The three largest telescopes are in the northern hemisphere. But there are big observatories in both the north and the south. A lot of them are in Hawaii, which is decently close to the equator, so it gets pretty good all around views.
The the next two super telescopes are already under construction, ESO's EELT in Chile, and the TMT in Hawaii.
Gawker sites are always useless clickbait advertising traps. Thus they have so many sites linking to each other for more advertising clicks. What passes for journalism there is simply reposting other people's work. Buzzfeed actually manages to be worse (you know it is bad when Gawker calls someone out for plagarisim.)
Drunk drive once: death penalty. Drive over the limit: death penalty. Avoid paying your taxes: death penalty. Jay walking: death penaly. Use drugs: death penalty. You are a facsist.
And even if you were just spouting rhetorical bullthit about the death penalty, how does filling the jails with nonviolent offenders help?
Actually here are the real numbers. GP is pretty close, though.
It lumps all accidents together, I couldn't find a breakdown of them. But I am willing to be that car accidents are the vast majority of them.
1. Accidents (over 37% of all deaths in this range) 2. Suicide 3. Homicide 4. Cancer 5. Heart Disease (HIV is #6 for the 25-34 group)
Cancer and Heart Disease are #1 and #2 overall. Those will tend to get almost everyone in the end. If you manage not to die young.
Now, comparing with the 2002 data, a large drop in accident deaths in the 15-24 group, while 25-34 group went up. The total for both groups is lower, though. I am going to go out on a limb here and say this is due to cars getting safer, and not teenagers getting smarter.:)
This would only work if everyone was constantly subjected to whiplash. The vast majority of people will never experience head trauma. And in increasingly lower numbers as cars get safer. In the 10,000 or so years for natural selection to show up, it will make no difference.
But it doesn't currently work that way. Who is going to pay the billions of dollars it would take to deploy network hardware on the pole like you suggest?
I am all for competition, but there has to be a sane way to do it.
HFR did not make a difference to me, but if they are spending so much money on the films why do the CG physics still look like the thing was shot on the moon. And of course Legolas was the worst physics modeling yet again. Everyone in the theater burst out laughing at a certain part of the movie due to it.
Plastic wrap. You can stack pallets obscenely high as long as you hit it with enough plastic wrap. High enough to hit the top of the shipping container or truck, at least.
You need some standardization. Trucks and train cars need to be a certain width for the pallets to fit. Forklifts and pallet jacks need to be somewhat standard to fit the pallets.
Granted it doesn't have to be terribly precise, but there has to be some kind of coordination.
It reminds me of that old joke about why the Space Shuttle (and now SLS) design is influenced by the width of a horses ass.
While am no fan of Hugh Pickens, I do love pallets and logistics in general, and like this article.
As my dad is a truck driver, as a kid I would go with him on trips and see the inner workings of the industry that literally keeps the country rolling. Most trucks would take on empty pallets in exchange for full ones they offloaded. But the trucks did not always go back to the same location that they made the pickup at. I asked him once what happens to all the extra pallets that end up at the receiving end? He told me that eventually some truck would come by and pick the old pallets all up to try to load balance. The pallet truck was always this old beat up truck that looked like it was on the verge of dying.
But I asked him where new pallets come from, and he just smiled and said "obviously it is the pallet fairys."
As an adult I once saw a truck filled with brand new wooden pallets while driving on the highway. Even the truck looked brand new.
But now with the hard plastic GPS tracking pallets, I can imagine that the pallets themselves have some value and have to be tracked even when empty. Lucky for them they have GPS, I suppose.
The three largest telescopes are in the northern hemisphere. But there are big observatories in both the north and the south. A lot of them are in Hawaii, which is decently close to the equator, so it gets pretty good all around views.
The the next two super telescopes are already under construction, ESO's EELT in Chile, and the TMT in Hawaii.
Orion is a winter constellation in the north. You are only missing out if you are too wimpy to go outside in the winter. :)
But this is the case for anywhere, you need to observe year-round if you want to see everything.
Gawker sites are always useless clickbait advertising traps. Thus they have so many sites linking to each other for more advertising clicks. What passes for journalism there is simply reposting other people's work. Buzzfeed actually manages to be worse (you know it is bad when Gawker calls someone out for plagarisim.)
I've also seen the tilt-trailer trucks. They seem to be a lot more efficient. But don't look nearly as awesome as flipping the entire truck upright.
The width of two horses asses is directly proportional to the width of one horses ass, so I am still correct. :)
That is really watering down the definition of "violent offender", and you know it.
So you are suggesting what, prohibition? Yeah, that worked great the last time.
Drunk drive once: death penalty. Drive over the limit: death penalty. Avoid paying your taxes: death penalty. Jay walking: death penaly. Use drugs: death penalty. You are a facsist.
And even if you were just spouting rhetorical bullthit about the death penalty, how does filling the jails with nonviolent offenders help?
"It depicts Kim Jong-un as a vain, buffoonish despot, alternating between threats and weeping that he's been misunderstood..."
Yeah, I highly doubt he gives a shit about being misunderstood. The rest of it is spot on.
Also in South Korea, over 2/5ths of the entire population are either Kim, Lee, or Park. Surnames have a different meaning over there than in the West.
Actually here are the real numbers. GP is pretty close, though.
It lumps all accidents together, I couldn't find a breakdown of them. But I am willing to be that car accidents are the vast majority of them.
1. Accidents (over 37% of all deaths in this range)
2. Suicide
3. Homicide
4. Cancer
5. Heart Disease
(HIV is #6 for the 25-34 group)
Cancer and Heart Disease are #1 and #2 overall. Those will tend to get almost everyone in the end. If you manage not to die young.
Now, comparing with the 2002 data, a large drop in accident deaths in the 15-24 group, while 25-34 group went up. The total for both groups is lower, though. I am going to go out on a limb here and say this is due to cars getting safer, and not teenagers getting smarter. :)
This would only work if everyone was constantly subjected to whiplash. The vast majority of people will never experience head trauma. And in increasingly lower numbers as cars get safer. In the 10,000 or so years for natural selection to show up, it will make no difference.
Well it is a monarchy, so... maybe it was intentional?
I thought they used Pyongvax?
Kim had the motive. If it is war he wants it is war he gets. We'll give worse than we get.
I did not realize you had your own army.
But it doesn't currently work that way. Who is going to pay the billions of dollars it would take to deploy network hardware on the pole like you suggest?
I am all for competition, but there has to be a sane way to do it.
I mean, if there was ever a bank not to trust... it's the one with Trust in their name.
HFR did not make a difference to me, but if they are spending so much money on the films why do the CG physics still look like the thing was shot on the moon. And of course Legolas was the worst physics modeling yet again. Everyone in the theater burst out laughing at a certain part of the movie due to it.
Now THIS is how you unload that kind of thing.
Plastic wrap. You can stack pallets obscenely high as long as you hit it with enough plastic wrap. High enough to hit the top of the shipping container or truck, at least.
Well the calculation would assume they were not using a motorized pallet jack, since it was comparing the 1920s
But even then, it depends on how heavy the pallets are.
Interesting. I bet you also needed to employ some interesting storage techniques because of the cramped quarters.
Reminds me of this scene.
You need some standardization. Trucks and train cars need to be a certain width for the pallets to fit. Forklifts and pallet jacks need to be somewhat standard to fit the pallets.
Granted it doesn't have to be terribly precise, but there has to be some kind of coordination.
It reminds me of that old joke about why the Space Shuttle (and now SLS) design is influenced by the width of a horses ass.
Interestingly enough the article mentions iGPS. I saw a good number of their pallets (they have branding on them) at Costco the other day.
While am no fan of Hugh Pickens, I do love pallets and logistics in general, and like this article.
As my dad is a truck driver, as a kid I would go with him on trips and see the inner workings of the industry that literally keeps the country rolling. Most trucks would take on empty pallets in exchange for full ones they offloaded. But the trucks did not always go back to the same location that they made the pickup at. I asked him once what happens to all the extra pallets that end up at the receiving end? He told me that eventually some truck would come by and pick the old pallets all up to try to load balance. The pallet truck was always this old beat up truck that looked like it was on the verge of dying.
But I asked him where new pallets come from, and he just smiled and said "obviously it is the pallet fairys."
As an adult I once saw a truck filled with brand new wooden pallets while driving on the highway. Even the truck looked brand new.
But now with the hard plastic GPS tracking pallets, I can imagine that the pallets themselves have some value and have to be tracked even when empty. Lucky for them they have GPS, I suppose.