Anyone with a thermometer can gather climate data.
and do for the most part, with thermometer accurate to 1 degree
Some people have internet connected weather stations so if you don't trust the government you can get this information from thousands of independent sources.
Those are notoriously bad, the ethernet cable is only 100 feet so any reading is automatically contaminated by building heat.
And if government weather data weren't reliable, you would probably hear a lot from aircraft pilots, sailors, etc... as it is literally a matter of life and death for them.
Airport weather stations are sited for aviation needs not climatological research needs
For less direct climate data there are historical records you can check yourself as well as scientific publications from all over the world, not just the US.
People keep telling me that, but when I get there is always a "Quality Controlled Data Product" not the real deal. The USCRN is very good, but nobody uses it.
I'm not following your logic, firstly " except in cases arising in the land or naval forces, or in the Militia, when in actual service in time of War or public danger; " exception would appear to my lay mind to apply to non-uniformed Enemy Combatants engaged in hostilities not under a declared state of war; and in both cases you are seeming to imply the Military Tribunals lack "due process of law". Military law is meticulous in attention to deal to insure "due process of law" is executed to the highest degree possible, this often causes civilians to assume a speedy trial hasn't occurred.
Saying you heard something isn't the same as you saying something is a fact. In fact, The United States Labor Force Participation Rate is 62.7%, so 1 - 0.627 = 0.337, that's pretty close to his "probably" numbers.
If you don't know how to post a URL link in HTML, I'm sure you can find a home at reddit, flinging poo with your peers; we Nerds have standards to uphold.
Well the bird doesn't cookoo in a vacuum but being in free-fall doesn't help a weight driven clock do anything. Most people would be perfectly fine with a bird that doesn't cookoo in a cookoo clock. Most of the people would be ecstatic if their cookoo clock didn't cookoo from when the kids went to bed to until the adults got their first cup of coffee!!
lots of ceramic and solid-state-tantalum capacitors, typically in redundant parallel arrays so that single-failure doesn't matter much.
I would more reasonably expect that Capacitors in parallel were designed that way for value adjustment rather than failure tolerance; I've seen many more caps short out than open, and one short would take out the whole circuit.
And keeping the Galileo military-grade GPS an unreliable entity will insure that GLONASS and Beidou work fine and used exclusively until the USG sends them the back-doored kill signal at the opportune time; or at least that's the way I would do it if I were a Spy Movie script-writer.
No, the company that literally is based around sales and use of a drug known and acknowledged to impair judgement, is trusting their data to a cloud based storage and software company who's product is an ERP software specifically tailored for the marijuana industry. They, by law have to track inventory from seed to retail sale, this data was destroyed. Apparently there were offline or off-site backups that are being used to restore the service.
Ward continued. “What will take time is reconstructing historical data” from backups, a process she likened to piecing together a jigsaw puzzle.
Sounds like they may be building from a combination of full and incremental backups.
Well for the most part, the security of encrypted data is The_perceived_value / Cost_of_decryption. Cost_of_decryption would be high if your trying to brute-force the database encryption, not so much if you have a key-logger installed on a POS and force everybody to change password to access their cloud data and a copy of the software used.
Occam's Razor suggests that the simpler explanation is correct - that the reason the FBI didn't recommend charges was because charges weren't justified.
My Occam's Razor says the simplest answer was "In this Political Environment no reasonable prosecutor would pursue this matter.", but saying the "In this Political Environment " part out loud would have been suicidal.
We share a common name with a British Dentist and I've seen his website, while NHS dental care may be free, he's only seeing NHS patients once a week, it appears you can get free, you can get taken care without waiting 6 months for an appointment but not both. Hopefully this is a YMMV thing but I suspect it's not.
No they just click a couple times with the mouse and the Rx either spits out the printer (and is legible) or is sent electronically to the pharmacy of record. If the staff knows how to set up the software, it works well, if not they limp along with the software vendor's defaults. The vendor defaults are usually set up in consultation with industry reps, so generic is extra steps, I suspect there are a product placement deals involved too..
Because Schools take away the Kid's drugs and administer any necessary to avoid liability for self-medication error, abuse and sales. Kids take a lot of high abuse potential drugs like amphetamines.
You buy the pens before you have an OMG emergency. The pharmacist says "I can order the Mylan Epi-Pen, It's not covered, it will be $699.00 and I can have it here next week or you can get the CVS pen, it's $10.00 out of pocket, and is in stock in case you need it for an emergency over the weekend".
Since there is no difference in what is in the pen and they have the same effect, there is no reason to buy the more expensive one. Either way, it's a temporary measure until you can get the person to the hospital.
What is likely happen now is the Insurers will say an Epi autoinjector is a covered benefit, and it's covered at $109.99. Now if Mylan wants to sell Epi-pens and have it cover by insurance, it'll be at $109.99; if they don't play ball, the pharmacies wouldn't have enough volume to justify stocking. The Insurance have a contract with Providers and almost always it's a violation of the contract to sell to a patient for cash for more than the allowed amount for a covered benefit. Sometime a Patient will strike up a side-deal to get the "good stuff" for cash, but sooner or later somebody submits it to Insurance and the Provider gets busted, sued, all of the side deals come out in discovery, and all of those Patients get reimbursed.
It's not that it's not workable, it's that the markets are not efficient (in the economic sense). Note that this took TEN YEARS to occur. Had the reaction been on the order of 3-6 months, I'd say it worked properly. The time from the beginning of price gouging to the current state where the cost is a single digit multiple of the production cost means that the marketplace is only reactive to massive imbalances.
You can't even fill out the FDA applications in 3 months.
Hitting a vein with epi can be exciting, but hey the Pt is likely to die without anyway. We had a guy shot 2mg of atropine into his thumb with an autoinjector, well not the whole 2mg as the needle buried itself into the bone.
There are no patents that I know of, Mylan might have a patent on their particular style of autoinjector, but autoinjectors are a technology developed for the military 40years ago, well outside of patent protection. There certainly many servicable designs that have fallen out of patent protection. The drug epinephrine is a natural hormone produced by the adrenal glands and has been used medically for decades and first isolated in 1901. While a particular method to manufacture it could be patented, it's an inexpensive generic drug. There is no reason why anyone couldn't get FDA501(k) certified, buy some product liability insurance, a few thousand unfilled autoinjectors and some epinepherine and go to town; that's what CVS did.
Anyone with a thermometer can gather climate data.
and do for the most part, with thermometer accurate to 1 degree
Some people have internet connected weather stations so if you don't trust the government you can get this information from thousands of independent sources.
Those are notoriously bad, the ethernet cable is only 100 feet so any reading is automatically contaminated by building heat.
And if government weather data weren't reliable, you would probably hear a lot from aircraft pilots, sailors, etc... as it is literally a matter of life and death for them.
Airport weather stations are sited for aviation needs not climatological research needs
For less direct climate data there are historical records you can check yourself as well as scientific publications from all over the world, not just the US.
People keep telling me that, but when I get there is always a "Quality Controlled Data Product" not the real deal. The USCRN is very good, but nobody uses it.
If you want US elections to have any more credibility than a TV news poll, some changes are going to have to be made,
I'm not following your logic, firstly " except in cases arising in the land or naval forces, or in the Militia, when in actual service in time of War or public danger; " exception would appear to my lay mind to apply to non-uniformed Enemy Combatants engaged in hostilities not under a declared state of war; and in both cases you are seeming to imply the Military Tribunals lack "due process of law". Military law is meticulous in attention to deal to insure "due process of law" is executed to the highest degree possible, this often causes civilians to assume a speedy trial hasn't occurred.
The Bureau of Labor Statistics reports six different unemployment rates, the press most commonly cites U-3.
For example, he claims that up to 42% in the US are out of work.
No he didn't
Saying you heard something isn't the same as you saying something is a fact.
In fact, The United States Labor Force Participation Rate is 62.7%, so 1 - 0.627 = 0.337, that's pretty close to his "probably" numbers.
If you don't know how to post a URL link in HTML, I'm sure you can find a home at reddit, flinging poo with your peers; we Nerds have standards to uphold.
Are you talking about Hillary or the President, I didn't see anything that one did that the other didn't?
Even with a fuse, the total capacitance of the circuit would decrease, which would change the operational parameters.
Well the bird doesn't cookoo in a vacuum but being in free-fall doesn't help a weight driven clock do anything. Most people would be perfectly fine with a bird that doesn't cookoo in a cookoo clock. Most of the people would be ecstatic if their cookoo clock didn't cookoo from when the kids went to bed to until the adults got their first cup of coffee!!
lots of ceramic and solid-state-tantalum capacitors, typically in redundant parallel arrays so that single-failure doesn't matter much.
I would more reasonably expect that Capacitors in parallel were designed that way for value adjustment rather than failure tolerance; I've seen many more caps short out than open, and one short would take out the whole circuit.
Third Option, 2 clocks disagree, both are discarded because you can't be sure which is correct.
And keeping the Galileo military-grade GPS an unreliable entity will insure that GLONASS and Beidou work fine and used exclusively until the USG sends them the back-doored kill signal at the opportune time; or at least that's the way I would do it if I were a Spy Movie script-writer.
No, the company that literally is based around sales and use of a drug known and acknowledged to impair judgement, is trusting their data to a cloud based storage and software company who's product is an ERP software specifically tailored for the marijuana industry. They, by law have to track inventory from seed to retail sale, this data was destroyed. Apparently there were offline or off-site backups that are being used to restore the service.
Sounds like they may be building from a combination of full and incremental backups.
Well for the most part, the security of encrypted data is The_perceived_value / Cost_of_decryption. Cost_of_decryption would be high if your trying to brute-force the database encryption, not so much if you have a key-logger installed on a POS and force everybody to change password to access their cloud data and a copy of the software used.
Occam's Razor suggests that the simpler explanation is correct - that the reason the FBI didn't recommend charges was because charges weren't justified.
My Occam's Razor says the simplest answer was "In this Political Environment no reasonable prosecutor would pursue this matter.", but saying the "In this Political Environment " part out loud would have been suicidal.
We share a common name with a British Dentist and I've seen his website, while NHS dental care may be free, he's only seeing NHS patients once a week, it appears you can get free, you can get taken care without waiting 6 months for an appointment but not both. Hopefully this is a YMMV thing but I suspect it's not.
No they just click a couple times with the mouse and the Rx either spits out the printer (and is legible) or is sent electronically to the pharmacy of record. If the staff knows how to set up the software, it works well, if not they limp along with the software vendor's defaults. The vendor defaults are usually set up in consultation with industry reps, so generic is extra steps, I suspect there are a product placement deals involved too..
Because Schools take away the Kid's drugs and administer any necessary to avoid liability for self-medication error, abuse and sales. Kids take a lot of high abuse potential drugs like amphetamines.
The Bonuses and Interest on the big Bonuses for the last 4 years is bigger the the smaller bonuses spread out over decades.
You buy the pens before you have an OMG emergency. The pharmacist says "I can order the Mylan Epi-Pen, It's not covered, it will be $699.00 and I can have it here next week or you can get the CVS pen, it's $10.00 out of pocket, and is in stock in case you need it for an emergency over the weekend".
Since there is no difference in what is in the pen and they have the same effect, there is no reason to buy the more expensive one. Either way, it's a temporary measure until you can get the person to the hospital.
What is likely happen now is the Insurers will say an Epi autoinjector is a covered benefit, and it's covered at $109.99. Now if Mylan wants to sell Epi-pens and have it cover by insurance, it'll be at $109.99; if they don't play ball, the pharmacies wouldn't have enough volume to justify stocking. The Insurance have a contract with Providers and almost always it's a violation of the contract to sell to a patient for cash for more than the allowed amount for a covered benefit. Sometime a Patient will strike up a side-deal to get the "good stuff" for cash, but sooner or later somebody submits it to Insurance and the Provider gets busted, sued, all of the side deals come out in discovery, and all of those Patients get reimbursed.
Not infrequently the "Name Brand" and the Generic are manufactured on the same production line, sometimes the color of the coating is tweeked a bit.
It's not that it's not workable, it's that the markets are not efficient (in the economic sense). Note that this took TEN YEARS to occur. Had the reaction been on the order of 3-6 months, I'd say it worked properly. The time from the beginning of price gouging to the current state where the cost is a single digit multiple of the production cost means that the marketplace is only reactive to massive imbalances.
You can't even fill out the FDA applications in 3 months.
Hitting a vein with epi can be exciting, but hey the Pt is likely to die without anyway. We had a guy shot 2mg of atropine into his thumb with an autoinjector, well not the whole 2mg as the needle buried itself into the bone.
There are no patents that I know of, Mylan might have a patent on their particular style of autoinjector, but autoinjectors are a technology developed for the military 40years ago, well outside of patent protection. There certainly many servicable designs that have fallen out of patent protection. The drug epinephrine is a natural hormone produced by the adrenal glands and has been used medically for decades and first isolated in 1901. While a particular method to manufacture it could be patented, it's an inexpensive generic drug.
There is no reason why anyone couldn't get FDA501(k) certified, buy some product liability insurance, a few thousand unfilled autoinjectors and some epinepherine and go to town; that's what CVS did.