No. Radio cars are police cars, dispatched via radio -- the usual every-day panda cars. The officers in the chopper just guided them to where the drone pilots were located. Still a giant waste of resources.
Hopefully the drone pilots file an FAA complaint, that should be sufficient to get at LEAST a suspension of the officer's flight status. He caused an accident under Part 830 by intentionally entering another craft's airspace.
Cars on the ground can, with little exception, stop any time they feel like giving up the chase and turning themselves in to the officers. Aircraft have no such ability, and if you were being actively closely pursued by another aircraft it could even prove fatal to try and land. That doesn't even take into account the risks involved to the people on the ground below, who the police in this case endangered by engaging in pursuit -- the correct action would be to have the ATC track the belligerent until it landed, and arrest the pilots there. Following it at high speed, closely, it precisely what FAA regulations were intended to prevent.
I'll buy your argument, up until the last sentence. 4G was already a defined technology, which had been advertised to the public as having specific features. Verizon/ATT/TMobile/Sprint decided to redefine the term, but clearly didn't want to try too hard letting their subscribers know the "new 4G network" wasn't the same 4G we'd all been told to expect.
It's available on Steam for cheap, and it is very much a 3-axis Descent-type game. The premise is different, and absurd, but it's fun and gave me a reason to acclimate to dual thumb-sticks again.
It's free to play, but features an amazingly complex and interconnected skill tree. Any class can use any combination of skills; it's just where on the 2D skill matrix you start that changes.
Nope, the math doesn't wash if you're considering a universe with less than 3 spatial + 1 time dimension. Planetary orbits wouldn't be stable, for example.
I don't have any problem with persons or organizations having my personal details, so long as I/chose/ to give them said information or access. Hell, I'd probably be more than willing to give the government access, too, if they had bothered to consult me. What upsets me most is how ready my government is to evade the spirit, if not the letter, of law and constitution.
Latent heat added to beer during condensation = latent heat lost to evaporation of the condensate subsequent to the beer warming to ambient. Basically the condensation heats the beer, then once it's at ambient temperature it starts evaporating, with heat flow from the environment making up for the latent heat energy loss. So water vapor heats the beer quickly, then evaporates slowly enough as to be useless for cooling the beer.
The triple-flange type earplugs are readily available in most music stores. I know Sam Ash and Daddy's Junky Music carry them as hearing protection for concert-goers.
From TFA: " I did, however, get an urgent call from AppleCare ten minutes after emailing Mr. Cook, informing me that my situation had been escalated and there is now only one person at Apple who can make changes to my account. "...how do I get the same level of security?
--Matthew
Family therapy, before she passes away. It will help keep the surviving family members together, and closer, after the passing. And it will help prevent long-lasting emotional damage in the children. Survivor's guilt and whatnot.
It's more of a portable computer. And I'd have thought that not exposing a computer to very cold temps and then immediately bringing it in to a warmer environment where condensation will form was common sense. That's physics. They can whine all they want, but water is going to condense on cold surfaces regardless.
Apple's specs DO allow those temperatures ranges. However, they clearly state that the humidity must be non-condensing. Since the phone is being abruptly moved from extremely cold to warm locations, and the resultant condensing humidity is the cause, it seems pretty obvious that the damage is occurring from mis-use, not from use in spec-approved conditions.
Timing isn't everything. Alice and Bob also would've needed to have selected the same source-port for the last message they sent, or else the swapped replies would've been ignored.
They probably bought refurb phones (knowingly, or not..) and the phones hadn't been wiped since the last customer used them.. hence they were still signed into Facebook.
No. Radio cars are police cars, dispatched via radio -- the usual every-day panda cars. The officers in the chopper just guided them to where the drone pilots were located. Still a giant waste of resources.
And everything that falls outside both lists is left to the States to decide.
Hopefully the drone pilots file an FAA complaint, that should be sufficient to get at LEAST a suspension of the officer's flight status. He caused an accident under Part 830 by intentionally entering another craft's airspace.
Cars on the ground can, with little exception, stop any time they feel like giving up the chase and turning themselves in to the officers. Aircraft have no such ability, and if you were being actively closely pursued by another aircraft it could even prove fatal to try and land. That doesn't even take into account the risks involved to the people on the ground below, who the police in this case endangered by engaging in pursuit -- the correct action would be to have the ATC track the belligerent until it landed, and arrest the pilots there. Following it at high speed, closely, it precisely what FAA regulations were intended to prevent.
I'll buy your argument, up until the last sentence. 4G was already a defined technology, which had been advertised to the public as having specific features. Verizon/ATT/TMobile/Sprint decided to redefine the term, but clearly didn't want to try too hard letting their subscribers know the "new 4G network" wasn't the same 4G we'd all been told to expect.
T-Mobile's Simple Choice unlimited voice/data plans include unlimited international roaming, as well.
It's available on Steam for cheap, and it is very much a 3-axis Descent-type game. The premise is different, and absurd, but it's fun and gave me a reason to acclimate to dual thumb-sticks again.
I don't see Amazon in the list of supported hosting providers.
It's free to play, but features an amazingly complex and interconnected skill tree. Any class can use any combination of skills; it's just where on the 2D skill matrix you start that changes.
Nope, the math doesn't wash if you're considering a universe with less than 3 spatial + 1 time dimension. Planetary orbits wouldn't be stable, for example.
Google Plus hangouts also support sharing a single video stream, so you could watch movies together. youtube.com/movies
I don't have any problem with persons or organizations having my personal details, so long as I /chose/ to give them said information or access. Hell, I'd probably be more than willing to give the government access, too, if they had bothered to consult me. What upsets me most is how ready my government is to evade the spirit, if not the letter, of law and constitution.
Latent heat added to beer during condensation = latent heat lost to evaporation of the condensate subsequent to the beer warming to ambient. Basically the condensation heats the beer, then once it's at ambient temperature it starts evaporating, with heat flow from the environment making up for the latent heat energy loss. So water vapor heats the beer quickly, then evaporates slowly enough as to be useless for cooling the beer.
The triple-flange type earplugs are readily available in most music stores. I know Sam Ash and Daddy's Junky Music carry them as hearing protection for concert-goers.
http://wh.gov/vyC1
That's easy -- only criminals need to run and hide, duh. If the government is after you, you're a crook and should be thrown in the clink.
From TFA: " I did, however, get an urgent call from AppleCare ten minutes after emailing Mr. Cook, informing me that my situation had been escalated and there is now only one person at Apple who can make changes to my account. " ...how do I get the same level of security?
--Matthew
It's not a copyright issue. The Geneva Convention defined the Red Cross, so it's protected by international treaty.
Family therapy, before she passes away. It will help keep the surviving family members together, and closer, after the passing. And it will help prevent long-lasting emotional damage in the children. Survivor's guilt and whatnot.
It's more of a portable computer. And I'd have thought that not exposing a computer to very cold temps and then immediately bringing it in to a warmer environment where condensation will form was common sense. That's physics. They can whine all they want, but water is going to condense on cold surfaces regardless.
Apple's specs DO allow those temperatures ranges. However, they clearly state that the humidity must be non-condensing. Since the phone is being abruptly moved from extremely cold to warm locations, and the resultant condensing humidity is the cause, it seems pretty obvious that the damage is occurring from mis-use, not from use in spec-approved conditions.
Timing isn't everything. Alice and Bob also would've needed to have selected the same source-port for the last message they sent, or else the swapped replies would've been ignored.
They probably bought refurb phones (knowingly, or not..) and the phones hadn't been wiped since the last customer used them.. hence they were still signed into Facebook.
In the days after socialism, trees live in men?
Nah, sorry.