The reason you don't have to divulge passwords is because doing so would be compelling people to be witnesses against themselves. The right to remain silent. That's completely different from biometric security, where you have freely made the choice to use it. There is no right to not disclose one's fingerprints or retina pattern.
The problem is that there is a significant proportion of the public that doesn't agree with that. They don't mind, or they outright prefer, that some innocent people get put into jail accidentally, as long as the police are getting the bad guys too.
They can return on a full- or part-time basis, and even take subsequent time off later in the year if needed. Netflix will "keep paying them normally."
You should ask those "farmers" where their vegetables are actually grown. Just because they are sold locally doesn't mean they were grown locally. The variety of "local" products at those places always amazes me.
But more importantly, things like produce are pretty much commodities. So all the consumption affects all the production.
Who feeds cows almonds and avocados? Cows eat grasses and corn. I don't think California grows that.
And growing rice, a textbook wetland type of crop, in a place without sufficient water doesn't make a whole lot of sense. California should stick to growing things that are suited to the land available.
Fuck my groceries. Food, as a percentage of household spending, is historically cheap. Charge the farmers the same price they charge everyone else, and the farmers will raise their prices accordingly. If that means I can't afford California's products, I'll choose another product. None of the things that California grows are necessary staples. If that means the farmers aren't competitive any more, then they should choose a line of work whose profitability doesn't depend on government largess and piping in water from god knows where.
It's nonsense really. You don't subsidize a limited, necessary resource. You let the supply demand curve determine the optimum price, and then if poor people can't afford to get drinking water, you subsidize them directly. Not to mention, when the price of water reaches its natural level, new sources like desalinization become economically feasible.
before you spout off about "all but one lane", you should probably look at a map. The whole thing was about one tiny town's tiny access road to the bridge. The mainline bridge was fine.
I hardly think that it would take an actual competent developer more than a day to write code to the effect of "read pedal" "write throttle". It is half as complicated as a stupid joystick.
Since when can't you do anything to prevent bugs? How complicated does a throttle control have to be? Read the value from the pedal, send the value to the throttle. I would expect any high school student to be able to implement this in BASIC or LOGO.
Software doesn't have to have bugs. There is no reason on god's green earth why an accelerator routine should ever be susceptible to something as stupid as a stack overflow. We should have higher expectations.
Perhaps. But there is also the possibility that not employing that bigshot VP would mean the company performs worse and those burger flippers would never have had a job to start with, or make even less money.
With IPV6, each client can have multiple addresses. You can have your global address, but you can also have internal only addresses. You can even NAT ipv6 if you really want to.
Plus, you really shouldn't be hard coding anything that has to do with public IP addresses.
What kind of accommodations can you get for full time minimum wage work in your country? In the US, you can absolutely support yourself on minimum wage. You will have to live with roommates and eat inexpensive food and probably not have much left over for luxuries. Minimum wage is about $1000 a month after taxes (which you probably will get refunded anyway). $500 for your share of rent, $100 for a monthly bus pass, $100 for your cell phone, leaving $300 for food and entertainment and savings. It isn't pretty or fun, but it is certainly doable.
We have great infrastructure, but only where the people are. I doubt Australia has many cell towers in the outback, either.
The reason you don't have to divulge passwords is because doing so would be compelling people to be witnesses against themselves. The right to remain silent. That's completely different from biometric security, where you have freely made the choice to use it. There is no right to not disclose one's fingerprints or retina pattern.
The problem is that there is a significant proportion of the public that doesn't agree with that. They don't mind, or they outright prefer, that some innocent people get put into jail accidentally, as long as the police are getting the bad guys too.
But that other man's responsibility is usually just the duty to NOT take some action.
They can return on a full- or part-time basis, and even take subsequent time off later in the year if needed. Netflix will "keep paying them normally."
It's only unsustainable if we do nothing. There are some very small changes that can be made that will make SS sustainable far into the future.
Apposed?
How about building a desalinization plant that is powered by an onsite nuclear reactor? No need to burn coal.
$1 billion is a lot different than $800 billion. Not to mention the energy costs needed to run them.
You should ask those "farmers" where their vegetables are actually grown. Just because they are sold locally doesn't mean they were grown locally. The variety of "local" products at those places always amazes me.
But more importantly, things like produce are pretty much commodities. So all the consumption affects all the production.
That's pretty much what makes a desert a desert.
It's called pooling costs. That's what insurance does.
Who feeds cows almonds and avocados? Cows eat grasses and corn. I don't think California grows that.
And growing rice, a textbook wetland type of crop, in a place without sufficient water doesn't make a whole lot of sense. California should stick to growing things that are suited to the land available.
Fuck my groceries. Food, as a percentage of household spending, is historically cheap. Charge the farmers the same price they charge everyone else, and the farmers will raise their prices accordingly. If that means I can't afford California's products, I'll choose another product. None of the things that California grows are necessary staples. If that means the farmers aren't competitive any more, then they should choose a line of work whose profitability doesn't depend on government largess and piping in water from god knows where.
It's nonsense really. You don't subsidize a limited, necessary resource. You let the supply demand curve determine the optimum price, and then if poor people can't afford to get drinking water, you subsidize them directly. Not to mention, when the price of water reaches its natural level, new sources like desalinization become economically feasible.
The judge's purpose is to run a legal trial and to rule in matters of law. The jury rules in matters of fact. If there is no jury, the judge both.
Maybe mathematics is what is wrong?
It's more like paying a toll to cross a bridge. I pay in one direction, Netflix pays in the other direction.
Who knows? Maybe it is cheaper to pay Comcast directly for access than it is to pay the various telcos.
before you spout off about "all but one lane", you should probably look at a map. The whole thing was about one tiny town's tiny access road to the bridge. The mainline bridge was fine.
If you can't make the code to read a sensor and write to an actuator bug free, you should not be writing code for anything.
I hardly think that it would take an actual competent developer more than a day to write code to the effect of "read pedal" "write throttle". It is half as complicated as a stupid joystick.
Since when can't you do anything to prevent bugs? How complicated does a throttle control have to be? Read the value from the pedal, send the value to the throttle. I would expect any high school student to be able to implement this in BASIC or LOGO.
Software doesn't have to have bugs. There is no reason on god's green earth why an accelerator routine should ever be susceptible to something as stupid as a stack overflow. We should have higher expectations.
Perhaps. But there is also the possibility that not employing that bigshot VP would mean the company performs worse and those burger flippers would never have had a job to start with, or make even less money.
With IPV6, each client can have multiple addresses. You can have your global address, but you can also have internal only addresses. You can even NAT ipv6 if you really want to.
Plus, you really shouldn't be hard coding anything that has to do with public IP addresses.
What kind of accommodations can you get for full time minimum wage work in your country? In the US, you can absolutely support yourself on minimum wage. You will have to live with roommates and eat inexpensive food and probably not have much left over for luxuries. Minimum wage is about $1000 a month after taxes (which you probably will get refunded anyway). $500 for your share of rent, $100 for a monthly bus pass, $100 for your cell phone, leaving $300 for food and entertainment and savings. It isn't pretty or fun, but it is certainly doable.