So, yet another netflix streamer is ok, but I want something as good or better than the boxes box for local content. About 50% of my streaming media are things that I have locally on my network.
If Fire TV supported file sharing protocols I'd be a buyer.
That's not true at all. The top students at the top 10% of schools are worth far more than min wage even has freshmen summer interns. One, common sense is present or not at this stage. Two, many of these kids come from upper-middle or better backgrounds and know how to conduct themselves in business settings. Many have leadership experience from shift leads in high school jobs, clubs, sports, and even directing household help like the maid.
Upbringing isn't just education, much of our practical knowledge is set from our upbringing.
I know it's not as controlled, but letting actual people live in this town would have a few benefits.
1. Some people would get a place to live. 2. If you want simulation data for humans, why not just use humans?
Seriously, let people live there for free or nearly free and the deal is they have to let scientists into their homes whenever for testing and upgrades. They also give up privacy for all of their anonimized actions and give up certain privacy for identifiable information, like photos. Bonus round, let them run the businesses too. Seriously, in the days of the WPA there were all sorts of co op planned communities that went up all at once, like Greenbelt, MD. Many of them are still thriving.
"He was a 17-year-old, and the curator of the museum was close, like a father to him," said Seattle attorney Daniel Harris, who is representing Anderson.
Like a father father, your statement is false, your argument is invalid. The moon rocks were given by Nixon to the various government bodies, not licensed by NASA or distributed with a EULA. NASA's interest ended, and they are using the only tools they have available, intimidation and shame. Can someone please explain to me why it is important that we collect every spec of dust brought back with that moon mission? We have some, and if we want more moon rocks, well we know where they are, right?
I couldn't disagree more vigorously with Ms. O'Neill, it's exactly what I expect of a professional educator. Mature thought is supposed to make us challenge our current assumptions, not change them, but at least think about them.
This teacher is making people think. And on a completely different note, this is standard practice in a security audit. Think like the bad guy.
Move along, the only story here is an administrator acting stupidly and hindering someone trying to practice their profession well.
Here OP, let me make an analogy to explain why Apple is not entirely responsible, only partially, for Foxconn.
Why should we let the OP (or any other poster) abdicate responsibility for their supply chain? If OP chooses to work with a grocery store, then OP is on the hook for ensuring the grocery store is a reputable and humane supplier.
Or is it okay to let a poster like OP accrue the benefits of outsourcing (i.e. not having to have a farm or barter with farmers directly) while ignoring negative consequences (i.e. environmental damage, inhumane working conditions, etc.)?
See how silly that sounds? Now, in reality responsibility scales proportionally to percentage of gross sales you make up for your supplier. OP to his grocery is a many to one relationship, giving him little responsibility. Apple to Foxconn is a few to one relationship, giving apple more, but not total responsibility. However, when a supplier has only one customer, that customer has total responsibility.
Actually even if there was a strong criminal / intentional exclusion on the policy it probably wouldn't matter. Business insurance policies have an innocent party carveback, so the policies would defend everyone who did not commit an intentional / criminal act. So, an individual who gave an order to ignore a safety regulation in violation of a criminal statute would not be defended against civil litigation individually, his company would still have the policy defend them unless the rest of the company knew / agreed to violate the law.
Actually - you're really on point. Let's take a look at the current government.
Roads - should be privatized ($x/mile driven)
Yes - we have this. They are called toll roads - see NJ turn pike, and may tunnels and bridges. The person using it pays, great idea. Honestly, the gas tax is also a roads usage based tax (hence the discount for farm diesel)
Water supply - should be privatized ($x/gallon taken into the house)
I'm sorry - you don't pay a water utility based on consumption now? Where do you live?
Sewage treatment - should be privatized ($x/gallon taken out of the house)
Check - my sewer bill is on the same bill as water. And my parents have a well and septic tank. No fee for them, because they are "off the grid" - More common than you think.
Police - should be privatized ($x/call to 911 etc)
Actually, that's a damn good idea if you bill them after the service. Police do this now in some states with the "accident fee" - call the cops to the scene of a car accident and you get a bill for 500 dollars.
Fire department - should be privatized ($x upfront to have your fire put out, but the neighbors can chip in so their houses won't be next)
I'm sorry - you've never heard of a fire department fee? Check your homeowners policy - your insurance company pays it for you. Many areas are still "subscription" - ever given money to a volunteer fire department? Yup - that's what you're paying for.
Army - should be privatized (don't want that North Korean missile [popsci.com] landing in your backyard? I hope you have the money to pay for it)
Actually national defense is one of the few responsibilities of a federal government - check the constitution when you get pouncing on it.
Schools - should be privatized ($x/day of school, and of course for missing school, turning in homework, missing homework etc)
Correct - I went to private school and so did my parents. Their parents worked hard to put 8 kids into catholic school. My grandparents went to catholic school too, they remember tuition cards that the nun stamped every week.
Power (including lease of the lines that feed your house) - should be privatized
Even before that I paid power bills to a private utility.
Street lighting - should be privatized (why not charge neighborhoods for the privilege of light?)
I see you've never gotten a bill from a homeowners association? What do you think that pays for?
Garbage collection - should be privatized ($x/lbs of garbage, extra charges if you don't sort everything perfectly)
Yup - we have to pay for that too, as I recall it's $100 every three months for the privilege of BFI to pick up my two cans. No charge for recyclables though.
Ambulance - should be privatized (got mugged, wallet and ID stolen, head smashed in? Too bad - if you don't have the cash or picture ID to show that you're covered, the EMTs won't help you)
I see you haven't taken a ride in one lately. A few weeks after, look out for a bill of about $1000.
Ah, there's an easy solution to this one. Create the IT tech on call pager. Rotate the pager through your staff and yourself. Only when the tech on call can't fix it does he call you. Added bonus, the pager lets you get back to the person who paged you on your time, this gives you time to get infront of a computer or get your mind set. This is very easy in settings like hospitals where staff are used to paging the oncall doctor.
I'm looking at the aricle, and something seemed a bit off to me. The picture. For one, the bottom slide is far more anterior then the top. For one, look at the shape of piriform and the optic bundle (it's what is optic nerve closer to the eyes.)
Beyond that, just look at the shape of the hippocampus, these slides are at least 2 mm seperated, if not more. I don't have a rat brain atlas in front of me. But the point I'm trying to make is it's not a direct comparison, and there are more blood ventricals in the second slide.
Second, this looks like a map2 stain, and if that is the case, dark brown signifies apoptosis, or quick sudden death of a neuron. But dark brown also comes from over freezing of the tissue, which is often cut at -40 C or below and can crack if flash frozen.
Furthermore, I'm skeptical that this sort of microwave radiation does much of anything to brain tissue over that sort of exposure periods, even at high doses. For some brain analysis, to freeze necrosis at the time of death and prevent breakdown of some neurotransmitters, rats are given a high dose of microwave radion to cook thier brain inside the head, which also makes it easier to disect, and I've never seen this sort of blood leakage.....but that's just me. I'd like to see the actual article though, because MAP2 staining here makes no sense....
Actually, a long time ago they were going to use the MiB notation.
But then, a movie company sued them for trademark dilution, because they didn't think it was nearly as cool as their movie, MiB = Men in Black.
But then the real problem came when some men came, flashed this thing in their eyes, and the hard drive companies completely forgot about MiB notation, and hence GiB and TiB never came to be.
I've used that AP before, as many UMD students have. It's quite spiffy. Many, Many people bring laptops, study and buy coffee for hours on end.
It's also the only place where I can get green tea cola, play pool for a buck a game 24 hours on weekends, and till two in the morning every other day. Starting next month, they also are going to have a bar, and food. They also have a ton of board games you can just sit and play for free. And all this is just in one large oversized house. Most nights they have music too.
The point of all that was, wireless APs should be a customer draw, not a service you charge for. When I have something to do at college perk, I stay for hours, drinking many green tea colas, and cafe mochas, when I have nothing to do, I stop by for A cup of coffee, not 3 or four.
So, yet another netflix streamer is ok, but I want something as good or better than the boxes box for local content. About 50% of my streaming media are things that I have locally on my network.
If Fire TV supported file sharing protocols I'd be a buyer.
Apostrophe now! It's the beginning of the end!
Most other imported finished goods have no tariffs.
Heh - you're cute. While many finished products don't have a tariff - arms aren't exactly in a small group of tariffed goods.
Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States
http://hts.usitc.gov/
That's not true at all. The top students at the top 10% of schools are worth far more than min wage even has freshmen summer interns. One, common sense is present or not at this stage. Two, many of these kids come from upper-middle or better backgrounds and know how to conduct themselves in business settings. Many have leadership experience from shift leads in high school jobs, clubs, sports, and even directing household help like the maid.
Upbringing isn't just education, much of our practical knowledge is set from our upbringing.
Because people that censor don't deserve our respect or compliance. Information wants to be free. And one day, so will the people of China.
You betcha. Isn't is nice of you to do that so he can consider maybe taking a part time job in IT this year?
100 years ago his factory job would have found his request for a soothing emotional atmosphere amusing.
Would you all shut up and buy more coins? I'm up almost 20% in the last 30 days and I want to see bitcoin hit 6 USD!
Actually - you're all wrong. In the US it's cracked 15%.
http://osxdaily.com/2011/03/18/mac-market-share-around-the-world-usa-15-canada-14-australia-14-and-more/
I know it's not as controlled, but letting actual people live in this town would have a few benefits.
1. Some people would get a place to live.
2. If you want simulation data for humans, why not just use humans?
Seriously, let people live there for free or nearly free and the deal is they have to let scientists into their homes whenever for testing and upgrades. They also give up privacy for all of their anonimized actions and give up certain privacy for identifiable information, like photos. Bonus round, let them run the businesses too. Seriously, in the days of the WPA there were all sorts of co op planned communities that went up all at once, like Greenbelt, MD. Many of them are still thriving.
From the article:
"He was a 17-year-old, and the curator of the museum was close, like a father to him," said Seattle attorney Daniel Harris, who is representing Anderson.
Like a father father, your statement is false, your argument is invalid. The moon rocks were given by Nixon to the various government bodies, not licensed by NASA or distributed with a EULA. NASA's interest ended, and they are using the only tools they have available, intimidation and shame. Can someone please explain to me why it is important that we collect every spec of dust brought back with that moon mission? We have some, and if we want more moon rocks, well we know where they are, right?
I couldn't disagree more vigorously with Ms. O'Neill, it's exactly what I expect of a professional educator. Mature thought is supposed to make us challenge our current assumptions, not change them, but at least think about them.
This teacher is making people think. And on a completely different note, this is standard practice in a security audit. Think like the bad guy.
Move along, the only story here is an administrator acting stupidly and hindering someone trying to practice their profession well.
Here OP, let me make an analogy to explain why Apple is not entirely responsible, only partially, for Foxconn.
Why should we let the OP (or any other poster) abdicate responsibility for their supply chain? If OP chooses to work with a grocery store, then OP is on the hook for ensuring the grocery store is a reputable and humane supplier.
Or is it okay to let a poster like OP accrue the benefits of outsourcing (i.e. not having to have a farm or barter with farmers directly) while ignoring negative consequences (i.e. environmental damage, inhumane working conditions, etc.)?
See how silly that sounds? Now, in reality responsibility scales proportionally to percentage of gross sales you make up for your supplier. OP to his grocery is a many to one relationship, giving him little responsibility. Apple to Foxconn is a few to one relationship, giving apple more, but not total responsibility. However, when a supplier has only one customer, that customer has total responsibility.
Actually even if there was a strong criminal / intentional exclusion on the policy it probably wouldn't matter. Business insurance policies have an innocent party carveback, so the policies would defend everyone who did not commit an intentional / criminal act. So, an individual who gave an order to ignore a safety regulation in violation of a criminal statute would not be defended against civil litigation individually, his company would still have the policy defend them unless the rest of the company knew / agreed to violate the law.
If you don't like the duties of the federal government spelled out in the constitution - amend it. Don't ignore it.
Actually - you're really on point. Let's take a look at the current government.
Roads - should be privatized ($x/mile driven)
Yes - we have this. They are called toll roads - see NJ turn pike, and may tunnels and bridges. The person using it pays, great idea. Honestly, the gas tax is also a roads usage based tax (hence the discount for farm diesel)
Water supply - should be privatized ($x/gallon taken into the house)
I'm sorry - you don't pay a water utility based on consumption now? Where do you live?
Sewage treatment - should be privatized ($x/gallon taken out of the house)
Check - my sewer bill is on the same bill as water. And my parents have a well and septic tank. No fee for them, because they are "off the grid" - More common than you think.
Police - should be privatized ($x/call to 911 etc)
Actually, that's a damn good idea if you bill them after the service. Police do this now in some states with the "accident fee" - call the cops to the scene of a car accident and you get a bill for 500 dollars.
Fire department - should be privatized ($x upfront to have your fire put out, but the neighbors can chip in so their houses won't be next)
I'm sorry - you've never heard of a fire department fee? Check your homeowners policy - your insurance company pays it for you. Many areas are still "subscription" - ever given money to a volunteer fire department? Yup - that's what you're paying for.
Army - should be privatized (don't want that North Korean missile [popsci.com] landing in your backyard? I hope you have the money to pay for it)
Actually national defense is one of the few responsibilities of a federal government - check the constitution when you get pouncing on it.
Schools - should be privatized ($x/day of school, and of course for missing school, turning in homework, missing homework etc)
Correct - I went to private school and so did my parents. Their parents worked hard to put 8 kids into catholic school. My grandparents went to catholic school too, they remember tuition cards that the nun stamped every week.
Power (including lease of the lines that feed your house) - should be privatized
Um - it is. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maryland_Electric_Deregulation
Even before that I paid power bills to a private utility.
Street lighting - should be privatized (why not charge neighborhoods for the privilege of light?)
I see you've never gotten a bill from a homeowners association? What do you think that pays for?
Garbage collection - should be privatized ($x/lbs of garbage, extra charges if you don't sort everything perfectly)
Yup - we have to pay for that too, as I recall it's $100 every three months for the privilege of BFI to pick up my two cans. No charge for recyclables though.
Ambulance - should be privatized (got mugged, wallet and ID stolen, head smashed in? Too bad - if you don't have the cash or picture ID to show that you're covered, the EMTs won't help you)
I see you haven't taken a ride in one lately. A few weeks after, look out for a bill of about $1000.
I have to completely agree. Ron Paul has a real message about real change. No other candidate wants to make fundamental reform to the system.
Ron Paul '08
Maybe it was the parent to this post.
I'm not paranoid, I'm just very, very absorbant!
He clearly did want to use cohesion. You see, the cameraman that got arrested was taking advantage of the properties of cohesion.
He knew the charge of felony wiretapping would bot be very cohesive.
Actually, your math is very wrong. Let me help.
.80 = 20,000
.80 = 16,000
25,000 X
20,000 X
The author was correct. Please return to your scheduled nitpicking.
Ah, there's an easy solution to this one. Create the IT tech on call pager. Rotate the pager through your staff and yourself. Only when the tech on call can't fix it does he call you. Added bonus, the pager lets you get back to the person who paged you on your time, this gives you time to get infront of a computer or get your mind set. This is very easy in settings like hospitals where staff are used to paging the oncall doctor.
I remember a pair of twins back from my high school, the Moore twins. Boy, they were prime. They did everything togeatther, everything.
I'm looking at the aricle, and something seemed a bit off to me. The picture. For one, the bottom slide is far more anterior then the top. For one, look at the shape of piriform and the optic bundle (it's what is optic nerve closer to the eyes.)
Beyond that, just look at the shape of the hippocampus, these slides are at least 2 mm seperated, if not more. I don't have a rat brain atlas in front of me. But the point I'm trying to make is it's not a direct comparison, and there are more blood ventricals in the second slide.
Second, this looks like a map2 stain, and if that is the case, dark brown signifies apoptosis, or quick sudden death of a neuron. But dark brown also comes from over freezing of the tissue, which is often cut at -40 C or below and can crack if flash frozen.
Furthermore, I'm skeptical that this sort of microwave radiation does much of anything to brain tissue over that sort of exposure periods, even at high doses. For some brain analysis, to freeze necrosis at the time of death and prevent breakdown of some neurotransmitters, rats are given a high dose of microwave radion to cook thier brain inside the head, which also makes it easier to disect, and I've never seen this sort of blood leakage.....but that's just me. I'd like to see the actual article though, because MAP2 staining here makes no sense....
Actually, a long time ago they were going to use the MiB notation.
But then, a movie company sued them for trademark dilution, because they didn't think it was nearly as cool as their movie, MiB = Men in Black.
But then the real problem came when some men came, flashed this thing in their eyes, and the hard drive companies completely forgot about MiB notation, and hence GiB and TiB never came to be.
I've used that AP before, as many UMD students have. It's quite spiffy. Many, Many people bring laptops, study and buy coffee for hours on end.
It's also the only place where I can get green tea cola, play pool for a buck a game 24 hours on weekends, and till two in the morning every other day. Starting next month, they also are going to have a bar, and food. They also have a ton of board games you can just sit and play for free. And all this is just in one large oversized house. Most nights they have music too.
The point of all that was, wireless APs should be a customer draw, not a service you charge for. When I have something to do at college perk, I stay for hours, drinking many green tea colas, and cafe mochas, when I have nothing to do, I stop by for A cup of coffee, not 3 or four.
See! Free beer really will beat out free speech, not only did he stop coding for that beer, he gave up his shirt too!