He reported 100% real news (that Bush didn't complete his military obligation and was AWOL) but unfortunately had included a single piece of possibly forged evidence in with the body of completely true evidence.
Corporations have a need for revenue, but there's no law guaranteeing that (unless you count the MPAA/RIAA, the perpetually extended "temporary" copyrights, the broken patent system....)
"pillageplunder" wants to allow corporations to waltz on in and trade our precious natural resource for 30 pieces of silver.
How about this: Even under the bizarre idea that a corporation has rights like a citizen, they are surely no more deserving of special treatment than anyone else. Every person gets assigned a small slice of our shared bandwidth and corporations can just make do with whatever tiny amount they get.
I'm using two computers here, but only one is doing movemail. It's actually 1.6 on that machine. Don't know what to tell you, it works here and I didn't even do it either of these ways.
how something that happens on Earth can affect the rotation time. It's all about angular momentum.
Angular momentum is conserved and is calculated by L = Iw where I is the rotational inertia, w is the angular velocity and L is the constant product. So if I goes up (and I will show in a minute how that happens), w must go down.
I, the rotational inertia, is calculated different ways for different geometries. A long stick held by the end has a larger I than the same stick held by the center, for instance. Another example is a sphere, like the Earth, rotating on an axis. If it suddenly puts out a long arm, that's going to increase its rotation inertia considerably, decreasing its angular velocity. Lifting up a whole region by a few inches could easily do that.
30% is not 5x current methods. 30% is at par with current (i.e. in research but not devel) methods. It is 2x current if you compare apples to oranges and use actual solar panels you can buy at the store right now.
2x is a big increase, but it's a lot less than 5x.
First of all, there are 6 billion people on the planet but "only" a few million a year dying from aids. 1 billion is 1000 million, so we are looking at multiple centuries at least before all humans caught it, at present rates. That's a lot of generations.
Second of all, study epidemiology. When a critical percentage of the population is immune to a disease, it stops spreading. This is because if most of the people you come in contact with are immune, you can't pass it on very well. When AIDS immunity reaches this percentage, the selection pressure will be very low.
and I don't even have a machine that can run it, while I do have OpenOffice installed. Why? Because, frankly, OpenOffice sucks. I was trying to make a chart out of a spreadsheet the other day and a) they hid the menu option to do this and b) when I eventually found it it didn't do jack. I couldn't define axes, couldn't label anything, couldn't put two charts together. WTF.
but my dad probably has adult onset and I'm at risk for it. I'm deathly afraid of getting it not because diabetes is such a terrible disease but because I won't be able to prick my own finger (or any other body part, probably) to get a blood sample. Surely there's another way, say with urine samples, or an embedded monitor or something.
It wasn't Xerox, that invented the GUI, that revolutionized computers. It wasn't Microsoft, that actually delivered the GUI to millions of people, that revolutionized computers. It was Apple, that made a commercial about the GUI, THEY revolutionized computers.
They won't do it for the same reason they don't seed clouds to try to prevent hurricanes anymore: liability. If they do it and fail, or trigger a disaster, there will be hell to pay.
Because a disaster can happen at any time, I never wear a seatbelt or install smoke alarms plus I make sure to always wear loose clothing near my tablesaw and run with scissors.
There's only 300 million people in the US altogether. No way are 1/3 of them located within a couple kilometers of the East Coast. (Sure it hits non-US locations but also keep in mind that the death rate isn't 100% either.)
that doesn't mean that subjective judgement is "the best analysis", it just means that current benchmarks suck. Subjective judgement is what built the cathedrals of yore. That's because they didn't have a real "best analysis" back then. (And sure a lot of them held up, but most of the crumbled within a few years and in any case they are vastly overengineered, however aesthetic.)
Skyscrapers, all else being equal, yes. But human activity hasn't just been increasing Earth's moment of inertia, it has also been decreasing it. Cutting down millions of trees, for instance.
Angular momentum is conserved and is calculated by L = Iw where I is the rotational inertia, w is the angular velocity and L is the constant product. So if I goes up (and I will show in a minute how that happens), w must go down.
I, the rotational inertia, is calculated different ways for different geometries. A long stick held by the end has a larger I than the same stick held by the center, for instance. Another example is a sphere, like the Earth, rotating on an axis. If it suddenly puts out a long arm, that's going to increase its rotation inertia considerably, decreasing its angular velocity. Lifting up a whole region by a few inches could easily do that.
I thought they meant pre-deceased dead flies. As in, the bot would kill them.
If the mission depends on the target being a sloppy housekeeper, then that's totally different. Maybe for version 2.0 they could program their spybot to sense when the fridge is being opened and dart in there to feed on mold growing on the bottom.
He reported 100% real news (that Bush didn't complete his military obligation and was AWOL) but unfortunately had included a single piece of possibly forged evidence in with the body of completely true evidence.
For the first time in history, Man has placed an object on the surface of a planet outside the Earth-Moon system.
They should be able to get spectrum. How about paying rent to the owners: us.
Corporations have a need for revenue, but there's no law guaranteeing that (unless you count the MPAA/RIAA, the perpetually extended "temporary" copyrights, the broken patent system....)
How about this: Even under the bizarre idea that a corporation has rights like a citizen, they are surely no more deserving of special treatment than anyone else. Every person gets assigned a small slice of our shared bandwidth and corporations can just make do with whatever tiny amount they get.
"movemail" was one of my options when I set up my mail and I haven't found a single bug yet.
I'm using two computers here, but only one is doing movemail. It's actually 1.6 on that machine. Don't know what to tell you, it works here and I didn't even do it either of these ways.
Done and done. I'm using movemail on Moz 1.7.3 right this very moment.
Angular momentum is conserved and is calculated by L = Iw where I is the rotational inertia, w is the angular velocity and L is the constant product. So if I goes up (and I will show in a minute how that happens), w must go down. I, the rotational inertia, is calculated different ways for different geometries. A long stick held by the end has a larger I than the same stick held by the center, for instance. Another example is a sphere, like the Earth, rotating on an axis. If it suddenly puts out a long arm, that's going to increase its rotation inertia considerably, decreasing its angular velocity. Lifting up a whole region by a few inches could easily do that.
2x is a big increase, but it's a lot less than 5x.
There is no corollary (deduction or inference from axioms) about the change in price. There is an assumption of it.
Second of all, study epidemiology. When a critical percentage of the population is immune to a disease, it stops spreading. This is because if most of the people you come in contact with are immune, you can't pass it on very well. When AIDS immunity reaches this percentage, the selection pressure will be very low.
but I wouldn't call corporatism a "failed economic ideology".
Maybe the conservative media will start swinging back towards the center now.
and I don't even have a machine that can run it, while I do have OpenOffice installed. Why? Because, frankly, OpenOffice sucks. I was trying to make a chart out of a spreadsheet the other day and a) they hid the menu option to do this and b) when I eventually found it it didn't do jack. I couldn't define axes, couldn't label anything, couldn't put two charts together. WTF.
Getting young, educated people into the South should help in the upcoming election cycles.
but my dad probably has adult onset and I'm at risk for it. I'm deathly afraid of getting it not because diabetes is such a terrible disease but because I won't be able to prick my own finger (or any other body part, probably) to get a blood sample. Surely there's another way, say with urine samples, or an embedded monitor or something.
It wasn't Xerox, that invented the GUI, that revolutionized computers. It wasn't Microsoft, that actually delivered the GUI to millions of people, that revolutionized computers. It was Apple, that made a commercial about the GUI, THEY revolutionized computers.
They won't do it for the same reason they don't seed clouds to try to prevent hurricanes anymore: liability. If they do it and fail, or trigger a disaster, there will be hell to pay.
Because a disaster can happen at any time, I never wear a seatbelt or install smoke alarms plus I make sure to always wear loose clothing near my tablesaw and run with scissors.
There's only 300 million people in the US altogether. No way are 1/3 of them located within a couple kilometers of the East Coast. (Sure it hits non-US locations but also keep in mind that the death rate isn't 100% either.)
that doesn't mean that subjective judgement is "the best analysis", it just means that current benchmarks suck. Subjective judgement is what built the cathedrals of yore. That's because they didn't have a real "best analysis" back then. (And sure a lot of them held up, but most of the crumbled within a few years and in any case they are vastly overengineered, however aesthetic.)
Skyscrapers, all else being equal, yes. But human activity hasn't just been increasing Earth's moment of inertia, it has also been decreasing it. Cutting down millions of trees, for instance.
I, the rotational inertia, is calculated different ways for different geometries. A long stick held by the end has a larger I than the same stick held by the center, for instance. Another example is a sphere, like the Earth, rotating on an axis. If it suddenly puts out a long arm, that's going to increase its rotation inertia considerably, decreasing its angular velocity. Lifting up a whole region by a few inches could easily do that.
If the mission depends on the target being a sloppy housekeeper, then that's totally different. Maybe for version 2.0 they could program their spybot to sense when the fridge is being opened and dart in there to feed on mold growing on the bottom.