About 2002, i tried to find a museum to take a VaxStation II with a serial number of WFPROTO001 and still no takers. Unless it fits with with they're looking for and particularly rare, it's unlikely a museum wants what you might have on offer.
> You forgot to capitalize an instance of "water" in your first and last sentences. I also think you should capitalize "moons", "worldly", and "substances", for good measure.
Just across the river in Fairfax County, Virginia, this is the normal behavior for lights. In fact, i suspect some of them are timed so as you get released from one light, the next one (200m away) turns red.
And a million (give or take) flickr users breathed a sigh of relief (and of course narcissistically photographed themselves breathing that sigh of relief).
I was in your shoes after a little more than 12 years in programming. I'm back in school studying Geography and Geographic Information Systems. Is the eventual job going to be IT? Maybe, but there's also a lot more possibilities out there too.
More to your point, see if there's something else that interests you that leverages your experience but also takes you in a different direction. Geography is it for me, what's it for you?
I saw this sign on the street in downtown Washington. I don't know how well it worked out for him, but it's pretty much an act of desperation for him at this point.
Oh, i've heard of bathymetry, and your post even got me looking to make sure it's not being done by radar and it's not, at least not directly. Satellite based bathymetry is done by measuring sea surface altitude and then matching that up with perturbations in the local gravity (usually detected from another satellite). It can give results with resolutions of around 100 m. I believe it can do ship detection and classification, but those ships are on the surface.
To the best of my knowledge (i'm working on my masters in Geography / Remote Sensing), radar can't penetrate water. So on the surface, yes it could see a submarine, but if it's submerged, it's still invisible to this.
Not that the US isn't paranoid ab't this stuff, it's just i don't think it's ab't submarines in this case.
Flickr has always embraced 3rd party utilities and has an API that allows you to roll your own application using the photos on their site. They also are pretty up front with their attitude of "the service is ours, but the photos remain the photographer's". If Microsoft buys them, how long will that last?
What makes you think INS will take google's say so that you've been immunized, and if you're the one responsible for putting the data into their system, it's just your say so. It might be useful for your own records (or it might creep you out), but i wouldn't expect it to be able to count as evidence...
Actually Landsat 6 wasn't built or launched by the government (not sure about how much they had to do with the design. Of course, it failed to reach orbit after being delayed for several years.
And given how long birds have been around and how many times the magnetic field has flipped in that history, those that couldn't adapt, didn't, and evolution is what happened.
So if someone gets scared, i guess you're a terrorist.
I'd say, "Laugh, it's a joke", but it's a more realistic definition that i've seen put forward lately...
It's actually kind of sad. Carter was probably the most intelligent president in US history. He just sucked as president. I can't say it was all his fault, but things were better when he took office than when he left and things were much, MUCH better after four years of Reagan.
Say what you want about Carter as president. He's the best ex-president we've had since Teddy Rosevelt.
Believe it or not, AOL had a huge Macintosh contingent. Among their server developers it was something like 75% using one as their primary machine. Of course, there was a PC (mostly Dells) on the desktop as well. I really missed giving mine up when i left.
So, what do people mean when they ask for simplicity? One-button operation, of course, but with all of their favorite features.
Actually, no, i don't think simplicity is one-button operation. It's having a control do one very simple thing. My camera has a separate button for its manual focus and macro functions because it's simpler to use that way rather than have a single button sometimes mean manual focus and sometimes mean macro.
About 2002, i tried to find a museum to take a VaxStation II with a serial number of WFPROTO001 and still no takers. Unless it fits with with they're looking for and particularly rare, it's unlikely a museum wants what you might have on offer.
And if you bring up them, how about when they go and fight crime!
The Comfort is not on its way as of 1300. It was in port in Baltimore.
What are You, German?
Just across the river in Fairfax County, Virginia, this is the normal behavior for lights. In fact, i suspect some of them are timed so as you get released from one light, the next one (200m away) turns red.
Start putting together a deal. Publicize it. Be open and transparent. If you're legitimate and it's viable, I'll put in a lot more than $10.
No, but it does have shoes.
This site is good for a number of languages, particularly for Java. Just read it and do the opposite.
Maybe Microsoft wants to buy Yahoo because they're tired of even them making them look bad? -- We are all little storms.
And a million (give or take) flickr users breathed a sigh of relief (and of course narcissistically photographed themselves breathing that sigh of relief).
I was in your shoes after a little more than 12 years in programming. I'm back in school studying Geography and Geographic Information Systems. Is the eventual job going to be IT? Maybe, but there's also a lot more possibilities out there too.
More to your point, see if there's something else that interests you that leverages your experience but also takes you in a different direction. Geography is it for me, what's it for you?
I saw this sign on the street in downtown Washington. I don't know how well it worked out for him, but it's pretty much an act of desperation for him at this point.
Oh, i've heard of bathymetry, and your post even got me looking to make sure it's not being done by radar and it's not, at least not directly. Satellite based bathymetry is done by measuring sea surface altitude and then matching that up with perturbations in the local gravity (usually detected from another satellite). It can give results with resolutions of around 100 m. I believe it can do ship detection and classification, but those ships are on the surface.
they can, I imagine, spot submarines as well,
To the best of my knowledge (i'm working on my masters in Geography / Remote Sensing), radar can't penetrate water. So on the surface, yes it could see a submarine, but if it's submerged, it's still invisible to this.
Not that the US isn't paranoid ab't this stuff, it's just i don't think it's ab't submarines in this case.
Flickr has always embraced 3rd party utilities and has an API that allows you to roll your own application using the photos on their site. They also are pretty up front with their attitude of "the service is ours, but the photos remain the photographer's". If Microsoft buys them, how long will that last?
What makes you think INS will take google's say so that you've been immunized, and if you're the one responsible for putting the data into their system, it's just your say so. It might be useful for your own records (or it might creep you out), but i wouldn't expect it to be able to count as evidence...
Actually Landsat 6 wasn't built or launched by the government (not sure about how much they had to do with the design. Of course, it failed to reach orbit after being delayed for several years.
And given how long birds have been around and how many times the magnetic field has flipped in that history, those that couldn't adapt, didn't, and evolution is what happened.
Wonder where i learned that?
So if someone gets scared, i guess you're a terrorist. I'd say, "Laugh, it's a joke", but it's a more realistic definition that i've seen put forward lately...
It's actually kind of sad. Carter was probably the most intelligent president in US history. He just sucked as president. I can't say it was all his fault, but things were better when he took office than when he left and things were much, MUCH better after four years of Reagan.
Say what you want about Carter as president. He's the best ex-president we've had since Teddy Rosevelt.
Believe it or not, AOL had a huge Macintosh contingent. Among their server developers it was something like 75% using one as their primary machine. Of course, there was a PC (mostly Dells) on the desktop as well. I really missed giving mine up when i left.
markus
Oh yeah? Then blur this! -- SIGFING. Except on BSD where it's SIGBIRD.
"Two years from now, spam will be solved" - Bill Gates
Yes, but this time, he'll always be right.
So, what do people mean when they ask for simplicity? One-button operation, of course, but with all of their favorite features.
Actually, no, i don't think simplicity is one-button operation. It's having a control do one very simple thing. My camera has a separate button for its manual focus and macro functions because it's simpler to use that way rather than have a single button sometimes mean manual focus and sometimes mean macro.