Sadly, I think this guy might be for real. Notice he didn't say "classified", merely "ITAR-restricted". Those are nowhere close to the same thing. Yet, if you get caught messing up with ITAR data, it's still up to a million-dollar fine per instance I believe. Reason enough to tell your lusers "No, you may not use Dropbox" and block it at the firewall.
Defense contractor - I'm thinking sub-contractor or sub-sub-contractor. There are so many small companies with no budget and less clue handling this kind of dangerous but not classified data out there, it's scary.
It depends on what state/country you're talking about. Even within a US state, how bad or good the DMV is depends on who runs it. In Illinois under Ryan (they just let him out of prison recently) Illinois' DMV was terrible. Long lines, terrible bureaucracy, and worse, bribery and corruption. It all changed when Jessie White took over; getting your license renewed is easy and only takes a few minutes now.
Bribery and corruption? How does that work, you slip the guy a fiver to jump to the head of the line?
Other than the usual selling blank ID templates out the back door for the fake ID makers and identity thieves, that is...
the key point here is not suggesting storing the hydrogen and transporting it
he is suggesting fuel cells in cars powered by the hydrogen that has just been created by the enzymes in your fuel tank , so when you "fill up" your adding food stock/celulose, the enzymes would then create hydrogen which your engine would burn to create electricity until all the hydrogen had gone and a battery would store the energy. Presumably the fuel would be stored in one receptical and passed to the enzymes as needed before the hydrogne is fed to the fuel cell
Mr. Fusion! This car runs on garbage (OK, yard waste).
In this case, there simply is NO natural recovery pathway. Unless some fantastic genetic engineering process is able to create an organism capable of breaking down the silicon waste product into components, releasing the oxygen.
They're called phytoplankton. Silicic acid, along with Nitrate and Phosphate, are inorganic nutrients which phytoplankton turn into organic nutrients, and so essentially form the base oceanic of the food chain.
What could possibly be so privacy-invading, not-worth-the-disk-space-to-log-it crazy that Facebook doesn't already log it? These people make tons of money selling every minute bit of data and metrics about their suckers^H^H^H^H^H^H^Husers that they can possibly hoover up. What could it be that even *they* wouldn't want to log?
Just goes to show, there is no boundary that some government agency won't want to cross to invade your privacy.
That, and it's really about the strength of the whole skeleton. Bionic arm? No, thanks, unless it comes with a bionic spine as well. Lifting hundreds of pounds is as much about your back as your arms. Legs, knees, back, shoulders, etc. Making one excessively strong compared to the others just shifts your injury to the next weakest link.
As the driver, you should always be in control of the vehicle. Taking your feet completely off the pedals in either type is a failure. If you want the car to not be moving you should always have your foot on the brake. Always.
Your left foot operates the clutch in a manual or stays on the floor in an automatic, but the action of the right foot is the same in either. On the accelerator for accelerating or on the brake for decelerating or at rest.
And many cars with manual transmissions will move forward when in gear without touching the accelerator. It depends on how much torque the engine has at idle vs. the rolling resistance. Diesels usually have plenty of torque to not stall out on level ground, but even many gas trucks (for example) will do this.
It can just be made out at the fully zoomed-out size. Below and to the right of Twitter, there is an orange and yellow icon. Directly to the right of that is a red square with a white intersection symbol ( an upside-down U or stylized lowercase n). Right underneath that is slashdot (below and a few pixels to the right).
"Maley's dismissal comes amid ongoing budget and staff cuts at Pennsylvania's IT security organization, the source said. Over the past 18 months to two years, the administration has cut information security budgets by close to 38%, and staff by 40%. They also put a "lockdown" on talking about cybersecurity, the source claimed."
Now there's a good plan: If you don't talk about it, no one will know you have a problem, and you can save all that money you were spending on those annoying security types.
Taxes are the price we pay for a civilized society.
If you prefer not to contribute to the public good (for example, public education, which is not just a public good, it is more like a necessity if we hope to survive as a civilization), then please feel free to absent yourself from the benefits provided by that civilization.
Inconceivable!
With everything working?
Define working.
I was thinking is sounded like the train described in the Robert A. Heinlein book Starman Jones.
Yeah that too (which I actually re-read this week)
And like this same thing from the webcomic Quantum Vibe:
http://www.quantumvibe.com/strip?page=460
Exactly. We forcibly relocate people all the time in the U.S. "like in China". Like pretty much anywhere in the world.
Not an issue.
Sadly, I think this guy might be for real. Notice he didn't say "classified", merely "ITAR-restricted". Those are nowhere close to the same thing. Yet, if you get caught messing up with ITAR data, it's still up to a million-dollar fine per instance I believe. Reason enough to tell your lusers "No, you may not use Dropbox" and block it at the firewall.
Defense contractor - I'm thinking sub-contractor or sub-sub-contractor. There are so many small companies with no budget and less clue handling this kind of dangerous but not classified data out there, it's scary.
I hope the whole "The greatest country in the world" is supposed to be sarcastic.
It's called irony, and it serves to underscore the point that the author is making.
Good grief, where do you live? I'd like to avoid visiting there in future...
My answer would be this:
I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed, or numbered! My life is my own.
Amen No. 6!
It depends on what state/country you're talking about. Even within a US state, how bad or good the DMV is depends on who runs it. In Illinois under Ryan (they just let him out of prison recently) Illinois' DMV was terrible. Long lines, terrible bureaucracy, and worse, bribery and corruption. It all changed when Jessie White took over; getting your license renewed is easy and only takes a few minutes now.
Bribery and corruption? How does that work, you slip the guy a fiver to jump to the head of the line?
Other than the usual selling blank ID templates out the back door for the fake ID makers and identity thieves, that is...
From the country that brought us the Cabinet Noir, this is surprising how?
the key point here is not suggesting storing the hydrogen and transporting it
he is suggesting fuel cells in cars powered by the hydrogen that has just been created by the enzymes in your fuel tank , so when you "fill up" your adding food stock/celulose, the enzymes would then create hydrogen which your engine would burn to create electricity until all the hydrogen had gone and a battery would store the energy. Presumably the fuel would be stored in one receptical and passed to the enzymes as needed before the hydrogne is fed to the fuel cell
Mr. Fusion! This car runs on garbage (OK, yard waste).
In this case, there simply is NO natural recovery pathway.
Unless some fantastic genetic engineering process is able to create an organism capable of breaking down the silicon waste product into components, releasing the oxygen.
They're called phytoplankton. Silicic acid, along with Nitrate and Phosphate, are inorganic nutrients which phytoplankton turn into organic nutrients, and so essentially form the base oceanic of the food chain.
What could possibly be so privacy-invading, not-worth-the-disk-space-to-log-it crazy that Facebook doesn't already log it? These people make tons of money selling every minute bit of data and metrics about their suckers^H^H^H^H^H^H^Husers that they can possibly hoover up. What could it be that even *they* wouldn't want to log?
Just goes to show, there is no boundary that some government agency won't want to cross to invade your privacy.
Evidence? Find it yourself. Get that oxy-acetylene torch out, and break into the hard drive by brute force, I don't care.
You're doing it wrong. There's this tool called a screwdriver.
There are loads of Rush songs in interesting time signatures. Heck, Jacob's Ladder changes time signature just about every measure.
That, and it's really about the strength of the whole skeleton. Bionic arm? No, thanks, unless it comes with a bionic spine as well. Lifting hundreds of pounds is as much about your back as your arms. Legs, knees, back, shoulders, etc. Making one excessively strong compared to the others just shifts your injury to the next weakest link.
That depends on which investigators you are referring to..
The problem here is not with the car.
As the driver, you should always be in control of the vehicle. Taking your feet completely off the pedals in either type is a failure. If you want the car to not be moving you should always have your foot on the brake. Always.
Your left foot operates the clutch in a manual or stays on the floor in an automatic, but the action of the right foot is the same in either. On the accelerator for accelerating or on the brake for decelerating or at rest.
And many cars with manual transmissions will move forward when in gear without touching the accelerator. It depends on how much torque the engine has at idle vs. the rolling resistance. Diesels usually have plenty of torque to not stall out on level ground, but even many gas trucks (for example) will do this.
whooosh!
(or would that be pshhhhh) :)
I'll give you 3 guesses what the 717 is based on. Just follow wikipedia one more link, and you would have found it..
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boeing_717
Hint: Boeing bought McDonnell Douglas in 1997 and guess what they did?
It can just be made out at the fully zoomed-out size. Below and to the right of Twitter, there is an orange and yellow icon. Directly to the right of that is a red square with a white intersection symbol ( an upside-down U or stylized lowercase n). Right underneath that is slashdot (below and a few pixels to the right).
Just wait and see what kinds of interesting "patterns" hordes of uninformed basement "researchers" can come up with given this huge dataset.
I predict hilarity.
The important paragraph in TFA:
"Maley's dismissal comes amid ongoing budget and staff cuts at Pennsylvania's IT security organization, the source said. Over the past 18 months to two years, the administration has cut information security budgets by close to 38%, and staff by 40%. They also put a "lockdown" on talking about cybersecurity, the source claimed."
Now there's a good plan: If you don't talk about it, no one will know you have a problem, and you can save all that money you were spending on those annoying security types.
My Chase MC and Visa required this to be setup and crazy passwords too, which I can't recall. I rarely use my Chase cards anymore as a result.
See that! You're more secure already!
And you doubted the value of this valuable security feature...
Taxes are the price we pay for a civilized society.
If you prefer not to contribute to the public good (for example, public education, which is not just a public good, it is more like a necessity if we hope to survive as a civilization), then please feel free to absent yourself from the benefits provided by that civilization.