Which would include a function to "Send next part of rant to Apple Watch." This would serve as an unobtrusive teleprompter for being annoying at HOA meetings.
But who would want to peer at a navigation map on a watch? You want to bring up the map in your familiar GPS app, select a destination and route, and start up navigation. With the phone back in your pocket, you can then follow route directions on your watch, with the only interaction being a tap for 'next part of the route.'
Nothing prevents photographers from invoking Getty as a service, just as authors hire editors online to go over their e-book offerings. The creator would be the one to retain control of the work. In the case covered here, I can't see artists rejecting a perfectly good way of getting their work to the market.
When a scientific issue like climate change gets invaded by politics, we need to make sure that the science itself is not contaminated. Political opiners are the folks who use terms like "believer" and "denier", not scientists. To draw scientific conclusions, focus on the research findings themselves, not the statements of the political interpreters.
In so many cases, the "rights owners" are middlemen who played no part in the artistic process. I would like to see the fungibility of intellectual property eliminated. Patents and copyrights would be treated as a personal right of the creator of work. Any other exploiting party would have to maintain a contractual relationship with the creator to use the work, with no one else owning it except for the artist or inventor.
No it isn't, because civil forfeiture operates when no charges are filed. If you are arrested, Constitutional rights kick in. Property can be frozen until trial, but any disposition of that property must be by legal judgment. Civil forfeiture allows officials to steal property without due process, so long as no charges are filed.
I automatically vote No on bond overrides for prison facilities. The more cells we give the legal system, the more crimes it will invent, out of thin air if necessary, to fill them. Limit the number of cells, and they will have to prioritize: no more locking people up fdor life for possessing seven pounds of wacky weed.
THIS is why people of my political persuasion are teaching our nine-year-olds how to handle machine guns. We would all rather that little girls be learning to code Swift at that age, but when cops have a license to steal, meaning just grab cash and property without due process and not even to contribute to a general revenue fund but to use it to buy paramilitary toys for themselves, this is what happens: http://www.cnn.com/2014/09/03/...
Because geeks are just as obsessed with fiction as anyone else, but elements specific to their own culture. The show deals purely in Star Wars/Star Trek and comic book references because a general audience will get these.Mention Gene Wolfe and it would be a big old "Whoosh!"
What you didn't mention was that your option B also means a much smaller volume of waste, because the unburned U of option A is gone. So you get hot short-lived waste, but at such small volume that the disposal problem becomes trivial.
It wasn't even the seawall height that was the real problem, since any seawall could eventually enounter a larger tsunami than it was designed for. Even the old reactor design used there is very forgiving in the sense that if the plant totally loses power after being scrammed and the backup diesel pumps don't work, you have plenty of time to connect an external coolant water source to the reactor and pump water through it for a few weeks to pull away heat of decay.
But at Fukushima the disaster was so large in scale that all the modern-day infrastructure surrounding the plant was washed away. A fire company eventually got through, but didn't have the right connector to join its pumper hose to the reactor. This is the kind of idiot basic stuff that makes acts of nature so much worse.
Sorry for making that last post with my eyes dilated, folks. It's the only post I was able to make that day.
But yes: waste will be exported to the first country to develop a recycling capability for spent fuel. "Waste" is 95% usable fuel, which is precisely why it lasts so long if not treated.
Not a problem if Japan can just its own waste. If it works, everybody else will want one of these reactors too. What the US or Russia tthinkf pf this will be of no consequence.
Exactly my point. Finding traces of Chernobyl radioactivity in boars should not be seen as yet another excuse for handwringing doomspeak. Instead, it should get the researchers asking: Why boars? What arw they eatingthat other animals don't? And why are these mushrooms hoarding cesium?
In the exclusion zones at Chernobyl and Fukushima, the problem is scattered radioisotopes. Finding plants that concentrate this stuff would be most valuable.
Which would include a function to "Send next part of rant to Apple Watch." This would serve as an unobtrusive teleprompter for being annoying at HOA meetings.
But who would want to peer at a navigation map on a watch? You want to bring up the map in your familiar GPS app, select a destination and route, and start up navigation. With the phone back in your pocket, you can then follow route directions on your watch, with the only interaction being a tap for 'next part of the route.'
Most people in IT would really appreciate any tech that would allow them to keep working into their fifties.
Here's a tidbit about that 'culture' that does not come from Fox News:
http://www.cbsnews.com/news/st...
Nothing prevents photographers from invoking Getty as a service, just as authors hire editors online to go over their e-book offerings. The creator would be the one to retain control of the work. In the case covered here, I can't see artists rejecting a perfectly good way of getting their work to the market.
Can Rackspace datacenters handle the steam and diesel smoke from CenturyLink's servers?
When a scientific issue like climate change gets invaded by politics, we need to make sure that the science itself is not contaminated. Political opiners are the folks who use terms like "believer" and "denier", not scientists. To draw scientific conclusions, focus on the research findings themselves, not the statements of the political interpreters.
In so many cases, the "rights owners" are middlemen who played no part in the artistic process. I would like to see the fungibility of intellectual property eliminated. Patents and copyrights would be treated as a personal right of the creator of work. Any other exploiting party would have to maintain a contractual relationship with the creator to use the work, with no one else owning it except for the artist or inventor.
Screw the fictional superheroes. We need Snowdonman!
No it isn't, because civil forfeiture operates when no charges are filed. If you are arrested, Constitutional rights kick in. Property can be frozen until trial, but any disposition of that property must be by legal judgment. Civil forfeiture allows officials to steal property without due process, so long as no charges are filed.
I automatically vote No on bond overrides for prison facilities. The more cells we give the legal system, the more crimes it will invent, out of thin air if necessary, to fill them. Limit the number of cells, and they will have to prioritize: no more locking people up fdor life for possessing seven pounds of wacky weed.
THIS is why people of my political persuasion are teaching our nine-year-olds how to handle machine guns. We would all rather that little girls be learning to code Swift at that age, but when cops have a license to steal, meaning just grab cash and property without due process and not even to contribute to a general revenue fund but to use it to buy paramilitary toys for themselves, this is what happens:
http://www.cnn.com/2014/09/03/...
Because geeks are just as obsessed with fiction as anyone else, but elements specific to their own culture. The show deals purely in Star Wars/Star Trek and comic book references because a general audience will get these.Mention Gene Wolfe and it would be a big old "Whoosh!"
That's because Troll is taken to mean "I really disagree."
What you didn't mention was that your option B also means a much smaller volume of waste, because the unburned U of option A is gone. So you get hot short-lived waste, but at such small volume that the disposal problem becomes trivial.
It wasn't even the seawall height that was the real problem, since any seawall could eventually enounter a larger tsunami than it was designed for. Even the old reactor design used there is very forgiving in the sense that if the plant totally loses power after being scrammed and the backup diesel pumps don't work, you have plenty of time to connect an external coolant water source to the reactor and pump water through it for a few weeks to pull away heat of decay.
But at Fukushima the disaster was so large in scale that all the modern-day infrastructure surrounding the plant was washed away. A fire company eventually got through, but didn't have the right connector to join its pumper hose to the reactor. This is the kind of idiot basic stuff that makes acts of nature so much worse.
Sorry for making that last post with my eyes dilated, folks. It's the only post I was able to make that day.
But yes: waste will be exported to the first country to develop a recycling capability for spent fuel. "Waste" is 95% usable fuel, which is precisely why it lasts so long if not treated.
Not a problem if Japan can just its own waste. If it works, everybody else will want one of these reactors too. What the US or Russia tthinkf pf this will be of no consequence.
Exactly my point. Finding traces of Chernobyl radioactivity in boars should not be seen as yet another excuse for handwringing doomspeak. Instead, it should get the researchers asking: Why boars? What arw they eatingthat other animals don't? And why are these mushrooms hoarding cesium?
In the exclusion zones at Chernobyl and Fukushima, the problem is scattered radioisotopes. Finding plants that concentrate this stuff would be most valuable.
If only browsers were smart enough not to play audio in background tabs.
Yes, Republicans need to reclaim the spirit of Goldwater. Can we hope for Democrats to ever reclaim the spirit of Roosevelt?
What do you mean, 'lately'?
Especially given that the average human body is giving off about 4500 Bq continuously.
Mushrooms can be used to bioconcentrate metals. Some species prefer cesium:
http://www.herbmuseum.ca/conte...
White people riot at the ballot box.