The further ahead we detect such things, the less effort it will take to solve the problem. A 1% course change when it's inside the Earth's orbit won't do anything to help, but that 1% course change when it's still out past Mars would be all the change needed to save us.
Also, the countries that get the highest number of American visitors didn't require a passport to visit until after the 9/11 fiasco. I've been to Mexico and Canada several times each where all that was needed was a drivers license. Today you need a passport to do the same.
What do you think of the idea of mandating that workers on H1B must be paid at least 3% higher salary than domestic workers - just to offset things affiliated with relocation costs. This would get rid of the motivation to import foreigners for no other reason than finding someone that will work for less, and could motivate the companies to invest in training the employees they have in the skills they need.
Perhaps this sort of discussion is what unions need to start taking into consideration when planning their actions. My own experience with a union was that their only purpose seemed to be being a thorn in the side of the company, and used providing services to the employees as a cover. Granted, the company also treated us like crap - so we all felt like hobbits caught between two fighting storm giants. That may or may not be just a side effect of how any organization needed to behave in order to deal with an extremely large telecommunications monopoly, but what afflicts one large union structure is likely to afflict another.
In any case, if unions started moderating their actions with a bit more consideration for the secondary effects on the workers, perhaps that would change the perception by the younger crowds that they are out of control or that they haven't done anything for us lately.
Almost, but not quite: A sequela (UK/skwil/, US/skwl/; usually used in the plural, sequelae) is a pathological condition resulting from a disease, injury, therapy, or other trauma. Typically, a sequela is, in medical language, a chronic condition that is a complication of an acute condition that begins during that acute condition.
If an initial encounter was for something like getting stitches for a laceration, a subsequent visit would be for getting those stitches removed. The sequela would be for treating a resulting infection.
Where I work, we've had ICD-10 codes available for use by our clients for the majority of this year, though we just got database updates for changes in them that will be going into effect on the first. It's kind of a muddle right now because of all the foot-dragging in the required start date: the analytics packages have been requiring ICD-10 for a while to attest for MU, so a lot of people are more confused by the repeated postponements. That and they don't want to update until they have to, and still record some stuff in ICD-9.
My own financial health is far more threatened by outsourcing, H1-B visas, and the threat of removing my affordable healthcare than immigrants (those people this country was built out of), and the Americans in the cars around me each day are many hundreds of times more likely to kill me than any Muslim terrorist. America suffers more Christian terrorist attacks every year than Muslim terrorist attacks within our borders, but since Christians are the majority in this country, the news refuses to phrase it that way.
The problem with disciplining people for trying to beat a bullshit technology to detect lies is that their evidence of the person trying to beat the machine is also based upon the same bullshit technology. If you can't trust the machine to reliably deliver on its primary function, you sure as hell can't prove anything for results derived from it.
Product placement is usually done in an unintrusive manner - they don't have the characters go off on wild tangents extolling the virtues of the product. Ads aren't bad because they're ads, they're bad when they get in the way of what you're trying to do, and do things that are harmful.
What about the huge pine tree air freshener market? That thing was center stage for the whole movie. The only things that came closer was the Chevy Malibu and Pepsi.
It's stealing the same way that using the restroom when a TV show has a commercial break is stealing.
Can they really blame people for defending themselves when they are constantly barraged with out-of-control ads that track users, install malware, block the actual content, and play difficult-to-stop audio that's not related to the actual content? I see them as no different than if the ads played before movies started showing up on the side walls of the theater while the movie is playing, and sometimes in the middle of the screen while the movie is still playing. And they send people into the theater to try and pick your pocket and leave ads in place of your wallet. Sure, the theater would make a good living taking money from those people for being allowed in - but they will still be driven out of business if all the customers stop showing up because of it.
You're right about them not being able to detect motorcycles. I had a co-worker that told me all the guys in his MC purchase magnets that are placed on the underside of the motorcycle and give them a boost in being detected, since a motorcycle just doesn't contain enough ferrous metal. Of course bicycles aren't going to trigger any of them, and the same magnets most likely will not be strong enough on their own to trigger them.
Google's Project Wing shows drones lowering the deliveries on a cable - so the drone's wouldn't even need to descend all the way. Would a 350' cable be feasible?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?...
Such devices are, for the most part, non-directional and indiscriminate. Destroying all electronic devices in a 2-4 block (or greater) radius would not be well received. And what you do see about them on TV is only superficially correct at best.
While the police would need the ability to order cars to pull over (bank robbery getaway, or a kidnapping, etc.), there's also the problems of police abusing their authority and people impersonating officers to deal with. Rather than allow police more control than "pull over at the first safe opportunity" and "this area is unsafe, detour this way", we should also be implementing verification that the orders are lawful. A transponder in the officer's badge that could be detected by the car is one idea - where the car can communicate with the local police headquarters to verify that said officer is on duty, is an officer in that area and is not a duplicate, and what their status is if their own car/equipment can't communicate with HQ.
Of course, there should be a manual override available in the event of communications jamming or the scene becoming unsafe for some other reason.
Why, that's got to be almost 10% of what my cable provider upgraded me to for free 6 months ago. I feel sorry for the people using Comcast's network that hasn't been upgraded yet.
But really, why upgrade their equipment at all to 10 mbps? If you're replacing equipment, why not upgrade to something that costs a little bit more, but won't need to be replaced in 1/4 the time to stay competitive?
Can you imagine the sheer horror of politicians who would be forced to think about what they say before letting it escape their mouths or before they click the submit button on their computers?
If they have an intern sending their tweets, are these people so short on time that they don't have time to personally view and approve messages before they are broadcast to the entire world? If they don't understand the consequences of using a communications tool, perhaps they shouldn't be using it? Or perhaps they should be employing some more mature and trustworthy interns? Or perhaps ones that can explain the Streisand effect to them?
Being too late to stop changes from happening is not a good reason to stop efforts to limit how bad it gets. That's like saying "I'm already going to hit the car in front of me, so why use my brakes before impact?"
Well, it could spell the difference between a dented bumper and slaughtering everyone in both cars.
For a while I've been imagining a device like this, if it could be properly targeted, would be able to remove specific antibodies from the blood stream, and effectively remove unwanted allergies while leaving the properly-functioning part of the immune system intact.
If humans had perfect and infallible memory that they could also pass directly on to others without distortion, our concept of privacy would be very different from what it is today.
We live in a time when police can storm a business and smash the existing surveillance system the owners have in place, then argue (unsuccessfully, thank Buddha) that the footage from the one camera they missed shouldn't be admissible because they had an expectation of privacy. Yet the government sees no problem with virtually following each of us everywhere in our private lives as if they were electronic papparazzi.and we were Daniel Radcliffe walking hand-in-hand with a micro-bikini-clad Kim Cardassian.
And people don't notice electronic privacy violations like what Penelope Garcia does several times a minute without any kind of warrant in the show Criminal Minds.
There are many, many powers and tools that could be given to police to aid them in fighting crime, but it is a certainty that each and every one of them will be abused - police (I'm told) are every bit as human as anyone else, and they don't lie any less than anyone else. So said tools and powers given to them absolutely must be limited by our constitutional and human rights.
It's located in an "officially unincorporated" portion of the county called Paradise. The city tried to annex this area once... once.
source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?...
The further ahead we detect such things, the less effort it will take to solve the problem. A 1% course change when it's inside the Earth's orbit won't do anything to help, but that 1% course change when it's still out past Mars would be all the change needed to save us.
Also, the countries that get the highest number of American visitors didn't require a passport to visit until after the 9/11 fiasco. I've been to Mexico and Canada several times each where all that was needed was a drivers license. Today you need a passport to do the same.
What do you think of the idea of mandating that workers on H1B must be paid at least 3% higher salary than domestic workers - just to offset things affiliated with relocation costs. This would get rid of the motivation to import foreigners for no other reason than finding someone that will work for less, and could motivate the companies to invest in training the employees they have in the skills they need.
Perhaps this sort of discussion is what unions need to start taking into consideration when planning their actions. My own experience with a union was that their only purpose seemed to be being a thorn in the side of the company, and used providing services to the employees as a cover. Granted, the company also treated us like crap - so we all felt like hobbits caught between two fighting storm giants. That may or may not be just a side effect of how any organization needed to behave in order to deal with an extremely large telecommunications monopoly, but what afflicts one large union structure is likely to afflict another. In any case, if unions started moderating their actions with a bit more consideration for the secondary effects on the workers, perhaps that would change the perception by the younger crowds that they are out of control or that they haven't done anything for us lately.
Almost, but not quite: A sequela (UK /skwil/, US /skwl/; usually used in the plural, sequelae) is a pathological condition resulting from a disease, injury, therapy, or other trauma. Typically, a sequela is, in medical language, a chronic condition that is a complication of an acute condition that begins during that acute condition.
If an initial encounter was for something like getting stitches for a laceration, a subsequent visit would be for getting those stitches removed. The sequela would be for treating a resulting infection. Where I work, we've had ICD-10 codes available for use by our clients for the majority of this year, though we just got database updates for changes in them that will be going into effect on the first. It's kind of a muddle right now because of all the foot-dragging in the required start date: the analytics packages have been requiring ICD-10 for a while to attest for MU, so a lot of people are more confused by the repeated postponements. That and they don't want to update until they have to, and still record some stuff in ICD-9.
My own financial health is far more threatened by outsourcing, H1-B visas, and the threat of removing my affordable healthcare than immigrants (those people this country was built out of), and the Americans in the cars around me each day are many hundreds of times more likely to kill me than any Muslim terrorist. America suffers more Christian terrorist attacks every year than Muslim terrorist attacks within our borders, but since Christians are the majority in this country, the news refuses to phrase it that way.
The problem with disciplining people for trying to beat a bullshit technology to detect lies is that their evidence of the person trying to beat the machine is also based upon the same bullshit technology. If you can't trust the machine to reliably deliver on its primary function, you sure as hell can't prove anything for results derived from it.
Product placement is usually done in an unintrusive manner - they don't have the characters go off on wild tangents extolling the virtues of the product. Ads aren't bad because they're ads, they're bad when they get in the way of what you're trying to do, and do things that are harmful.
What about the huge pine tree air freshener market? That thing was center stage for the whole movie. The only things that came closer was the Chevy Malibu and Pepsi.
It's stealing the same way that using the restroom when a TV show has a commercial break is stealing. Can they really blame people for defending themselves when they are constantly barraged with out-of-control ads that track users, install malware, block the actual content, and play difficult-to-stop audio that's not related to the actual content? I see them as no different than if the ads played before movies started showing up on the side walls of the theater while the movie is playing, and sometimes in the middle of the screen while the movie is still playing. And they send people into the theater to try and pick your pocket and leave ads in place of your wallet. Sure, the theater would make a good living taking money from those people for being allowed in - but they will still be driven out of business if all the customers stop showing up because of it.
I just freeze my luggage in carbonite before the trip.
Flowers have petals, bikes have pedals.
You're right about them not being able to detect motorcycles. I had a co-worker that told me all the guys in his MC purchase magnets that are placed on the underside of the motorcycle and give them a boost in being detected, since a motorcycle just doesn't contain enough ferrous metal. Of course bicycles aren't going to trigger any of them, and the same magnets most likely will not be strong enough on their own to trigger them.
Source?
Google's Project Wing shows drones lowering the deliveries on a cable - so the drone's wouldn't even need to descend all the way. Would a 350' cable be feasible? https://www.youtube.com/watch?...
Such devices are, for the most part, non-directional and indiscriminate. Destroying all electronic devices in a 2-4 block (or greater) radius would not be well received. And what you do see about them on TV is only superficially correct at best.
While the police would need the ability to order cars to pull over (bank robbery getaway, or a kidnapping, etc.), there's also the problems of police abusing their authority and people impersonating officers to deal with. Rather than allow police more control than "pull over at the first safe opportunity" and "this area is unsafe, detour this way", we should also be implementing verification that the orders are lawful. A transponder in the officer's badge that could be detected by the car is one idea - where the car can communicate with the local police headquarters to verify that said officer is on duty, is an officer in that area and is not a duplicate, and what their status is if their own car/equipment can't communicate with HQ. Of course, there should be a manual override available in the event of communications jamming or the scene becoming unsafe for some other reason.
Why, that's got to be almost 10% of what my cable provider upgraded me to for free 6 months ago. I feel sorry for the people using Comcast's network that hasn't been upgraded yet. But really, why upgrade their equipment at all to 10 mbps? If you're replacing equipment, why not upgrade to something that costs a little bit more, but won't need to be replaced in 1/4 the time to stay competitive?
Can you imagine the sheer horror of politicians who would be forced to think about what they say before letting it escape their mouths or before they click the submit button on their computers?
If they have an intern sending their tweets, are these people so short on time that they don't have time to personally view and approve messages before they are broadcast to the entire world? If they don't understand the consequences of using a communications tool, perhaps they shouldn't be using it? Or perhaps they should be employing some more mature and trustworthy interns? Or perhaps ones that can explain the Streisand effect to them?
Being too late to stop changes from happening is not a good reason to stop efforts to limit how bad it gets. That's like saying "I'm already going to hit the car in front of me, so why use my brakes before impact?"
Well, it could spell the difference between a dented bumper and slaughtering everyone in both cars.
For a while I've been imagining a device like this, if it could be properly targeted, would be able to remove specific antibodies from the blood stream, and effectively remove unwanted allergies while leaving the properly-functioning part of the immune system intact.
That works out to one car stolen about every hour and 15 minutes. I imagine the folks there are a bit fed up with it.
If humans had perfect and infallible memory that they could also pass directly on to others without distortion, our concept of privacy would be very different from what it is today. We live in a time when police can storm a business and smash the existing surveillance system the owners have in place, then argue (unsuccessfully, thank Buddha) that the footage from the one camera they missed shouldn't be admissible because they had an expectation of privacy. Yet the government sees no problem with virtually following each of us everywhere in our private lives as if they were electronic papparazzi.and we were Daniel Radcliffe walking hand-in-hand with a micro-bikini-clad Kim Cardassian. And people don't notice electronic privacy violations like what Penelope Garcia does several times a minute without any kind of warrant in the show Criminal Minds. There are many, many powers and tools that could be given to police to aid them in fighting crime, but it is a certainty that each and every one of them will be abused - police (I'm told) are every bit as human as anyone else, and they don't lie any less than anyone else. So said tools and powers given to them absolutely must be limited by our constitutional and human rights.
It's a cookbook!