So? There is apparently no other issue with David Watson's tax returns, as the IRS probably reviewed his taxes with a fine tooth comb (I'm sure the IRS would have nailed him for more if they could have). Therefore his taxes can be reasonably assumed as correctly done.
Once again, why does Steve Jobs get to do it while this guy doesn't? There could be up to 100 shareholders in his little S-Corp too, so the argument that the low salary helps all the shareholders is bogus.
So thousands and thousands of units were sold at a loss. Compare that to millions of PS3 consoles out there, and this is an example of being penny wise and pound foolish.
I have to disagree. After a horrific crash, an airline simply rebrands itself (e.g. Valuejet). The airlines have no direct interest in ensuring passenger safety, similar to how you assert the Government has no incentive to ensure safety. Regulations control such things as maximum hours the cabin crew can work, how repairs are certified, and so on; these regulations do improve overall safety.
Why do you think the "Passenger Bill of Rights" was necessary. Hint: it wasn't because the airlines were going to do anything about people stuck on the tarmac for 9 hours.
First, heavy industries are generally heavy polluters. The characteristics of California make it easy for air pollution to hang around rather than disperse. Northern California is still dealing with all the mercury that was dumped all around during the gold rush. Maybe other states like pollution, that's fine by me.
Second, yes, Ca doesn't have as much water as some states. But the biggest chunk of water usage is for farmers.
Third, PG&E sucks. But the energy problems you talk of were a decade ago when Enron was manipulating the deregulated energy market.
Forth, yes, there are parts of Ca that have very bad traffic. That's why Toyota was using trains to move auto parts around for Nummi .
So go to some other state and get a lower educated workforce which is fine with polluting.
My points were A) The pests that Moryath were referring to were introduced by humans; the impact on the Kiwi's is not because the Kiwis were introduced, but they were 'victims' from introduced species.
B) Eradicating mosquitoes is probably a benign effort (if implemented correctly). The Screwworm was a major pest that was effectively eradicated from most of North and Central America. This effort provided a significant improvement in the quality of life for a large number of animals, including wild animals.
Errr - correct me if I'm wrong, but the carp and Zebra mussels were introduced by human activities, while the Kiwi's are in their natural habitat. There are many non-cuddly animals that have protected status. I do not know of any endangered species that is considered a 'pest' from reintroduction into another location.
I was curious too - What was the exact problem? I found a youtube video of the game. There is at least one significant example - during gameplay, numbers come across the screen from the left side to the right. A lefty would block much of the left part of the screen with their hand while playing.
Freedoms such as Gay Marriage, supporting the rights of muslims to build a Mosque/Community Center, the rights of non-white people, freedom of reproductive choice... At least the Democrats do something to uphold those rights.
Unless by freedom you mean the 2nd amendment...
The Democratic platform is conveniently written down here.
The Democrats are a bit more diverse, as they really are a central party; they are left-leaning only in comparison to Republicans. Republicans have been on a tear for the last few years kicking out "RINO"s...
I agree that North America is much bigger than the USA, but to me it is (from North to South) Canadian/American/Mexican. Given that the USA is the only county in either North or South America that has "America" as part of the country's name, I think it is sufficiently unique.
Actually, I doubt that they were using tantalum capacitors; they were aluminum electrolytic caps. Tantalum caps usually do not have a liquid inside and therefore do not leak, rather they explode.
The reason that Intel is whining is in the context of large number crunching systems or high end workstations. Rather than sell Ks of chips for the former, Nvidia (and to a lesser extent AMD) gets to sell hundreds of GPU chips. And for the workstations, Intel sells only one chip instead of a 2 to 4.
The Mobility versions of video cards are weaker than desktop version - they are effectively 1 generation behind. I really doubt your laptop is able to run a 100W GPU without some insane fan noise. So while the box says 4870, and you paid the cost of a 4870, you effectively have a 4750.
No, WebOS is cleaner and more consistent than Iphone's OS. The way notifications, multitasking, and controlling phone features such as Bluetooth and Wifi are cleaner on WebOS.
As for the central App Store, WebOS has both a Palm sanctioned central app store along with a community developed app store that is independent. You get to choose.
And I feel I could give my WebOS to my great-grandmother to use, so there.
I think there is a bit of "not dead yet" for Palm. Things do look pretty dismal for them right now, but I really want for them to pull through. WebOS is vastly more open than the iPhone's OS, and the HW is pretty decent. WebOS is a truly great phone OS.
I don't have any problem running 10+ apps simultaneously on my Palm Pre. Perhaps some companies besides Apple can do things right! But that's unpossible!
Yes, it was the 486, not the 386 - after around 20 years a detail or two gets lost. And you are right about the 8086/8087 being an additional decade earlier, and unless Intel had a time machine...
Intel has always played hardball, and as unfairly as they can. It's in their institutional DNA to be FIGs...
That's because the CPU was crippled by Intel (I think it was the 386sx that didn't have a FPU, the external 387FPU was simply a 386 with an internal FPU). In fact, I think the FPU on the 386sx was fine, it was just disabled by a bonding option. Quite the scam - sell 2 chips instead of one.
But those continents would give you more armies than Australia. While I can understand your interest in Down Under, however that region is already committed to a loyal follower. I need to keep Australia under a tight control; as everyone knows, and Australia is entirely peopled with criminals.
So? There is apparently no other issue with David Watson's tax returns, as the IRS probably reviewed his taxes with a fine tooth comb (I'm sure the IRS would have nailed him for more if they could have). Therefore his taxes can be reasonably assumed as correctly done.
Once again, why does Steve Jobs get to do it while this guy doesn't? There could be up to 100 shareholders in his little S-Corp too, so the argument that the low salary helps all the shareholders is bogus.
Here's an idea: HP can buy Windows Phone 7 from Microsoft for its nice UI and graft that onto WebOS's core -- after modernizing the core, of course.
First off, bad idea, and second, WebOS already has a modern core.
So thousands and thousands of units were sold at a loss. Compare that to millions of PS3 consoles out there, and this is an example of being penny wise and pound foolish.
So then why did my electricity bill more then double if the rates to customers were fixed?
I have to disagree. After a horrific crash, an airline simply rebrands itself (e.g. Valuejet). The airlines have no direct interest in ensuring passenger safety, similar to how you assert the Government has no incentive to ensure safety. Regulations control such things as maximum hours the cabin crew can work, how repairs are certified, and so on; these regulations do improve overall safety.
Why do you think the "Passenger Bill of Rights" was necessary. Hint: it wasn't because the airlines were going to do anything about people stuck on the tarmac for 9 hours.
But choosing R means the car stays in the ditch, while the Ds will at least try to get the car out of the ditch.
Your points aren't very great.
First, heavy industries are generally heavy polluters. The characteristics of California make it easy for air pollution to hang around rather than disperse. Northern California is still dealing with all the mercury that was dumped all around during the gold rush. Maybe other states like pollution, that's fine by me.
Second, yes, Ca doesn't have as much water as some states. But the biggest chunk of water usage is for farmers.
Third, PG&E sucks. But the energy problems you talk of were a decade ago when Enron was manipulating the deregulated energy market.
Forth, yes, there are parts of Ca that have very bad traffic. That's why Toyota was using trains to move auto parts around for Nummi .
So go to some other state and get a lower educated workforce which is fine with polluting.
My points were
A) The pests that Moryath were referring to were introduced by humans; the impact on the Kiwi's is not because the Kiwis were introduced, but they were 'victims' from introduced species.
B) Eradicating mosquitoes is probably a benign effort (if implemented correctly). The Screwworm was a major pest that was effectively eradicated from most of North and Central America. This effort provided a significant improvement in the quality of life for a large number of animals, including wild animals.
Errr - correct me if I'm wrong, but the carp and Zebra mussels were introduced by human activities, while the Kiwi's are in their natural habitat. There are many non-cuddly animals that have protected status. I do not know of any endangered species that is considered a 'pest' from reintroduction into another location.
As for mosquitoes, perhaps you could read this article on the importance of mosquitoes..
I was curious too - What was the exact problem? I found a youtube video of the game. There is at least one significant example - during gameplay, numbers come across the screen from the left side to the right. A lefty would block much of the left part of the screen with their hand while playing.
"Democrats are against freedoms too"
Freedoms such as Gay Marriage, supporting the rights of muslims to build a Mosque/Community Center, the rights of non-white people, freedom of reproductive choice... At least the Democrats do something to uphold those rights.
Unless by freedom you mean the 2nd amendment...
The Democratic platform is conveniently written down here.
The Democrats are a bit more diverse, as they really are a central party; they are left-leaning only in comparison to Republicans. Republicans have been on a tear for the last few years kicking out "RINO"s...
I agree that North America is much bigger than the USA, but to me it is (from North to South) Canadian/American/Mexican. Given that the USA is the only county in either North or South America that has "America" as part of the country's name, I think it is sufficiently unique.
Intel was not paying 'discounts'. It was taking an anti-competitive action.
Actually, I doubt that they were using tantalum capacitors; they were aluminum electrolytic caps. Tantalum caps usually do not have a liquid inside and therefore do not leak, rather they explode.
The reason that Intel is whining is in the context of large number crunching systems or high end workstations. Rather than sell Ks of chips for the former, Nvidia (and to a lesser extent AMD) gets to sell hundreds of GPU chips. And for the workstations, Intel sells only one chip instead of a 2 to 4.
The Mobility versions of video cards are weaker than desktop version - they are effectively 1 generation behind. I really doubt your laptop is able to run a 100W GPU without some insane fan noise. So while the box says 4870, and you paid the cost of a 4870, you effectively have a 4750.
WebOS?
No, WebOS is cleaner and more consistent than Iphone's OS. The way notifications, multitasking, and controlling phone features such as Bluetooth and Wifi are cleaner on WebOS.
As for the central App Store, WebOS has both a Palm sanctioned central app store along with a community developed app store that is independent. You get to choose.
And I feel I could give my WebOS to my great-grandmother to use, so there.
Other 'news' - Apparently, Apple is going to make a phone! Maybe it's will be as big as the Ipod!
But I get almost all of that with WebOS (except for the SD card, which is quite nice).
I think there is a bit of "not dead yet" for Palm. Things do look pretty dismal for them right now, but I really want for them to pull through. WebOS is vastly more open than the iPhone's OS, and the HW is pretty decent. WebOS is a truly great phone OS.
I don't have any problem running 10+ apps simultaneously on my Palm Pre. Perhaps some companies besides Apple can do things right! But that's unpossible!
Yes, it was the 486, not the 386 - after around 20 years a detail or two gets lost. And you are right about the 8086/8087 being an additional decade earlier, and unless Intel had a time machine...
Intel has always played hardball, and as unfairly as they can. It's in their institutional DNA to be FIGs...
That's because the CPU was crippled by Intel (I think it was the 386sx that didn't have a FPU, the external 387FPU was simply a 386 with an internal FPU). In fact, I think the FPU on the 386sx was fine, it was just disabled by a bonding option. Quite the scam - sell 2 chips instead of one.
But those continents would give you more armies than Australia. While I can understand your interest in Down Under, however that region is already committed to a loyal follower. I need to keep Australia under a tight control; as everyone knows, and Australia is entirely peopled with criminals.