Yeah, I read the articles and, as I said in my original post, it talks about the money made by sellers, not the transaction costs imposed by the markets themselves.
How much did Silk Road 2 itself make? The article says "hundreds of thousands of dollars a day", but that seems to refer to the total money in transactions.
Because if DPR2 was making that amount and only got 5 years in prison, this isn't a deterrent -- there'll be long lines of people wanting to make that deal.
You get a total number of prepaid pageviews that can be used over time. This means that you will pre-pay for a number of pageviews, then you'll have to come back to order more after your site has been viewed that number of times.
For example, if you order 250,000 page views, when your webpages using the webfonts have been viewed 250,000 times, you will need to buy the webfont package again for an additional number of prepaid pageviews.
A usage meter in your order history will help you know how many prepaid pageviews you have left. You can check your usage at any time, and pre-pay for additional pageviews here as well.
We will send an email notification when you have used 75% of your prepaid pageviews, and another reminder at 90%.
I'm not sure what you mean by political greenwashing. What I meant was, in searching for information I found this document posted on that website. I did not find anything that spoke to the specific battery technology, other than the one statement in their Miami-Dade project that use recycled car batteries.
I was trying to be clear that they claim not to be manufacturers of batteries, which I believe, but simply buy them from others. Nothing more or less.
I think it varies depending on the location. In the Miami-Dade they actually use recycled automobile batteries. However, I think that's probably a one-off project.
FPL already has 18 solar farms in Florida, and at least one large-scale battery storage project at Babcock Ranch, a town designed from the ground up for solar.
According to their 10-Year Power Site Plan that was filed in April of 2018 they are still experimenting with battery configurations, and purchase through competitive RFP.
According to the article, this was part of the software upgrade. When you or the car is navigating to a charging station, the car starts pre-heating the batteries to optimal charge temperature.
No. Tesla's, and the various batteries that Tesla sells, all come with warranties. The quicker they screw them up, the quicker *Tesla* has to pay for more.
Before vaccination, measles used to infect 700,000 people per year, just in the United States. Combined, diseases that are now preventable by vaccination used to infect millions, and cause the deaths of hundreds of thousands worldwide.
This type of information doesn't seem to survive from generation to generation. My grandparents knew people who died from diseases like measles, rubella, small pox, polio, etc. I don't, because widespread vaccinations have all but eliminated these diseases. People no longer come face-to-face with the horror of their young children dying regularly, so they forget.
The math is so small exactly because people were forcibly injected with a foreign substance in the past. Or, faced with the horrors of preventable deaths, gladly lined up.
Where, exactly? There are several States that allow exemptions from vaccination for "personal reasons" or "religious belief". Those States allow unvaccinated children to attend public school.
The most aggressive States in requiring vaccination are, I believe, Mississippi and West Virginia. The only exemptions accepted are from a medical doctor who testifies that the child is allergic to the vaccine itself.
Mississippi ran a campaign for medical professionals called "If you get 'em, stick 'em." to encourage universal vaccination.
Are you creeped out that some big corporation will make the ad revenue on her son's gymnastics video (to the extent that she doesn't)?
How do you figure? Google said it isn't eligible for ads at all, not that there were going to be ads and SHE wouldn't get paid. Nobody is going to make money on ad revenue on her little kid's gymnastic's routine.
Putting this in context, the article cites a study about VPN Apps on the Apple Store and Google Play Store. We're not talking gov't issued laptops, but rather BYOD cell phones.
It wasn't just Disney. With UV it was pretty much just UV. With Movies Anywhere it links to my Google Play account. MA will link with several, so I don't have to have a bunch of different apps.
I purchase the physical discs, and the digital copies are just a handy convenience feature. It allows anyone in my family group to stream the movie without connecting to the home server thru VPN.
Have you watched any music videos in the last couple of years? Scenes don't generally last for more than a few seconds. Sometimes it's all of a second.
I hate to break it to you, but music videos have been that way since at least the early-1980s, with the advent of MTV. We're talking 30+ years, not "last couple of years".
With the Moon, the "dark" side is just the half away from the sun. This changes as the moon revolves around the Earth. No one side is in perpetual darkness.
the "far side" is the side that is facing away from Earth. As the moon is tidally locked, the far side doesn't change -- it is perpetually the far side. That's why we always see the same side when we look up.
You could land on the "dark side" and land next to one of the Apollo landers, depending on the position of the moon at the time.
Yeah, I read the articles and, as I said in my original post, it talks about the money made by sellers, not the transaction costs imposed by the markets themselves.
How much did Silk Road 2 itself make? The article says "hundreds of thousands of dollars a day", but that seems to refer to the total money in transactions.
Because if DPR2 was making that amount and only got 5 years in prison, this isn't a deterrent -- there'll be long lines of people wanting to make that deal.
None of which explains this level of douchieness:
I'm not sure what you mean by political greenwashing. What I meant was, in searching for information I found this document posted on that website. I did not find anything that spoke to the specific battery technology, other than the one statement in their Miami-Dade project that use recycled car batteries.
I was trying to be clear that they claim not to be manufacturers of batteries, which I believe, but simply buy them from others. Nothing more or less.
I think it varies depending on the location. In the Miami-Dade they actually use recycled automobile batteries. However, I think that's probably a one-off project.
FPL already has 18 solar farms in Florida, and at least one large-scale battery storage project at Babcock Ranch, a town designed from the ground up for solar.
According to their 10-Year Power Site Plan that was filed in April of 2018 they are still experimenting with battery configurations, and purchase through competitive RFP.
Except Florida only has one active coal plant left in operation, and that is already scheduled to be shut down by the end of the year.
Traditionally, Florida used oil-burning rather than coal-burning electricity plants. Those have steadily been converted to natural gas over the years.
That sounds suspiciously like the plot for the 1992 movie Medicine Man.
1 Parsec = 3.26 light years
1 Kiloparsec = 3262 light years
1 light year = 9.46 trillion kilometers = 5.88 trillion miles
Further than the Basingstoke Roundabout, so stick out your thumb and be prepared for a long trip.
That's a red herring. The phone isn't so much a storage device itself, as it is conduit to all of your online data.
Planetary Defense Officer. That'd be sweet on a business card.
Where's all the click-bait on what would it be like if this happened over a major population center?
Ericsson or Nokia would be my guess. Both are major telecom manufacturers with a heavy investment in 5G. Both are European companies.
According to the article, this was part of the software upgrade. When you or the car is navigating to a charging station, the car starts pre-heating the batteries to optimal charge temperature.
No. Tesla's, and the various batteries that Tesla sells, all come with warranties. The quicker they screw them up, the quicker *Tesla* has to pay for more.
Check the history to get an idea.
https://www.historyofvaccines.org/content/graph-us-measles-cases
Before vaccination, measles used to infect 700,000 people per year, just in the United States. Combined, diseases that are now preventable by vaccination used to infect millions, and cause the deaths of hundreds of thousands worldwide.
This type of information doesn't seem to survive from generation to generation. My grandparents knew people who died from diseases like measles, rubella, small pox, polio, etc. I don't, because widespread vaccinations have all but eliminated these diseases. People no longer come face-to-face with the horror of their young children dying regularly, so they forget.
The math is so small exactly because people were forcibly injected with a foreign substance in the past. Or, faced with the horrors of preventable deaths, gladly lined up.
Where, exactly? There are several States that allow exemptions from vaccination for "personal reasons" or "religious belief". Those States allow unvaccinated children to attend public school.
The most aggressive States in requiring vaccination are, I believe, Mississippi and West Virginia. The only exemptions accepted are from a medical doctor who testifies that the child is allergic to the vaccine itself.
Mississippi ran a campaign for medical professionals called "If you get 'em, stick 'em." to encourage universal vaccination.
http://www.peppermalware.com/2019/03/quick-analysis-of-trickbot-sample-with.html
That's a quick review of using Ghidra to analyze Trickbot. It shows the interface and many of the features, with a brief comparison to IDA.
Which threshold was that? Gold is virtually unchanged over both a 1-year (-0.16%) and 5-year (+0.14%) period, according to the charts on Kitco.
Are you creeped out that some big corporation will make the ad revenue on her son's gymnastics video (to the extent that she doesn't)?
How do you figure? Google said it isn't eligible for ads at all, not that there were going to be ads and SHE wouldn't get paid. Nobody is going to make money on ad revenue on her little kid's gymnastic's routine.
Putting this in context, the article cites a study about VPN Apps on the Apple Store and Google Play Store. We're not talking gov't issued laptops, but rather BYOD cell phones.
BYOD is a security nightmare.
It wasn't just Disney. With UV it was pretty much just UV. With Movies Anywhere it links to my Google Play account. MA will link with several, so I don't have to have a bunch of different apps.
I purchase the physical discs, and the digital copies are just a handy convenience feature. It allows anyone in my family group to stream the movie without connecting to the home server thru VPN.
Bitcoin.
Have you watched any music videos in the last couple of years? Scenes don't generally last for more than a few seconds. Sometimes it's all of a second.
I hate to break it to you, but music videos have been that way since at least the early-1980s, with the advent of MTV. We're talking 30+ years, not "last couple of years".
Tempus fugit.
Then how can Sceptre sell 4K "dumb" TVs so cheap? I bought a 50" UHD TV for $299. You can get these at Walmart and Amazon, among other places.
http://www.sceptre.com/store/TV/4K-UHD-TV-category1category73.html
With the Moon, the "dark" side is just the half away from the sun. This changes as the moon revolves around the Earth. No one side is in perpetual darkness.
the "far side" is the side that is facing away from Earth. As the moon is tidally locked, the far side doesn't change -- it is perpetually the far side. That's why we always see the same side when we look up.
You could land on the "dark side" and land next to one of the Apollo landers, depending on the position of the moon at the time.
The dark side and The far side are two different things.