The really tough thing would be watching us Nuke each other from 2 years away and realizing no more food and water was going to follow. So sayeth the Mars Chronicles:D.
The nexus line isn't marketed at the average user though -- its a developer phone to show off the tricks and tips that Google thinks developers should start adding to future phones. But the party I want to emphasize here is that there is no such think as the "Nexus" phone, it's the "HTC Nexus One" the "Samsung Galaxy Nexus" and the phones keep the manufacturer's look and feel (i.e. trademarkable branding elements) along with the official Google "nexus" blessing. They're good phones, but they haven't been the best of their generation yet -- they tend to push the technology in interesting directions, rather than tailoring the phone to sell well.
A microsoft equivalent of the google nexus line of thinking is actually really compelling.
Google actually protects its vendors by having them produce the nexus phones for it, rather than making their own "offical" android device. At least they have so far. Motoogle cometh.
He's just one of several Appellate judges in the Seventh Circuit, and certainly not the only important voice on that bench. If the case gets appealed he would probably recuse himself as well (even assuming he was one of the three judges picked to hear that particular case). He is infamously sharp-tounged though. Google "Lawyer Ostrich" for an example.
This story really needs to mention that posner is actually an appellate judge sitting on the trial bench because we have too many open seats on the federal bench. Appellate judges are being forced to do double duty. Posner, as an appellate judge, is accustomed to commenting on and changing our interpretation of law. Dangerous man to pull for a trial judge.
There might be search and seizure issues. The FBI still has to justify the confiscation in the U.S. If it was done without due process of law that might be a complication.
how did they provide it with fuel for a whole year?
From TFA
The 29-foot, solar-powered craft had an original mission of 270 days.
The Air Force said the second mission was to further test the technology but the ultimate purpose has largely remained a mystery.
So -- I'm guessing solar power. Also, the folks in the picture are wearing hazmat uniforms and carrying what appears to be a geiger counter, so maybe nuke as well.
They're called adhesion contracts. EULAs are the most common example, but so are the warranties that come with mass produced goods, the terms on your ticket stub at a ball game or a parking garage -- these things are contracts and they are enforceable. They're just held to a (very slightly) higher standard of fairness before being held unconscionable.
Theoretically you could break a contract of adhesion, hire a lawyer, and get away with it. But that lawyer will charge you more than you would have to pay for windows (unless he's a very cheap lawyer, or you get a really bad deal on windows). So, click accept little sheep, go down the ramp into the windowless room now please.
Having not coded a web page in... oh... ten years, which is the lie: that different browsers require different mark-ups or that IE7 and Firefox/Chrome basically all work the same now?
I think its the former, but I wouldn't be surprised by the later.
Muhahhaaha "fined" for the "time saved" in writing 9 lines of code that the judge already advised counsel he (the judge) could write in less than am afternoon. Ooooh look out, here cones a $10,000 fine. Quick, sell GOOG now!!!
That's not cheating -- that's the game. Anyway, just throw a false sign half-way down. Works every time.
The really tough thing would be watching us Nuke each other from 2 years away and realizing no more food and water was going to follow. So sayeth the Mars Chronicles :D.
According to the FAQ they plan to send 8 un-manned missions ahead of the first crew.
The nexus line isn't marketed at the average user though -- its a developer phone to show off the tricks and tips that Google thinks developers should start adding to future phones. But the party I want to emphasize here is that there is no such think as the "Nexus" phone, it's the "HTC Nexus One" the "Samsung Galaxy Nexus" and the phones keep the manufacturer's look and feel (i.e. trademarkable branding elements) along with the official Google "nexus" blessing. They're good phones, but they haven't been the best of their generation yet -- they tend to push the technology in interesting directions, rather than tailoring the phone to sell well.
Mr. Bill?
A microsoft equivalent of the google nexus line of thinking is actually really compelling.
Google actually protects its vendors by having them produce the nexus phones for it, rather than making their own "offical" android device. At least they have so far. Motoogle cometh.
He's just one of several Appellate judges in the Seventh Circuit, and certainly not the only important voice on that bench. If the case gets appealed he would probably recuse himself as well (even assuming he was one of the three judges picked to hear that particular case). He is infamously sharp-tounged though. Google "Lawyer Ostrich" for an example.
This story really needs to mention that posner is actually an appellate judge sitting on the trial bench because we have too many open seats on the federal bench. Appellate judges are being forced to do double duty. Posner, as an appellate judge, is accustomed to commenting on and changing our interpretation of law. Dangerous man to pull for a trial judge.
Why stop giving a loan that's guaranteed to be paid off?
Build a set of form response and then just run through them every time you get a scam offer.
False. Armistice isn't peace. War was declared, it has never been terminated by any treaty or act of congress.
Actually -- we are at war with North Korea -- just saying.
You stole my post. Good thoughts.
If we don't have to make things, then we'll need people to entertain us. If nothing else.
There might be search and seizure issues. The FBI still has to justify the confiscation in the U.S. If it was done without due process of law that might be a complication.
Sure ... and these tourists were given access to the files. So ... oops? Who's fault is that then?
how did they provide it with fuel for a whole year?
From TFA
The 29-foot, solar-powered craft had an original mission of 270 days.
The Air Force said the second mission was to further test the technology but the ultimate purpose has largely remained a mystery.
So -- I'm guessing solar power. Also, the folks in the picture are wearing hazmat uniforms and carrying what appears to be a geiger counter, so maybe nuke as well.
They're called adhesion contracts. EULAs are the most common example, but so are the warranties that come with mass produced goods, the terms on your ticket stub at a ball game or a parking garage -- these things are contracts and they are enforceable. They're just held to a (very slightly) higher standard of fairness before being held unconscionable.
Theoretically you could break a contract of adhesion, hire a lawyer, and get away with it. But that lawyer will charge you more than you would have to pay for windows (unless he's a very cheap lawyer, or you get a really bad deal on windows). So, click accept little sheep, go down the ramp into the windowless room now please.
Maybe we can all vote on criminal trial verdicts too.
::cough:: Jury of our peers. What exactly is it you think juries DO to reach a verdict?
Having not coded a web page in ... oh ... ten years, which is the lie: that different browsers require different mark-ups or that IE7 and Firefox/Chrome basically all work the same now?
I think its the former, but I wouldn't be surprised by the later.
And thank God for them. Someone has to invest in the U.S. with a sight-line longer than three quarters down the road.
But could you do without cheap missile guidance systems for very long if we actually go to the bad place with China?
Muhahhaaha "fined" for the "time saved" in writing 9 lines of code that the judge already advised counsel he (the judge) could write in less than am afternoon. Ooooh look out, here cones a $10,000 fine. Quick, sell GOOG now!!!
If you can see it, you will eventually understand it.
The allegation is that fb overstated its earnings in the prospectus. That would be fraud. . . If true.