If Daily Doubles were 100% random, they would be located in the 3 higher slots more than 50% of the time because those slots make up 60% of the board. Of course the real article http://www.mentalfloss.com/art... states that when IBM's Watson analyzed Jeopardy it discovered that Daily Doubles actually were more likely to be placed in the highest 2 slots indicating non-random placement.
What the study found was that in the early grades, the marks given by the teacher were better predicted by "attentiveness, task persistence, eagerness to learn, learning independence, flexibility and organization" than by test scores and the outcome was that girls received better marks than boys. This could lead to boys developing a feeling that school is unfair so they'll put less effort into it. Also, some might be routed into classes below their ability, making them bored and unlikely to get into the college-favored honors and AP classes. The hard part, as always, is figuring out how to use these findings in order to maximize the achievement of all students.
The point of one antenna per customer is to avoid the rebroadcast and carriage fee issue. They aren't rebroadcasting into the air, or even into a shared CATV (community access television) cable. They are "retransmitting" portions of the freely received signal privately over the internet. It seems logical that this should be legal, but logic left the intersection of copyright and technology long ago.
I hope no one would argue that playing Guitar Hero would help you learn to play actual music on a guitar, but it does exercise your fingers pretty well and developing the coordination to be able to play on the hard and expert levels should translate in part to playing a real instrument.
If we're going to pretend that we're back in time before IE has ever been integrated into Windows than the choice would presumably be between Internet Explorer and Netscape. At that time Netscape was all over the news with one of the biggest IPOs ever. Netscape and web browser were virtually synonymous. How many people would really have chosen IE 2.0 over Netscape 1.2 or 2.0?
If Daily Doubles were 100% random, they would be located in the 3 higher slots more than 50% of the time because those slots make up 60% of the board. Of course the real article http://www.mentalfloss.com/art... states that when IBM's Watson analyzed Jeopardy it discovered that Daily Doubles actually were more likely to be placed in the highest 2 slots indicating non-random placement.
What the study found was that in the early grades, the marks given by the teacher were better predicted by "attentiveness, task persistence, eagerness to learn, learning independence, flexibility and organization" than by test scores and the outcome was that girls received better marks than boys. This could lead to boys developing a feeling that school is unfair so they'll put less effort into it. Also, some might be routed into classes below their ability, making them bored and unlikely to get into the college-favored honors and AP classes.
The hard part, as always, is figuring out how to use these findings in order to maximize the achievement of all students.
The point of one antenna per customer is to avoid the rebroadcast and carriage fee issue. They aren't rebroadcasting into the air, or even into a shared CATV (community access television) cable. They are "retransmitting" portions of the freely received signal privately over the internet. It seems logical that this should be legal, but logic left the intersection of copyright and technology long ago.
If you enter the application number in the US PTO search function, you get: http://patft.uspto.gov/netacgi/nph-Parser?Sect1=PT O2&Sect2=HITOFF&p=1&u=%2Fnetahtml%2FPTO%2Fsearch-a dv.htm&r=1&f=G&l=50&d=PALL&S1=20030208745&OS=20030 208745&RS=20030208745
Patent 7,055,140: Software breakpoints implementation via specially named function.
This PS2 bundle is for the "modern Grand Theft Auto" titles: meaning GTA 3, GTA: Vice City, and GTA: San Andreas.
I hope no one would argue that playing Guitar Hero would help you learn to play actual music on a guitar, but it does exercise your fingers pretty well and developing the coordination to be able to play on the hard and expert levels should translate in part to playing a real instrument.
If we're going to pretend that we're back in time before IE has ever been integrated into Windows than the choice would presumably be between Internet Explorer and Netscape. At that time Netscape was all over the news with one of the biggest IPOs ever. Netscape and web browser were virtually synonymous. How many people would really have chosen IE 2.0 over Netscape 1.2 or 2.0?
I wasn't going to post any, but this one just popped up:
The Geek Hellmouth? Don't believe it
Actually, DVD-Video uses compression, for DVD-Audio, compression would be unnecessary