It changed from this: I've read dozens of submissions about election anomolies in the last week and they show no sign of slowing so I've decided to post a few of the main ones here to let you all discuss them. The first is the Common Dreams report that shows that optically scanned votes have a strange anomoly in florida: the Diebold counties roughly matched up to party registration numbers, but optically scanned paper ballot counties showed strangeness like one county where 69.3% registered democrat, but only 28% of them voted for Kerry. Palm Beach County, Florida logged 88,000 more votes than there were voters; that machines in LaPorte, Michigan discounted 50,000 voters; in Columbus, Ohio voting machines gave Bush an extra 4,000 votes; in Broward County, Florida voting machines were counting backwards; Lastly, precincts in New Mexico gave provisional ballots that will never be counted to as many as 10% of all their voters.
To this: I've read dozens of submissions about election anomolies in the last week and they show no sign of slowing so I've decided to post a few of the main ones here to let you all discuss them. The first is the Common Dreams report that shows that optically scanned votes have a strange anomoly in florida: the Touchscreen counties roughly matched up to party registration numbers, but optically scanned paper ballot counties showed strangeness like one county where 69.3% registered democrat, but only 28% of them voted for Kerry. Palm Beach County, Florida logged 88,000 more votes than there were voters; that machines in LaPorte, Michigan discounted 50,000 voters; in Columbus, Ohio voting machines gave Bush an extra 4,000 votes; in Broward County, Florida voting machines were counting backwards; Lastly, precincts in New Mexico gave provisional ballots that will never be counted to as many as 10% of all their voters.
So Diebold changed to Touchscreen. Taco that ain't fair, we can't edited our posts:)
I had this post open when it was first posted, and just came back to refresh. I saw the description change, without an editors comment. I think that this was the new string "the Touchscreen counties", perhaps it was Diebold before? Anyone got a cached copy?
Note I am not suggesting anything clandestine, but I would like to know if the (mother)post was edited, and not attributed to a/. ops.
Your reply doesn't discount the fact that only 5% are searched. And the poster did not say anything about it was the CG's fault. He is saying that perhaps we should be spending MORE money on getting MORE people to search cargo entering this country, rather than bending over for corporations. Jeez dude take a breath, its friday, enjoy.
Slap those headlights on an SUV any higher vehicle, and sit in a 'normal car'. I think Aspirin & Optometrists lobbied for these things. I am just glad I don't wear glasses or I swear I would have burned another set of holes in my head.
Except these examples (and the article) give no response on how well it dissapates heat. It could be really nifty, but it might cause your pc to melt itself if its an insulator......go give it a try, if you reply I will assume it worked.
Not odd when you look at how the hosts have been shifting in the last 6 months. Going to the young hip hosts and casting aside the older more informative less reactionary hosts.:/
Are you insane? Canadian hospitals are open and providing the same level of service year-round. You may have a longer wait for some services in the winter, particularly if you show up in the emergency room with a relatively non-emergent problem--it's flu season, and there are more slips and falls, and so forth. This is untrue. My mother (who works at a hospital) routinely talked about having to close half of the available beds due to lack of funding. And occasionaly would close their doors to all but emergency cases, making people go to another hospital, which in some cases was over an hour away. globe article. Now this is temporary closure, there is also forced permanent closure link.
Compounding the problem is the 'brain drain' where Canadian doctors (or med students) get lured to the states. We pay to train and don't necessarily get to reap the rewards.
That's why in Canada we have a lot of doctor's and engineers and the like from foreign countries wind up with the honourable job of driving cabs. It's very unfortunate when they have skills.
This could be a good bandwagon if it actually instigated some discourse. Of course that won't happen. News organizations, besides almost solely dishing out company press-releases and news wire stories, also use other 'news worthy' items that were spawned by other news organizations, without presenting new information, and requoting the existing misquoted quotes. People see one little 'bad article' about google, but then as the week goes on they see more and more news organizations mentioning the same thing, they begin to no longer trust google to not be mysteriously hacking their box when the go to google.com. I wish there a few more 'reporters' left out there...
At work I use dual monitors, and was suprised how easy it was to setup with WinXP on my laptop. Using 'synergy' I can also use the Build server beside me with its monitor, without having to switch keyboards and mice. Three monitors, two computers, no waiting. Of course I probably have killed a ton of my 'little soldiers'.;)
Threading of messages has been around for decades. Searching is easy and fast on modern hardware.
True, threading messages has been around for a long time. However the way gmail sorts the threads in a conversation seems to be both inuitive and unique. Without going into too much detail each unique responder is assigned a color. Excessive quoted text is removed, while specifically quote text remains. etc. These approaches make it unique to any threaded mail application I have used.
The searching is incredibly fast, because, I assume the machines they have on their back end are a great deal faster than my machine. I know that searching for messages in Thuderbird with my 4 years worth of mail is far slower than searching in gmail with already a moderate mail list.
One household in a thousand had a license. The number of guns per license could be a lot larger than one, and usually was, especially amongst collectors.
Ok so the one household in a thousand had X according to you. Doesn't make more households safer. Except when the gun gets turned on its owner, all the guns stolen. Perhaps a concerned citizen will purchase one of these stolen guns for the protection of his/her family.
Actually you could teach it a lot. Most importantly DON'T EAT THE PEASENTS. Rock throwing. Tree planting. Tree Watering. Plant a tree, then Water it. plant tree's in rows. Filling resources when the flags on your little common area got low. Using the fields as a washroom. Thats off the top of my head, and not playing the game in a few years.
But then you even say you suffer from "impatience" yourslef.
more accuratley, a sufficiently advanced civilization that will attempt to seek out other intelligences, but are not too intelligent to know they are better off not returning our calls.
Bookmarks->Bookmark This Page->check bookmark all tabs in a folder
It changed from this:
:)
I've read dozens of submissions about election anomolies in the last week and they show no sign of slowing so I've decided to post a few of the main ones here to let you all discuss them. The first is the Common Dreams report that shows that optically scanned votes have a strange anomoly in florida: the Diebold counties roughly matched up to party registration numbers, but optically scanned paper ballot counties showed strangeness like one county where 69.3% registered democrat, but only 28% of them voted for Kerry. Palm Beach County, Florida logged 88,000 more votes than there were voters; that machines in LaPorte, Michigan discounted 50,000 voters; in Columbus, Ohio voting machines gave Bush an extra 4,000 votes; in Broward County, Florida voting machines were counting backwards; Lastly, precincts in New Mexico gave provisional ballots that will never be counted to as many as 10% of all their voters.
To this:
I've read dozens of submissions about election anomolies in the last week and they show no sign of slowing so I've decided to post a few of the main ones here to let you all discuss them. The first is the Common Dreams report that shows that optically scanned votes have a strange anomoly in florida: the Touchscreen counties roughly matched up to party registration numbers, but optically scanned paper ballot counties showed strangeness like one county where 69.3% registered democrat, but only 28% of them voted for Kerry. Palm Beach County, Florida logged 88,000 more votes than there were voters; that machines in LaPorte, Michigan discounted 50,000 voters; in Columbus, Ohio voting machines gave Bush an extra 4,000 votes; in Broward County, Florida voting machines were counting backwards; Lastly, precincts in New Mexico gave provisional ballots that will never be counted to as many as 10% of all their voters.
So Diebold changed to Touchscreen. Taco that ain't fair, we can't edited our posts
I had this post open when it was first posted, and just came back to refresh. I saw the description change, without an editors comment. I think that this was the new string "the Touchscreen counties", perhaps it was Diebold before? Anyone got a cached copy?
/. ops.
Note I am not suggesting anything clandestine, but I would like to know if the (mother)post was edited, and not attributed to a
[sarcasm]Oh my, thats like the beginning of time DUDE!!!![/sarcasm]
Seriously, OS/2 has been running bank machines and old licensing kiosks for years and years.
If you can't read it, don't pass it. I don't know why they find this so hard to understand. ARGGGGGG.
Your reply doesn't discount the fact that only 5% are searched. And the poster did not say anything about it was the CG's fault. He is saying that perhaps we should be spending MORE money on getting MORE people to search cargo entering this country, rather than bending over for corporations. Jeez dude take a breath, its friday, enjoy.
Slap those headlights on an SUV any higher vehicle, and sit in a 'normal car'. I think Aspirin & Optometrists lobbied for these things. I am just glad I don't wear glasses or I swear I would have burned another set of holes in my head.
Except these examples (and the article) give no response on how well it dissapates heat. It could be really nifty, but it might cause your pc to melt itself if its an insulator ......go give it a try, if you reply I will assume it worked.
Not odd when you look at how the hosts have been shifting in the last 6 months. Going to the young hip hosts and casting aside the older more informative less reactionary hosts. :/
Are you insane? Canadian hospitals are open and providing the same level of service year-round. You may have a longer wait for some services in the winter, particularly if you show up in the emergency room with a relatively non-emergent problem--it's flu season, and there are more slips and falls, and so forth. This is untrue. My mother (who works at a hospital) routinely talked about having to close half of the available beds due to lack of funding. And occasionaly would close their doors to all but emergency cases, making people go to another hospital, which in some cases was over an hour away. globe article. Now this is temporary closure, there is also forced permanent closure link.
Compounding the problem is the 'brain drain' where Canadian doctors (or med students) get lured to the states. We pay to train and don't necessarily get to reap the rewards.
That's why in Canada we have a lot of doctor's and engineers and the like from foreign countries wind up with the honourable job of driving cabs. It's very unfortunate when they have skills.
This could be a good bandwagon if it actually instigated some discourse. Of course that won't happen. News organizations, besides almost solely dishing out company press-releases and news wire stories, also use other 'news worthy' items that were spawned by other news organizations, without presenting new information, and requoting the existing misquoted quotes. People see one little 'bad article' about google, but then as the week goes on they see more and more news organizations mentioning the same thing, they begin to no longer trust google to not be mysteriously hacking their box when the go to google.com. I wish there a few more 'reporters' left out there...
I don't know, I have seen some lawyers and managers with at least some of these rodent genes active...
At work I use dual monitors, and was suprised how easy it was to setup with WinXP on my laptop. Using 'synergy' I can also use the Build server beside me with its monitor, without having to switch keyboards and mice. Three monitors, two computers, no waiting. Of course I probably have killed a ton of my 'little soldiers'. ;)
Well you can bite my shiny metal ass.
First we had a post on Hibernate with no explanation. Then a post on OQO and now we have one on 'Linux'. When will the madness end?!?!? ;)
ohhh imagine a beowolf cluster of those. ;)
Which of course sounded like the ripped off the simpsons VIP bit, which of course certainly ripped off something else.
True, threading messages has been around for a long time. However the way gmail sorts the threads in a conversation seems to be both inuitive and unique. Without going into too much detail each unique responder is assigned a color. Excessive quoted text is removed, while specifically quote text remains. etc. These approaches make it unique to any threaded mail application I have used. The searching is incredibly fast, because, I assume the machines they have on their back end are a great deal faster than my machine. I know that searching for messages in Thuderbird with my 4 years worth of mail is far slower than searching in gmail with already a moderate mail list.
Perhaps the poster has an exteremely long lifespan, everything is incremental on a big enough scale. ;)
perhaps Secrecy is the norm....and no one told you ;)
Ok so the one household in a thousand had X according to you. Doesn't make more households safer. Except when the gun gets turned on its owner, all the guns stolen. Perhaps a concerned citizen will purchase one of these stolen guns for the protection of his/her family.
Actually you could teach it a lot.
Most importantly DON'T EAT THE PEASENTS.
Rock throwing.
Tree planting.
Tree Watering.
Plant a tree, then Water it.
plant tree's in rows.
Filling resources when the flags on your little common area got low.
Using the fields as a washroom.
Thats off the top of my head, and not playing the game in a few years.
But then you even say you suffer from "impatience" yourslef.
more accuratley, a sufficiently advanced civilization that will attempt to seek out other intelligences, but are not too intelligent to know they are better off not returning our calls.