Depending on the state and how his worker classification it might not be illegal. (Remember most states are at-will so some one cause be let go without cause for any reason at any time).
USCG is part of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and not currently part of the DoD since we are actually at "war".
The USCG was also transfered from the Department of Transportation and not Commerce on the creation of the DHS.
It is also considered one of the five (5) armed services under the US Code with the Marines as well (even though the Marines are administrated under the Department of the Navy due to historical reasons).
It's actually a free app in the regular iTunes App store. No jail break needed. It however kind of sucks since it's really difficult to control a desktop that expect you to have a seperate full keyboard and a seperate mouse.
If you read the article it covers this point. Herzog Zwei was the first "real-time", but in the current genre of RTS is pretty much defined by Dune II. Warcraft, StarCraft, and C&C are just pretty graphic versions of Dune II with different units.
And how will publishers work around North American ISPs' utter failure to serve rural customers?
They simply won't. The number of players in rural areas wouldn't generate enough revenue to even care about so they'll just ignore them or tell those customers to get a better ISP.
There is a reason the Federal government needed to handle rural electricfication and mandate rural telephone service (and generate a seperate fee paid by all users to see that it's done). Basic economics dictates that serving rural customers over urban or suburban customers is a losing proposition. They're too spread out and not in great enough numbers to for a company to make a profit.
The real problem with satellite radio is that since it competes mainly with free services (i.e. regular radio) it cannot raise its prices to bring in enough capital to cover the costs and there are not enough users, who like you and your family find it useful, to allow the service to make up the difference in volume.
While I doubt satellite radio is doomed in general, the Sirius/XM companies are. They have too much debt and don't bring in enough revenue to cover operating costs and debt retirement. I have the feeling that'll turn out like Iridium where the initial company goes bankrupt and another company steps in to buy the whole thing at some really reduced cost and then can operate the service without the debt of the initial startup costs. (Iridium was bought for $25 million after $6 billion of capital costs were sunk into it. Only then did it become profitable for the owners).
Usual theory is that orbits stay constant (since mass is basicly constant) but the radius of the Sun expands past the current orbit consuming the planet it it's firey corona of love.
I also don't think getting flung off will be the end of life on the planet. I mean just look at the last time it happened.
The Economics prize is actually selected by a committee of members of the The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences. The prize was established by the Sveriges Riksbank, but it is not awarded by it.
This was linked below from the treasury department. It states while it can be accepted as legal tender it does not have to be accepted by any private organization.
Please re-read the linked article. The relevant portion is below:
This statute means that all United States money as identified above are a valid and legal offer of payment for debts when tendered to a creditor. There is, however, no Federal statute mandating that a private business, a person or an organization must accept currency or coins as for payment for goods and/or services. Private businesses are free to develop their own policies on whether or not to accept cash unless there is a State law which says otherwise.
Most likelythe DMV that you are referring to is in violation of Federal law since it is not a public entity. I'd recommend suing them over it in order to get it properly litigated out and corrected.
No. They're charging everyone the same price per volume. It's about this guy's business model not working out once the price per ad on Google climbed above the price per ad posted on his website. As such I don't really feel all that sorry for him. There are other ad organizations out there that may suit his needs, but blaming Google for raising fees to cover costs (like in this case where he's taking 1.2 million a year from Google) is just plain silly.
And yes, he has a nice looking link farm, but that doesn't make it not a link farm. It provides no new and unique content that cannot be found elsewhere.
While private organizations can actually refuse to accept any current demoniation (pennies included, though it's usually $100 bills), government organizations (like the courts) cannot. If they refuse to accept the pennies which would be legal tender the debt to the government would be cancelled.
He's specifying "letter of the law" in terms of contract law since the SecureRom usage was negoatated between Stardock and their distrubitor and as such it created contractual obligations for both parties that could be litagated according to the law in civil court.
I believe the bill was large, but the total cost was expected and in line with the unlimited plan she ordered. It's just that AT&T printed out every byte transaction made over the previous month.
While CDs/DVD and drives will be available in 25 years. My guess is that even under the best conditions the disk will have degraded enough to be completely unusable.
It does not play "flash" YouTube videos. YouTube on the iPhone is a custom client app that does not use flash at all. It won't even play all the videos YouTube has to offer only the ones that can be accessed in h264 format so the app can use the iPod video decoding software/hardware to play it with their custom interface (flash only videos will not play at all).
So who did the seventh?
Ron Howard
Depending on the state and how his worker classification it might not be illegal. (Remember most states are at-will so some one cause be let go without cause for any reason at any time).
It is definately dickish though.
Dude. It's all on the TV ever week. There is no secret here, so spill the beans.
USCG is part of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and not currently part of the DoD since we are actually at "war".
The USCG was also transfered from the Department of Transportation and not Commerce on the creation of the DHS.
It is also considered one of the five (5) armed services under the US Code with the Marines as well (even though the Marines are administrated under the Department of the Navy due to historical reasons).
Well, until your hard drive fails
It's actually a free app in the regular iTunes App store. No jail break needed. It however kind of sucks since it's really difficult to control a desktop that expect you to have a seperate full keyboard and a seperate mouse.
If you read the article it covers this point. Herzog Zwei was the first "real-time", but in the current genre of RTS is pretty much defined by Dune II. Warcraft, StarCraft, and C&C are just pretty graphic versions of Dune II with different units.
And how will publishers work around North American ISPs' utter failure to serve rural customers?
They simply won't. The number of players in rural areas wouldn't generate enough revenue to even care about so they'll just ignore them or tell those customers to get a better ISP.
There is a reason the Federal government needed to handle rural electricfication and mandate rural telephone service (and generate a seperate fee paid by all users to see that it's done). Basic economics dictates that serving rural customers over urban or suburban customers is a losing proposition. They're too spread out and not in great enough numbers to for a company to make a profit.
The real problem with satellite radio is that since it competes mainly with free services (i.e. regular radio) it cannot raise its prices to bring in enough capital to cover the costs and there are not enough users, who like you and your family find it useful, to allow the service to make up the difference in volume.
While I doubt satellite radio is doomed in general, the Sirius/XM companies are. They have too much debt and don't bring in enough revenue to cover operating costs and debt retirement. I have the feeling that'll turn out like Iridium where the initial company goes bankrupt and another company steps in to buy the whole thing at some really reduced cost and then can operate the service without the debt of the initial startup costs. (Iridium was bought for $25 million after $6 billion of capital costs were sunk into it. Only then did it become profitable for the owners).
Usual theory is that orbits stay constant (since mass is basicly constant) but the radius of the Sun expands past the current orbit consuming the planet it it's firey corona of love.
I also don't think getting flung off will be the end of life on the planet. I mean just look at the last time it happened.
Really? They announced last years prize on Slashdot.
The Economics prize is actually selected by a committee of members of the The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences. The prize was established by the Sveriges Riksbank, but it is not awarded by it.
The third reason is to have shares on hand to re-issue as options to current executives and employees without diluting the existing share holders.
This was linked below from the treasury department. It states while it can be accepted as legal tender it does not have to be accepted by any private organization.
Please re-read the linked article. The relevant portion is below:
This statute means that all United States money as identified above are a valid and legal offer of payment for debts when tendered to a creditor. There is, however, no Federal statute mandating that a private business, a person or an organization must accept currency or coins as for payment for goods and/or services. Private businesses are free to develop their own policies on whether or not to accept cash unless there is a State law which says otherwise.
Most likelythe DMV that you are referring to is in violation of Federal law since it is not a public entity. I'd recommend suing them over it in order to get it properly litigated out and corrected.
That may be true, but how does this site help? It just links to the same screwed up documentation?
No. They're charging everyone the same price per volume. It's about this guy's business model not working out once the price per ad on Google climbed above the price per ad posted on his website. As such I don't really feel all that sorry for him. There are other ad organizations out there that may suit his needs, but blaming Google for raising fees to cover costs (like in this case where he's taking 1.2 million a year from Google) is just plain silly.
And yes, he has a nice looking link farm, but that doesn't make it not a link farm. It provides no new and unique content that cannot be found elsewhere.
While private organizations can actually refuse to accept any current demoniation (pennies included, though it's usually $100 bills), government organizations (like the courts) cannot. If they refuse to accept the pennies which would be legal tender the debt to the government would be cancelled.
He's specifying "letter of the law" in terms of contract law since the SecureRom usage was negoatated between Stardock and their distrubitor and as such it created contractual obligations for both parties that could be litagated according to the law in civil court.
I believe the bill was large, but the total cost was expected and in line with the unlimited plan she ordered. It's just that AT&T printed out every byte transaction made over the previous month.
Umm.. by definition the smallest AES key is 128-bits.
While CDs/DVD and drives will be available in 25 years. My guess is that even under the best conditions the disk will have degraded enough to be completely unusable.
It does not play "flash" YouTube videos. YouTube on the iPhone is a custom client app that does not use flash at all. It won't even play all the videos YouTube has to offer only the ones that can be accessed in h264 format so the app can use the iPod video decoding software/hardware to play it with their custom interface (flash only videos will not play at all).
Really, cannot the same be said about the gold standard.
I really think it all started to go downhill once we got off the sea shell standard.