Because each new GPS satellite adds accuracy to the existing set of constellations, it’s technical cooperation, not war. The only reason why any country needs to add its own GPS constellation is to assure that it can never lose the ability to navigate, whatever other countries do.
One approach my town has already taken is allowing businesses and retail shops to incorporate apartments for workers. Quite a few businesses have implemented this. The prioritizing approach has Not gone over nearly as well.
My town, a major tourist draw in rural northern Arizona, also has a low-cost housing problem. The place is full of artists and high-end retirees, but there is no low-cost housing for our service army of waitstaff, janitors, medical techs, and cashiers. The spare rooms the plebeians used to rent are now being Air BnBed out of their reach.
Last month, a solution emerged: an Evil Developer staked out a large trailer park on the main highway just outside the city limits in county territory, where it does not require city approval. Though it would handily solve the worker housing problem, local property snobs are reacting as though it's going to be "The Stacks" from Ready Player One.
"The whole problem with the American justice system is that it requires evidence!"
This was a strategy problem. The charges were filed too early. That raft of new Democrats just elected will not even take office until January. It will take them months to push through law changes that remove the need for evidence in sex crime cases with a male defendant, even in Minnesota.
Even after this outcome, this could still be pursued as a civil case.
The question assumes that the old higher education model of accumulating well-established knowledge into degree steps is the only way of preparing people for the job market. The problem with that is that the old model works for the old jobs, in restricted-entry professions. If you want to practice law, get educated the traditional way.
To address the new jobs, universities need to make use of their current research to squirt small modules of current learning into people already in the job market, whether or not the student's earlier jobs (if any) required a basic degree to start with. These small modules will end up corresponding with a plethora of on-job certifications that would replace traditional advanced degrees.
So how long until corporate exploiters destroy it for profit, as retarded-growth-economic paradigms dictate as the only suitable outcome?
No, you people believe that we'll never get there, and that if some team miraculously achieves a flags-and-footsteps landing, we'll never colonize the place because of the impossibly difficult conditions.
Why would any sane person tie it to USD? That is faaaar from stable!
All a ‘stablecoin’ is, is digital scrip. Pegging it to the dollar gives it the ability to be used in blochian transfers while not being treated as a digital investment. Unlike the restricted-supply coins, it should be usable as currency.
As an alternative, let's try nutritionally enhanced growth of surface matting algae in the gyre. This will trap a lot of plastic, including the very small pieces, and at the same time sequester carbon. When it dies off as the nutrient is exhausted, the carbon and plastics sink to the seabed, ready to form more coal.
Yes, this would probably also kill a lot of fish. But fish that have ingested plastic are the ones we don't want in the food chain.
Our condo cluster mailbox sets have four of these attached to each cluster. A great idea, but they don't handle large packages. It would be nice if they were made available to UPS and Fedex for small packages. It could generate fee income for USPS.
I didn't say it would taste better, but that the taste would be similar enough to make it a desirable substitute, and eventually at a competitive price. It would then be more desirable because of its smaller environmental footprint.
No, the whole point is that although lab meat is an ethical no-brainer, religious faiths may have objections based on their internal laws. If it never had hooves, does G-d still consider it meat?
Buses have to make so many stops that regenerative braking would be a lot more advantageous on buses than on almost any other type of vehicle
But if we want buses to be less detested even in cities that have a popular, comprehensive transit network, having fewer stops would be a big improvement. If you can take a bus, you can walk one block. I know urban dwellers who Uber-commute to a subway station every day because the bus takes two hours to go three miles.
The reason that currently available alpha-test lab meat looks like "ground" beef is that getting to the structure and mouthfeel of steaks, chops, etc. requires further development. Meat will have to be grown on a scaffolding that properly emulates cartilage and bone.
Or they left the lens cap on.
In that case, who exactly would have put the lens cap back on after Pluto?
My guess is that at this distance it’s going to be a featureless ballbearing of ice. If so, then whatever rotation it may have is moot.
Now that fishermen are netting fried cod and grilled halibut, the boats are being redesigned to keep the catch piping hot from net to dock.
Let me guess: it was either psychologists or nutritionists.
Because each new GPS satellite adds accuracy to the existing set of constellations, it’s technical cooperation, not war. The only reason why any country needs to add its own GPS constellation is to assure that it can never lose the ability to navigate, whatever other countries do.
One approach my town has already taken is allowing businesses and retail shops to incorporate apartments for workers. Quite a few businesses have implemented this. The prioritizing approach has Not gone over nearly as well.
My town, a major tourist draw in rural northern Arizona, also has a low-cost housing problem. The place is full of artists and high-end retirees, but there is no low-cost housing for our service army of waitstaff, janitors, medical techs, and cashiers. The spare rooms the plebeians used to rent are now being Air BnBed out of their reach.
Last month, a solution emerged: an Evil Developer staked out a large trailer park on the main highway just outside the city limits in county territory, where it does not require city approval. Though it would handily solve the worker housing problem, local property snobs are reacting as though it's going to be "The Stacks" from Ready Player One.
This article will be flooded by angry replies from americans...
Actually, angry replies from American management.
"The whole problem with the American justice system is that it requires evidence!"
This was a strategy problem. The charges were filed too early. That raft of new Democrats just elected will not even take office until January. It will take them months to push through law changes that remove the need for evidence in sex crime cases with a male defendant, even in Minnesota.
Even after this outcome, this could still be pursued as a civil case.
The question assumes that the old higher education model of accumulating well-established knowledge into degree steps is the only way of preparing people for the job market. The problem with that is that the old model works for the old jobs, in restricted-entry professions. If you want to practice law, get educated the traditional way.
To address the new jobs, universities need to make use of their current research to squirt small modules of current learning into people already in the job market, whether or not the student's earlier jobs (if any) required a basic degree to start with. These small modules will end up corresponding with a plethora of on-job certifications that would replace traditional advanced degrees.
So how long until corporate exploiters destroy it for profit, as retarded-growth-economic paradigms dictate as the only suitable outcome?
No, you people believe that we'll never get there, and that if some team miraculously achieves a flags-and-footsteps landing, we'll never colonize the place because of the impossibly difficult conditions.
You can't have it both ways, dammit.
Why would any sane person tie it to USD? That is faaaar from stable!
All a ‘stablecoin’ is, is digital scrip. Pegging it to the dollar gives it the ability to be used in blochian transfers while not being treated as a digital investment. Unlike the restricted-supply coins, it should be usable as currency.
...and glass is much easier to recycle
And glass that is not recycled isn't a pollutant. It just looks ugly until erosion converts it into pretty stones.
As an alternative, let's try nutritionally enhanced growth of surface matting algae in the gyre. This will trap a lot of plastic, including the very small pieces, and at the same time sequester carbon. When it dies off as the nutrient is exhausted, the carbon and plastics sink to the seabed, ready to form more coal.
Yes, this would probably also kill a lot of fish. But fish that have ingested plastic are the ones we don't want in the food chain.
This offers British Airways another chance to make its customer service even worse.
If you have genetically modified houseplants in your home, liberals will stay away.
In California, reproduction itself has been shown to cause reproductive harm.
Our condo cluster mailbox sets have four of these attached to each cluster. A great idea, but they don't handle large packages. It would be nice if they were made available to UPS and Fedex for small packages. It could generate fee income for USPS.
The big one today is...MEN.
Tumblr is doing this in deference to the PoundMeToo movement. Watch it fade into obscurity.
I didn't say it would taste better, but that the taste would be similar enough to make it a desirable substitute, and eventually at a competitive price. It would then be more desirable because of its smaller environmental footprint.
Thanks for the reference. Whenever the Union of Concerned Scientists outgasses an opinion on something, I know to believe the opposite.
No, the whole point is that although lab meat is an ethical no-brainer, religious faiths may have objections based on their internal laws. If it never had hooves, does G-d still consider it meat?
Buses have to make so many stops that regenerative braking would be a lot more advantageous on buses than on almost any other type of vehicle
But if we want buses to be less detested even in cities that have a popular, comprehensive transit network, having fewer stops would be a big improvement. If you can take a bus, you can walk one block. I know urban dwellers who Uber-commute to a subway station every day because the bus takes two hours to go three miles.
The reason that currently available alpha-test lab meat looks like "ground" beef is that getting to the structure and mouthfeel of steaks, chops, etc. requires further development. Meat will have to be grown on a scaffolding that properly emulates cartilage and bone.