PS - This also, from a later comment (emphasis mine):
All inventors must sign an oath stating that they have disclosed all information known to them to be material to patentability. If you think your patent is invalid from the start, you are under an obligation to disclose whatever prior art you think is relevant.
From what I was told you never research patents - if you're found to be knowingly infringing (having read the patent is enough), damages are triple those if the infringement is unintentional.
Burlgers without guns can be mighty dangerous, sick, and vicious. I knew Bryan Harvey, and I can't imagine the pain and suffering they went through.
What isn't mentioned in that article is that one of the daughters was brought home by a friend or relative _during the home invasion_, and their mother (with one of the criminals standing behind her) was unable to warn the relative/friend to take the daughter away. Imagine being that parent, knowing that once your daughter crosses the threshold, you've sentenced her to death. Imagine being the relative/friend that didn't get the hint from the mother that something was horribly wrong - you unknowingly sent a little girl to a horrible death.
Had the Harvey's had a firearm, they would've had a chance defending themselves against knife-wielding assailants. Instead, I have 4 dead friends to grieve.
Depending on what state you lived in, the post-prohibition drinking age (which is what the parent speaks to) was generally 18 or 21, with Colorado not having a minimum age until 1945, and Ohio's at 16 until 1935.
I was born in May of 1965, which put me right in the middle of the big changeover in Virginia between 1981 and 1985. Can, Can't. Can, Can't, etc. From the link above:
[Virginia's drinking age was] Raised to 19 in 1981 for off-premises consumption, raised to 19 for all beer sales in 1983, [and] raised to 21 in 1985.
Most rear suspensions have been replaced by more modern independent suspensions in recent years, and both swing and deDion types are virtually unused today. One exception is the Czech truck manufacturer Tatra, which uses swing axles and a central 'backbone' tube instead of more common solid axles. This system is claimed to give greater rigidity and better performance on poor quality roads and off road.
I prefer Notgeld (which was created in the aftermath of WWI hyperinflation). I collect international currency, and notgeld is some of the most artistic stuff out there.
.. of Pontypool, a horrible Canadian movie whose premise is that a virus is capable of spreading through the English Language. As one commenter said, it looks like a bad stage play.
20 years ago an acquaintance of mine did something similar. He went to one of those gas station air pumps and filled his tires until they 'looked full'. 'Full' was between 100 and 120 PSI, and naturally a blowout ensued.
Ha ha, very funny. My Mini came from the factory with Dunlop SP Sport 9000 DSST Run Flat Tires (size 205/45/R17). The dunlop equivalent is $319-ish on tirerack.com.
Try replacing those on the cheap. I've gone through several sets (including an abysmal set of Kumhos), and am currently running Continental ContiProContact SSR's. They go for $219/each on tirerack.com.
My guess would be so that at full load the suspension and tires would be in the optimal geometry for maximum carrying capacity and maximum stopping force.
I imagine at full load those tires would be right at 0 camber angle.
If the 2nd amendment read "The right of the people to own cars shall not be infringed", would you consider it an infringement if the government decided that you could only own cars that cost over $100,000, or had to be red, or had to be made by GM, or could only run on rainbow dust and faerie farts?
I would.
It doesn't say "the right to bear AN arm", it says armS, without any restrictions.
If you're a Java jockey, the 2nd Amendment allows us to bear anything that extends the abstract class Arm, not a particular instance of an implementing class such as PoliticallyExpedientArm or NonThreateningLookingArm as codified by the assault weapons ban put in place by Clinton (if it looks evil enough, it's an assault weapon).
Please read about Executive Orders and Signing Statements. There is no explicit authorization for them in the Constitution, nor do they have congressional oversight.
The 'magic number' for a Java class file is 0xCAFEBABE.
d0 57upid 7r4|\|5147i0|\| 14|\|gu4g35 (0u|\|7?
What do you need a Perl module for? That line ran fine.
American pissed, or British pissed?
British pissed would be "ROFL-hiccup-MAO", American pissed would be "ROFLMAO-dammit!"
I'm just as dead when hit by a high school girl with a BAC of 0.08 as I am when hit by you at .25. Dead is dead, impaired is impaired.
PS - This also, from a later comment (emphasis mine):
All inventors must sign an oath stating that they have disclosed all information known to them to be material to patentability. If you think your patent is invalid from the start, you are under an obligation to disclose whatever prior art you think is relevant.
From what I was told you never research patents - if you're found to be knowingly infringing (having read the patent is enough), damages are triple those if the infringement is unintentional.
Burlgers without guns can be mighty dangerous, sick, and vicious. I knew Bryan Harvey, and I can't imagine the pain and suffering they went through.
What isn't mentioned in that article is that one of the daughters was brought home by a friend or relative _during the home invasion_, and their mother (with one of the criminals standing behind her) was unable to warn the relative/friend to take the daughter away. Imagine being that parent, knowing that once your daughter crosses the threshold, you've sentenced her to death. Imagine being the relative/friend that didn't get the hint from the mother that something was horribly wrong - you unknowingly sent a little girl to a horrible death.
Had the Harvey's had a firearm, they would've had a chance defending themselves against knife-wielding assailants. Instead, I have 4 dead friends to grieve.
Depending on what state you lived in, the post-prohibition drinking age (which is what the parent speaks to) was generally 18 or 21, with Colorado not having a minimum age until 1945, and Ohio's at 16 until 1935.
I was born in May of 1965, which put me right in the middle of the big changeover in Virginia between 1981 and 1985. Can, Can't. Can, Can't, etc. From the link above:
[Virginia's drinking age was] Raised to 19 in 1981 for off-premises consumption, raised to 19 for all beer sales in 1983, [and] raised to 21 in 1985.
See this, also.
Wow. That looks dangerous.
Ok, let's try this explanation (from the link):
Most rear suspensions have been replaced by more modern independent suspensions in recent years, and both swing and deDion types are virtually unused today. One exception is the Czech truck manufacturer Tatra, which uses swing axles and a central 'backbone' tube instead of more common solid axles. This system is claimed to give greater rigidity and better performance on poor quality roads and off road.
Also here, search for Tatra.
This comment seems to support my theory. He mentions that "Trucks run positive camber to account for different loads."
... motivation thrown in for the chars...
Was I the only one that read that as "Chairs" and thought of Ballmer?
I prefer Notgeld (which was created in the aftermath of WWI hyperinflation). I collect international currency, and notgeld is some of the most artistic stuff out there.
.. of Pontypool, a horrible Canadian movie whose premise is that a virus is capable of spreading through the English Language. As one commenter said, it looks like a bad stage play.
20 years ago an acquaintance of mine did something similar. He went to one of those gas station air pumps and filled his tires until they 'looked full'. 'Full' was between 100 and 120 PSI, and naturally a blowout ensued.
Ha ha, very funny. My Mini came from the factory with Dunlop SP Sport 9000 DSST Run Flat Tires (size 205/45/R17). The dunlop equivalent is $319-ish on tirerack.com.
Try replacing those on the cheap. I've gone through several sets (including an abysmal set of Kumhos), and am currently running Continental ContiProContact SSR's. They go for $219/each on tirerack.com.
My guess would be so that at full load the suspension and tires would be in the optimal geometry for maximum carrying capacity and maximum stopping force.
I imagine at full load those tires would be right at 0 camber angle.
I want one of these _badly_. I wonder if Virginia will let me register it? I had no issues registering my dune buggy.
Note that the 300hp version is 4.6 lbs/bhp.
Airlines could do a lot to reduce carbon emissions...
How is weighing me going to limit carbon emissions? I'll still be flying regardless of how badly they ridicule me.
You had no trepidation regarding trepanation?
It sounds like Lucy (Australopithecus afarensis) has some 'splaining to do.
If the 2nd amendment read "The right of the people to own cars shall not be infringed", would you consider it an infringement if the government decided that you could only own cars that cost over $100,000, or had to be red, or had to be made by GM, or could only run on rainbow dust and faerie farts?
I would.
It doesn't say "the right to bear AN arm", it says armS, without any restrictions.
If you're a Java jockey, the 2nd Amendment allows us to bear anything that extends the abstract class Arm, not a particular instance of an implementing class such as PoliticallyExpedientArm or NonThreateningLookingArm as codified by the assault weapons ban put in place by Clinton (if it looks evil enough, it's an assault weapon).
Please read about Executive Orders and Signing Statements. There is no explicit authorization for them in the Constitution, nor do they have congressional oversight.
Perhaps you meant the discreet removal of this sign? Discrete is "separate and distinct", discreet is "intentionally unobtrusive".
Actually, there is some evidence that the recent Russian wildfires, while not caused by solar storms, were in fact fostered by jet stream blocking events that seem to occur more often during lulls in solar activity.