this is a great line of question to ask, so I went about looking at my frames that I have, and sure enough, I have a few wood frames at the size of 2 feet wide by 3.5 feet tall to 4ft tall
the lowest weight was 7 LBS the highest was 19 LBS.
never taken apart a shredder so I have to ask, how light can they be? and hold a battery and to receive a signal, to make sure they work.
I thought of that, ( I collected in the past rare maps and documents ).
the concept of shredding part of the work ( if half was his goal ) was amazing.
I think that it would have been much more damaging to the artist and his reputation, if the work became damaged to the point where it even seemed harmed. but by it being shredded only half, he gave discussion and insight and laughter too. Never could I image it but I loved it.
works damaged by fire sometimes increase in value but in most cases it really just becomes worthless.
Right now, the works can be displayed and talked about as it is, but when you have a photo with a bunch of ashes, who want's to see that?
Now, thinking along those lines, a piece of art that changes over time when heated on purpose that becomes something else might garner some real attention. I think the concept of a square box with an expanding material that only when heated becomes something else.... think of a Faberge egg, but so modern that you have to place it into the heat of a hot fire. now something like that coming out of a good arthouse would garner praise and delight. think of the bonfire in central park with a party after the auction just to share in the fun of it expanding.
FYI, Analog wrote a 3 part series of this back in the 80's, it had a title of corporate warfare I think.
but it's exactly that. 1 subsidiary installs the bug into the chip, another outfit installs the software that will trigger the chip to behave as coded, and another does the hack at the terminal to start the entire process of getting access into the systems.
While I can not give you a solution to your problem with paint, I do have a fun solution which is working with sunlight heat reduction. I use a thin cheesecloth over my plants in my garden with. it's slightly cooler by 4C to 7C. I've tried it for myself and it's very nice to read in this type of shade. just an idea, that's all nothing tech about his.
Your point is very valid. But I think, and I don't know if employer retaliation is still legal in something like this. But I see your point and think it's very valid
I think this is something that both agencies are really going to hammer someone on. And if it's a Russian contractor, all hell will break loose from the Russian side. Russians lost 3 cosmonauts due to some sort of air pressure release problem. here is the wiki link, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... and I think the Russians will put on a show trial just to convict them and hang them publicly.
I don't think the American side has a clue about how painful of an affair this was to both nations because we lost our crew on the ground. And we re-built a new capsule because of that.
HI AC, my views will always count & let me put it clearly, you and your commie friends end game is clear. Like me there are others who can fight, and if anything has been proven, the USA will defeat your ugly ass once again.
I've followed the money looking way out...
While I don't know who or what is causing client change, we do know the co2 helps keep it warm. Who benefits from this at the end, Russia & Canada, polar shipping route and Russia's frozen tundra become the new bread basket and most of Canada's will too. the USA will have a lovely dust bowl.
You guys are investing 50's millions per year to make that happen, for a long-term outcome of 20 billion to 80 billion of produce produced yearly, good bet I would say, risk a few billion for a net outcome of trillions for your people. He who has the food will control the game.
But I am an American, we will find a way to get to universal peace and growth like that idea in Star-Trek, might still be another 100 years away, but we will sure try.
I just want to reference 1 topic : you said "I refuse to believe that Russians are smarter than Americans"
I will agree to a certain degree, but when Russians are given profit motive, they perform as good or better. I know too many ex-USSR people that now highly paid engineers in most fields here in the USA.
Also, I will say this, we are ( or I think we are ) behind the general population ball in science education.
I think that one of the best Russian skill set's is the ability to make something work in a harsh environment, the best example is the landing gear for the military jet's, built on the basis that it has to land on dirt roads. Sadly I can not cite an article to validate my statement.
while I do expect him to know how to use the phone, I prefer to know that he has a call patch over. and your point is valid.
what I find funny is that you might recall that the phones in the white house had to be patched to handle the volume of incoming calls back in the 90's, wire still works lol
I looked at your link, read the entire thing, so I asked myself, why are the results this way...
Well, I came up with some theories, most likely wrong but might be true.
you have a few sites like infowars what are sensational sites having a narrative of hate and conspiracies. They are adding negative values of trust to the trump name within certain search terms While sites like CNN are adding positive value to the trump name under the same rules
CNN put's out more content on a daily basis than fox and google is scanning both.
it's coming down to truthiness and trust. I trust CNN over infowars, I can trust Barrons over stars and stripes. I can see that CNN seems more truthful than Fox, and it starting to show.
so yes, the leaning to non-trump side. Also, the non-trump side propaganda machine is designed differently than the trump side. that could also be an issue. ( because it sound smart people think it's smart concept )
Sadly, I do recall around 2009 or 2010, reading something or watch 60 minutes where a pilot for a BIG airline had to have food stamps and worked in a fast food place to make ends meet.Shocked the living daylights out of me.
Lot's of truth in what you said. Sadly it's timeframe lacking, or perspective lacking
Beaver dams do create more farmland. Yes, that's truthful, the time frame is decades scale to century scale, sentiments and biological matter have to filter out and stay put.
Beaver Dams replenish Aquifers, Yes this is true for multiple reasons and usually faster than a dam does. Because a beaver dam brings in plant growth and slows down river flow, water has more time to enter the earth that the plant's have broken down via the root system. but again, this is time so sometimes it's observable during our lifetime, sometimes it's not.
Can fish go over beaver dams, during flooding times maybe to yes, but a good beaver dam will have small leaks that the flow of water downstream but a fish can not swim in those leaks.
There is more to be said about beavers, but sadly it's going to be rich people that save it. because they will buy up the land, put the beavers in it, and enjoy there own parks on a tax free basis.
While you might have thought you were Trolling, I went and looked and discovered something that I never knew existed and it's rather interesting ( at least to me who like's to learn about customs, shipping and laws
what ICE issued was a Export Enforcement Supeana: WTF is what I said, then I learned, interesting tool they have https://www.law.cornell.edu/cf... that's the link to the Cornell legal explanation of it and where it sits in the law books.
Now how it applies to Twitter, well that's up to a lawyer to explain to the readers of slashdot I understand how it applies to exports but this is confusing how it's being applied to Twitter.
truly, you have saddened my day... I recall moving routines around just to get a bit of speed IE: in C-64 basic, you wrote the alpha working perfectly, and then, re-wrote or did a tricky type of copy and paste all the subroutines to the lowest number set ( but even before that, you checked to see how many times that routine was called, most common was up top first ) the c-64 read the code from top down in number order, and this trick would always give you a great boost after clean alpha.
shit, I really miss those days when you coded with skill and love and could make a name for yourself.
And this is why I love Slashdot: Literally, there is so much knowledge within this group, I just have to recall one piece of the story and another will correct it and point me to the rest.
Thank you for checking, I had forgotten it was WordPerfect, not WordStar. I happen to like them both back in the day. WordStar just lost to market forces and lack of cash as you say.
Re-writes are or seem to be less brutal than in the days of 80'- 90's due to better compilers and more programming options. Also, while I think this is wishful thinking, I believe coders now-a-days really try to modulize the code to help the debugging teams and upgrade function teams, yes I know they will dump code for the pre-alpha to get the concept working, but then they keep cleaning and cleaning and then had it off to debugging by the time beta come's around. again most likely wishful thinking.
Nothing better than good map data, I wish apple luck.
referencing re-write and coding: if you were to code an application ( any type that would be for end-user, no OS specifications just web and mobile ) what would be your baseline choice, I am thinking of learning again, and I really have no concept of what would work. I use ( --- key word LOL ) to know, basic, C++, COBOL, Pascal, Prolog and maybe some Fortran and PHP.
someone will be able to fact check this: Back in the late 80's early 90' there was an amazing word processor called Wordstar. They choose to do a re-write of the code from top to bottom. At the same time Microsoft just came out with version 2 or 3 there's word processor. It was a race, and Microsoft choose to do a side by side development, where old code was upgraded with anything new they came up with, and the new ground-up version was being done with features from the old copied and tested and new stuff.
Microsoft won because they rolled out the upgrades ( we did not ( as i recall ) have on-line MS upgrades, but disk mailed upgrades, and pirate-BBS type shareware upgrades ) , people had the latest features without much issue and no real learning curve, and they walked everyone into the new word processor.
Wordstar flopped on the code re-write with too many bugs and people became dis-satisfied.
I hope Apple and other reading this take this lesson and apply it
you know what's interesting, You replied wanting to know, and you're 6 digit's and lower than mine 1999 or 2000 the guy below you is a 5 digit uid so he might be 1998 or 1999 and me early 2000 ( I had one that was in the 147K range but I forgot the password ) so what's interesting is that we are all similar group and we all thought similar. I will now want to ponder why. did the same type of reply to the guy below
you know what's interesting, You replied wanting to know, and you're a 5 digit uid so you might be 1998 or 1999 the guy above you is 6 digit's and lower than mine 1999 or 2000 and me early 2000 ( I had one that was in the 147K range but I forgot the password ) so what's interesting is that we are all similar group and we all thought similar. I will now want to ponder why I've done the same reply to the guy above
but not in 2006 when the work was created
this is a great line of question to ask, so I went about looking at my frames that I have,
and sure enough, I have a few wood frames at the size of 2 feet wide by 3.5 feet tall to 4ft tall
the lowest weight was 7 LBS the highest was 19 LBS.
never taken apart a shredder so I have to ask, how light can they be? and hold a battery and to receive a signal, to make sure they work.
I thought of that, ( I collected in the past rare maps and documents ).
the concept of shredding part of the work ( if half was his goal ) was amazing.
I think that it would have been much more damaging to the artist and his reputation,
if the work became damaged to the point where it even seemed harmed. but by it
being shredded only half, he gave discussion and insight and laughter too. Never
could I image it but I loved it.
works damaged by fire sometimes increase in value but in most cases it really just
becomes worthless.
Right now, the works can be displayed and talked about as it is, but when you have a
photo with a bunch of ashes, who want's to see that?
Now, thinking along those lines, a piece of art that changes over time when heated
on purpose that becomes something else might garner some real attention. I think
the concept of a square box with an expanding material that only when heated becomes
something else.... think of a Faberge egg, but so modern that you have to place it into
the heat of a hot fire. now something like that coming out of a good arthouse would garner
praise and delight. think of the bonfire in central park with a party after the auction just
to share in the fun of it expanding.
point valid.
lacking anything that is adding a value to the topic.
You could have pointed out a gun used or an item used
That would have added value
teaching grammar, while it could add value, but mostly to the person targeted.
this is why I don't comment much anymore,
I think that the shredding added value because now the art ( which is well accepted and liked ) has added a value of a statement or act.
like a famous gun that killed someone, it's value increase due to the action it was involved in.
personally, I think it was brilliant. and just the opportunity to watch it happen will give me joy on how wonderful creativity can be.
yep they even made a book https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... ... it's the exact story enjoy you guys.
FYI, Analog wrote a 3 part series of this back in the 80's, it had a title of corporate warfare I think.
but it's exactly that. 1 subsidiary installs the bug into the chip, another outfit installs the software that will trigger the chip to behave as coded, and another does the hack at the terminal to start the entire process of getting access into the systems.
update, it might be august 1977's story cold cash war ... wow, I never new I read so many of these http://www.analogsf.com/about-...
While I can not give you a solution to your problem with paint, I do have a fun solution which is working with sunlight heat reduction. I use a thin cheesecloth over my plants in my garden with. it's slightly cooler by 4C to 7C. I've tried it for myself and it's very nice to read in this type of shade. just an idea, that's all nothing tech about his.
Your point is very valid. But I think, and I don't know if employer retaliation is still legal in something like this. But I see your point and think it's very valid
I think this is something that both agencies are really going to hammer someone on.
And if it's a Russian contractor, all hell will break loose from the Russian side.
Russians lost 3 cosmonauts due to some sort of air pressure release problem.
here is the wiki link, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... and I think the Russians
will put on a show trial just to convict them and hang them publicly.
I don't think the American side has a clue about how painful of an affair this was to
both nations because we lost our crew on the ground. And we re-built a new capsule
because of that.
HI AC, my views will always count & let me put it clearly,
you and your commie friends end game is clear.
Like me there are others who can fight, and if anything has been proven, the USA will defeat your ugly ass once again.
I've followed the money looking way out...
While I don't know who or what is causing client change, we do know the co2 helps keep it warm. Who benefits from this at the end, Russia & Canada, polar shipping route and Russia's frozen tundra become the new bread basket and most of Canada's will too. the USA will have a lovely dust bowl.
You guys are investing 50's millions per year to make that happen, for a long-term outcome of 20 billion to 80 billion of produce produced yearly, good bet I would say, risk a few billion for a net outcome of trillions for your people. He who has the food will control the game.
But I am an American, we will find a way to get to universal peace and growth like that idea in Star-Trek, might still be another 100 years away, but we will sure try.
I just want to reference 1 topic : you said "I refuse to believe that Russians are smarter than Americans"
I will agree to a certain degree, but when Russians are given profit motive, they perform as good or better. I know too many ex-USSR people that now highly paid engineers in most fields here in the USA.
Also, I will say this, we are ( or I think we are ) behind the general population ball in science education.
I think that one of the best Russian skill set's is the ability to make something work in a harsh environment, the best example is the landing gear for the military jet's, built on the basis that it has to land on dirt roads. Sadly I can not cite an article to validate my statement.
while I do expect him to know how to use the phone, I prefer to know that he has a call patch over. and your point is valid.
what I find funny is that you might recall that the phones in the white house had to be patched to handle the volume of incoming calls back in the 90's, wire still works lol
I looked at your link, read the entire thing,
so I asked myself, why are the results this way...
Well, I came up with some theories, most likely wrong but might be true.
you have a few sites like infowars what are sensational sites having a narrative of hate and conspiracies.
They are adding negative values of trust to the trump name within certain search terms
While sites like CNN are adding positive value to the trump name under the same rules
CNN put's out more content on a daily basis than fox and google is scanning both.
it's coming down to truthiness and trust. I trust CNN over infowars, I can trust Barrons over stars and stripes. I can see that CNN seems more truthful than Fox, and it starting to show.
so yes, the leaning to non-trump side.
Also, the non-trump side propaganda machine is designed differently than the trump side. that could also be an issue.
( because it sound smart people think it's smart concept )
Sadly, I do recall around 2009 or 2010, reading something or watch 60 minutes where a pilot for a BIG airline had to have food stamps and worked in a fast food place to make ends meet.Shocked the living daylights out of me.
Can someone cite this: There is more uranium than silver in the mantle of the earth, so where does everyone keep say it's going to end?
While I would like to agree with you, I believe that if Bitcoin and the like were taken out of the graph, it would look different.
Lot's of truth in what you said. Sadly it's timeframe lacking, or perspective lacking
Beaver dams do create more farmland. Yes, that's truthful, the time frame is decades scale to century scale, sentiments and biological matter have to filter out and stay put.
Beaver Dams replenish Aquifers, Yes this is true for multiple reasons and usually faster than a dam does. Because a beaver dam brings in plant growth and slows down river flow, water has more time to enter the earth that the plant's have broken down via the root system. but again, this is time so sometimes it's observable during our lifetime, sometimes it's not.
Can fish go over beaver dams, during flooding times maybe to yes, but a good beaver dam will have small leaks that the flow of water downstream but a fish can not swim in those leaks.
There is more to be said about beavers, but sadly it's going to be rich people that save it. because they will buy up the land, put the beavers in it, and enjoy there own parks on a tax free basis.
While you might have thought you were Trolling, I went and looked and discovered something that I never knew existed and it's rather interesting ( at least to me who like's to learn about customs, shipping and laws
what ICE issued was a
Export Enforcement Supeana: WTF is what I said, then I learned, interesting tool they have https://www.law.cornell.edu/cf... that's the link to the Cornell legal explanation of it and where it sits in the law books.
Now how it applies to Twitter, well that's up to a lawyer to explain to the readers of slashdot
I understand how it applies to exports but this is confusing how it's being applied to Twitter.
truly, you have saddened my day... I recall moving routines around just to get a bit of speed IE: in C-64 basic, you wrote the alpha working perfectly, and then, re-wrote or did a tricky type of copy and paste all the subroutines to the lowest number set ( but even before that, you checked to see how many times that routine was called, most common was up top first ) the c-64 read the code from top down in number order, and this trick would always give you a great boost after clean alpha.
shit, I really miss those days when you coded with skill and love and could make a name for yourself.
Thank You
And this is why I love Slashdot: Literally, there is so much knowledge within this group, I just have to recall one piece of the story and another will correct it and point me to the rest.
Thank you for checking, I had forgotten it was WordPerfect, not WordStar. I happen to like them both back in the day. WordStar just lost to market forces and lack of cash as you say.
Re-writes are or seem to be less brutal than in the days of 80'- 90's due to better compilers and more programming options. Also, while I think this is wishful thinking, I believe coders now-a-days really try to modulize the code to help the debugging teams and upgrade function teams, yes I know they will dump code for the pre-alpha to get the concept working, but then they keep cleaning and cleaning and then had it off to debugging by the time beta come's around.
again most likely wishful thinking.
Nothing better than good map data, I wish apple luck.
referencing re-write and coding:
if you were to code an application ( any type that would be for end-user, no OS specifications just web and mobile ) what would be your baseline choice, I am thinking of learning again, and I really have no concept of what would work. I use ( --- key word LOL ) to know, basic, C++, COBOL, Pascal, Prolog and maybe some Fortran and PHP.
someone will be able to fact check this:
Back in the late 80's early 90' there was an amazing word processor called Wordstar. They choose to do a re-write of the code from top to bottom. At the same time Microsoft just came out with version 2 or 3 there's word processor. It was a race, and Microsoft choose to do a side by side development, where old code was upgraded with anything new they came up with, and the new ground-up version was being done with features from the old copied and tested and new stuff.
Microsoft won because they rolled out the upgrades ( we did not ( as i recall ) have on-line MS upgrades, but disk mailed upgrades, and pirate-BBS type shareware upgrades ) , people had the latest features without much issue and no real learning curve, and they walked everyone into the new word processor.
Wordstar flopped on the code re-write with too many bugs and people became dis-satisfied.
I hope Apple and other reading this take this lesson and apply it
you know what's interesting,
You replied wanting to know, and you're 6 digit's and lower than mine 1999 or 2000
the guy below you is a 5 digit uid so he might be 1998 or 1999
and me early 2000 ( I had one that was in the 147K range but I forgot the password )
so what's interesting is that we are all similar group and we all thought similar.
I will now want to ponder why.
did the same type of reply to the guy below
you know what's interesting,
You replied wanting to know, and you're a 5 digit uid so you might be 1998 or 1999
the guy above you is 6 digit's and lower than mine 1999 or 2000
and me early 2000 ( I had one that was in the 147K range but I forgot the password )
so what's interesting is that we are all similar group and we all thought similar.
I will now want to ponder why
I've done the same reply to the guy above