciplines of study (including the sciences) is through papers in journals and conferences wherein papers are discussed, I should hope that Physics classes above the 100 (and possibly 200) range should require papers. The science classes I took at university certainly did.
This is because class time is for lecture and disccussion, in short, for teaching. And also, few of the papers I had to write in college would've fit into the hour to hour and a half that my college classes were --I was an English/Ancient History major as an undergrad. My assignments averaged well above 10 pages, with many much, much higher than that. On top of that, in class essay writing and research papers are two different beasts, both of which should be required in a college setting. The plagarism policy was harsh and punishment was swift, woe to anyone who even forgot proper citations.
It will not, most likely. Ruling in favor of Damore would have huge implications for 'right to work' statutes. It would make it harder for businesses to fire at will -- there's no way a conservative court would do that.
i don't hate FIOS. wish they didn't require me to use their awful Quantum gateway, but am otherwise happy with them (once i disabled their DNS, which shows ads)
I wonder if they still do this in areas like New York City, where you cannot legally turn right on red, either?
I'm really tired of this thread of thought. A degree in the humanities is not useless. I have a BA in English Literature and a master's degree in information science. I am a very well regarded virtualization and cloud engineer. A good education is a good education.
no, it just means you screwed the high wage / high cost states, where 100K isn't exactly a huge salary.
i assume someone will make a dock/line out cable with a built in dac, since the lighting port support digital audi out
micro is way better for one reason: its unsquishable. not a month goes by that one of my 200 blackberry users don't need a replacement mini usb charger because they rolled over it with their office chair.
Short jokes are the lowest form of humor.
isn't the container format specified by h264, basically a quicktime container?
my library (the new york public library) has thousands of ebooks. Most are currently in PDF format, but ePub is becoming very common (the PDFs are ok to use, the epubs are just like the purchased books from the Sony store). My wife uses her the nypl.org website to download them to her sony reader. They do not work (as far as I am aware) on the kindle, but are supposed to work in the nook as well. Its super convenient. The books expire in something like 20-21 days. The biggest snafu is that they only can lend out $num of copies at a time, but you can 'reserve' them like regular books. I'm thinking of getting the nook once it becomes widely available, because of the ease of the whole system.
Additionally, most larger library systems will allow out of area residents to purchase a membership for the use of materials. I think the NYPL charges $100 for the privilege, which may or may not be worth it depending on what one likes to read and how much.
um, oh bondage, up yours was X-Ray Specs (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/X-Ray_Spex). Never went mainstream, was an awesome album
it doesn't, at least on the Droid variant, support remote wipe, making it against the regulations for most company's exchange/activesync policies. Even my company which allows users to have nearly whatever they want) will not allow android because of this
actually, i know for a fact, the primary applications used at Madoff were custom Lotus Notes Apps. That alone should prove malice.
ferrets can be litterbox trained, and don't really need cages once trained. though, in my experience it helps to give them multiple litterbox options, since they have a natural tendency to poop in corners.
to a certain extent, I think you are correct. That being said as an "Information Scientist" of sorts (cough *MLIS*), there is a certain amount of 'real' science going on in both fields, by which i mean, rather than inventing new tools, or refining them, research is actually being done on new theories, which will, indeed, turn into new or improved tools.
the nonvibrating cartridges work fine in the vibrating razor, as well, even with the vibration turned on
how does that explain the Pak?
why would he pick guilani? Unless I am mistaken, he can't deliver McCain anything he needs, as evidenced by his horrible primary showing. McCain is going to pick a conservative, possibly Huckabee to shore up his support amongst the conservatives who might stay home if he's not running against the "Hilary-devil"
xmljpg isn't such a terrible idea, frankly, since it would allow for richer metadata than is currently allowed (inside the file, not in an indexing DB), although --yes-- there are certainly easier ways to get around that.
well, co-incidence is probably the most likely explanation, although your idea is, admittedly, much cooler. from wikipedia: "The Phoenicians from Tyre founded the city Malaka here, in about 1000 BC. The name Malaka is probably derived from the Phoenician word for salt because fish was salted near the harbour; in other Semitic languages the word for salt is still Hebrew méla or Arabic mil." The Phoenicians were a mediteranian people and getting from Lebanon to Spain is far from an act of master seamanship
Madagascar was actually colonized by Malayasians via the sea. They brought Bananas to Africa.
I swear to god, it is a store that sells nothing. Its, instead, a showcase of the current samsung products available at any store that sells electronics in New York City. I went there once trying to buy a wireless adaptor for my sasmung DVD receiver, and I couldn't buy it there. Why would i waste my time going there?
My wife was a teacher in a poverty stricken school in inner city pittsburgh (where she chose to teach after being accepted to teach in pittsburgh's magnet elementary school {for high achievers]. After 2-3 years of awful administration and lack of support from parents, she decided to quit teaching. Now she writes textbooks. It's a shame on a certain level -- she was a truly excellent teacher. The number one problem in teaching is, I feel, administration -- find a school with good, supportive, fair administrators and you'll find one that can retain good teachers.
Considering that the two primary means of scholarly communication between academic researchers in nearly all disciplines of study (including the sciences) is through papers in journals and conferences wherein papers are discussed, I should hope that Physics classes above the 100 (and possibly 200) range should require papers. The science classes I took at university certainly did.
This is because class time is for lecture and disccussion, in short, for teaching. And also, few of the papers I had to write in college would've fit into the hour to hour and a half that my college classes were --I was an English/Ancient History major as an undergrad. My assignments averaged well above 10 pages, with many much, much higher than that. On top of that, in class essay writing and research papers are two different beasts, both of which should be required in a college setting. The plagarism policy was harsh and punishment was swift, woe to anyone who even forgot proper citations.