If that's the case (and that or simply showing hints of multiple universes without revealing which is which seem to be what the writers intend) how does the island end up on the bottom of the ocean in the purgatory/flash sideways, that was after all the first image of the flash sideways universe.
What high-end clients pay for may surprise you. For example, according to my ongoing interviews of several hundred sex workers, approximately 40 percent of trades in New York's sex economy fail to include a physical act beyond light petting or kissing. No intercourse, no oral stimulation, etc. That's one helluva conversation. But it's what many clients want. Flush with cash, these elite men routinely turn their prostitute into a second partner or spouse. Over the course of a year, they will sometimes persuade the woman to take on a new identity, replete with a fake name, a fake job, a fake life history, and so on. They may want to have sex or they may simply want to be treated like King for a Day.
I can see that, and certainly the costs for distribution are heavily unit based. If you're just a reseller almost all your costs are per unit or based on volume of sales.
Also, when a company has a declining cost curve, they'll almost always have a good deal of market power (in economics market power is a better term than monopoly power since you don't need to have a monopoly to have some control over price). When you have market power, your marginal revenue curve isn't flat either. In other words marginal revenue is a downward sloping line (since by selling at a high price you loose sales, and selling at a low price you can't charge higher prices to people who really want the product), unless we start talking about more complicated sales techniques like price descrimination, dutch auctions, individual sales and things that really don't apply to games (but can with other software).
Well part of the reason for not caring about the flight speed, might be that buyers looking at overall travel time which usually includes a layover or two.
Utilities, trains, software development, and a few other industries almost always feature a declining average cost curve, or the marginal cost curve is very high for product #1, and much lower for products 2-infinity.
I was unaware of the thinning for paper, thanks. I grew up around the popalar farms in the northwest for paper.
That's a terrible price, it might be worth more as firewood, wow.
I should have said majestic tree in some happy forest. I agree, on carbon sequestration, seems like a very stable form of carbon sequestration is paper and wood products. I don't know the current research but believe it was newly growing trees that sequestered the most carbon.
The wood for paper is the branches from trees that were already harvested for lumber or are grown like a crop (on farmland) in the arid west and are more like shrubs. They harvest them at 7-10 years and they are hybrids that grow exceedingly quickly. I we used no new paper tomorrow, not a single living tree would be saved.
It'd take some doing, but making tobacco tea is possible, we used to use it to kill bugs on plants. It works exceedingly well and never seemed to bother the plants. We'd use a lot (say 1/2 cup per quart) so I'm pretty sure it would have exceeded nicotine's lethal dose, but I'd be shocked if there wasn't a blend that wasn't. I'd suggest Sweedish Snus, though, steam curing supposedly generates far fewer of the carcinogiens than smoke curing (used everywhere else does).
I think it's that lower IQ people tend to have very high discount rates (in otherwords pleasure now is very preferrable to more pleasure in the future). You can see this in smoking rates, use of credit, rent to own contracts. Etc. As a result, most of society's status indicators require forgoing immediate benefits sometimes for a very long period of time. This tends to shift status toward high IQ folks (to a point, once it gets high enough men especially tend to signal by cease to play).
So do factories, warehouses, offices, and other business buildings, yet they seem to be built more than almost any other building in this country. Grass roots businesses spring up all the time, some grow rapidly, some grow only a little, some wither and die but new ones regularly come to take their place.
What about shortening names. Mexico is technically the United Mexican States, but the name is almost always shortened to Mexico. The US is the only country on either continent with America in it's name. Following the rules of every other country on earth is to drop adjectives or nous like republic or statesand the remaining word is your short name. For almost all these nations the people are given a term that derives from that word.
That's interesting because I saw a study a few months ago that suggested that the school you graduated from wasn't very highly coorellated with your lifetime income, rather the schools you were rejected from were a better predictor.
How bout, facebook makes it easy for women to filter and select the few men they all want to sleep with, so those men sleep with huge numbers of women (and disease spreads rampantly).
Sure but the materials aren't free either. It appears a safe stop saw runs about $700 more than similar saws. That's acceptable on a 3k granite topped cabinent saw, but pretty unacceptable on a $300 tabletop saw (that's designed and priced for people who will use it a couple times a year). Saw stop
It's highly likely that the 20,000 users most likely to be injured would be the first buyers especially given the price. Also, having something that makes the blade injury proof, is exceedingly likely to cause users to take risks that they probably wouldn't consider if they had a regular table saw.
I have no problem bringing charges under the T.C.A. 39-13-212 defines criminally negligent homicide as criminally negligent conduct, which results in the alleged victim's death. For a defendant to be found guilty of criminally negligent homicide, the state of Tennessee must prove each of the following elements beyond a reasonable doubt:
The defendant's criminally negligent conduct resulted in the death of the alleged victim; and
The defendant acted with criminal negligence.
The crux of negligent homicide is contained in the definition of criminal negligence under the Tennessee code. Pursuant to T.C.A. 39-11-302(d), “criminal negligence” refers to when a person acts negligently with respect to circumstances of which he or she should be aware will create a substantial and unjustifiable risk of homicide. To be criminal negligence, however, the risk must be of such a nature and degree that the failure to perceive it constitutes a gross deviation from the standard of care that an ordinary person would exercise under all the circumstances as viewed from the accused person's standpoint.
Most guns have a trigger pull ranging from 2-10 lbs. Some are adjustable (but that's normally not part of a pistol trigger). Target rifles are the lightest. I'd guess the trigger pull was about 2-3 lbs. If it's the new Sigma the pull wt is 3 lbs.
I believe it's because New Egg does a lot of purchasing in the grey market. Intel and AMD have certain order quantities at which they cut prices on the whole order. So a computer manufacturer who needs say 95,000 processors might get a low enough rate on 100,000 that it's worth ordering more than they will use and selling the remainder to resellers who then sell to places like NewEgg. They're not supposed to do this, but it's pretty common and because everything goes through a couple layers of resellers, it's difficult for Intel to spot.
Bill Cosby had it right on Seattle, when the sun comes out, they move to appease the gods. My problem was that 90 of those 158 rainy days seem to be pressed into Jan-Mar.
Of course there is nothing quite as glorious as a sunny June day there.
The big problem I see with education in the US, is that say 20% of the parents want a school that basically acts as day care. However, they cannot admit this becuase that would make them bad parents.
The other 80% all want the same thing, one of a few very limited seats at the elite universities in the country. This results in two major problems. Arms races between school districts that actually place kids here with huge wastes of resources that aren't necessary except to keep up/ahead of other districts, and b strong desire to prevent other school districts from improving (and creating a new arms race competitor).
Tying school funding to local house prices is a one of the causes of this fundamental problem.
Teens pretty much don't die disease or natural causes. So guns/cars/toxins are of course going to be the leading causes of death.
The scary thing is 200 years ago, the same would have been said about anyone who wasn't of your race/ethnic group.
No, Dave Barry does that.
If that's the case (and that or simply showing hints of multiple universes without revealing which is which seem to be what the writers intend) how does the island end up on the bottom of the ocean in the purgatory/flash sideways, that was after all the first image of the flash sideways universe.
Breaking Bad.
Ironically, at the high end most of what prostitutes do a lot of chatting.
What high-end clients pay for may surprise you. For example, according to my ongoing interviews of several hundred sex workers, approximately 40 percent of trades in New York's sex economy fail to include a physical act beyond light petting or kissing. No intercourse, no oral stimulation, etc. That's one helluva conversation. But it's what many clients want. Flush with cash, these elite men routinely turn their prostitute into a second partner or spouse. Over the course of a year, they will sometimes persuade the woman to take on a new identity, replete with a fake name, a fake job, a fake life history, and so on. They may want to have sex or they may simply want to be treated like King for a Day.
I can see that, and certainly the costs for distribution are heavily unit based. If you're just a reseller almost all your costs are per unit or based on volume of sales.
Also, when a company has a declining cost curve, they'll almost always have a good deal of market power (in economics market power is a better term than monopoly power since you don't need to have a monopoly to have some control over price). When you have market power, your marginal revenue curve isn't flat either. In other words marginal revenue is a downward sloping line (since by selling at a high price you loose sales, and selling at a low price you can't charge higher prices to people who really want the product), unless we start talking about more complicated sales techniques like price descrimination, dutch auctions, individual sales and things that really don't apply to games (but can with other software).
Well part of the reason for not caring about the flight speed, might be that buyers looking at overall travel time which usually includes a layover or two.
Utilities, trains, software development, and a few other industries almost always feature a declining average cost curve, or the marginal cost curve is very high for product #1, and much lower for products 2-infinity.
I was unaware of the thinning for paper, thanks. I grew up around the popalar farms in the northwest for paper. That's a terrible price, it might be worth more as firewood, wow. I should have said majestic tree in some happy forest. I agree, on carbon sequestration, seems like a very stable form of carbon sequestration is paper and wood products. I don't know the current research but believe it was newly growing trees that sequestered the most carbon.
The wood for paper is the branches from trees that were already harvested for lumber or are grown like a crop (on farmland) in the arid west and are more like shrubs. They harvest them at 7-10 years and they are hybrids that grow exceedingly quickly. I we used no new paper tomorrow, not a single living tree would be saved.
It'd take some doing, but making tobacco tea is possible, we used to use it to kill bugs on plants. It works exceedingly well and never seemed to bother the plants. We'd use a lot (say 1/2 cup per quart) so I'm pretty sure it would have exceeded nicotine's lethal dose, but I'd be shocked if there wasn't a blend that wasn't. I'd suggest Sweedish Snus, though, steam curing supposedly generates far fewer of the carcinogiens than smoke curing (used everywhere else does).
I think it's that lower IQ people tend to have very high discount rates (in otherwords pleasure now is very preferrable to more pleasure in the future). You can see this in smoking rates, use of credit, rent to own contracts. Etc. As a result, most of society's status indicators require forgoing immediate benefits sometimes for a very long period of time. This tends to shift status toward high IQ folks (to a point, once it gets high enough men especially tend to signal by cease to play).
So do factories, warehouses, offices, and other business buildings, yet they seem to be built more than almost any other building in this country. Grass roots businesses spring up all the time, some grow rapidly, some grow only a little, some wither and die but new ones regularly come to take their place.
What about shortening names. Mexico is technically the United Mexican States, but the name is almost always shortened to Mexico. The US is the only country on either continent with America in it's name. Following the rules of every other country on earth is to drop adjectives or nous like republic or statesand the remaining word is your short name. For almost all these nations the people are given a term that derives from that word.
That's interesting because I saw a study a few months ago that suggested that the school you graduated from wasn't very highly coorellated with your lifetime income, rather the schools you were rejected from were a better predictor.
How bout, facebook makes it easy for women to filter and select the few men they all want to sleep with, so those men sleep with huge numbers of women (and disease spreads rampantly).
Sure but the materials aren't free either. It appears a safe stop saw runs about $700 more than similar saws. That's acceptable on a 3k granite topped cabinent saw, but pretty unacceptable on a $300 tabletop saw (that's designed and priced for people who will use it a couple times a year).
Saw stop
Similar delta model
It's highly likely that the 20,000 users most likely to be injured would be the first buyers especially given the price. Also, having something that makes the blade injury proof, is exceedingly likely to cause users to take risks that they probably wouldn't consider if they had a regular table saw.
I have no problem bringing charges under the T.C.A. 39-13-212 defines criminally negligent homicide as criminally negligent conduct, which results in the alleged victim's death. For a defendant to be found guilty of criminally negligent homicide, the state of Tennessee must prove each of the following elements beyond a reasonable doubt: The defendant's criminally negligent conduct resulted in the death of the alleged victim; and The defendant acted with criminal negligence. The crux of negligent homicide is contained in the definition of criminal negligence under the Tennessee code. Pursuant to T.C.A. 39-11-302(d), “criminal negligence” refers to when a person acts negligently with respect to circumstances of which he or she should be aware will create a substantial and unjustifiable risk of homicide. To be criminal negligence, however, the risk must be of such a nature and degree that the failure to perceive it constitutes a gross deviation from the standard of care that an ordinary person would exercise under all the circumstances as viewed from the accused person's standpoint.
Most guns have a trigger pull ranging from 2-10 lbs. Some are adjustable (but that's normally not part of a pistol trigger). Target rifles are the lightest. I'd guess the trigger pull was about 2-3 lbs. If it's the new Sigma the pull wt is 3 lbs.
Step parental love has always been suspect, the villian in almost all fairy tales was a wicked step-parent.
I believe it's because New Egg does a lot of purchasing in the grey market. Intel and AMD have certain order quantities at which they cut prices on the whole order. So a computer manufacturer who needs say 95,000 processors might get a low enough rate on 100,000 that it's worth ordering more than they will use and selling the remainder to resellers who then sell to places like NewEgg. They're not supposed to do this, but it's pretty common and because everything goes through a couple layers of resellers, it's difficult for Intel to spot.
Bill Cosby had it right on Seattle, when the sun comes out, they move to appease the gods. My problem was that 90 of those 158 rainy days seem to be pressed into Jan-Mar.
Of course there is nothing quite as glorious as a sunny June day there.
The big problem I see with education in the US, is that say 20% of the parents want a school that basically acts as day care. However, they cannot admit this becuase that would make them bad parents.
The other 80% all want the same thing, one of a few very limited seats at the elite universities in the country. This results in two major problems. Arms races between school districts that actually place kids here with huge wastes of resources that aren't necessary except to keep up/ahead of other districts, and b strong desire to prevent other school districts from improving (and creating a new arms race competitor). Tying school funding to local house prices is a one of the causes of this fundamental problem.