Wow this whole thing is pure spin.
Read original article.
The Fire Department responds to a fire on the premises. Unrelated to the fire they find (quoting from the newspaper article linked):
Vessels of chemicals were all over the furniture and the floor, authorities said. The ensuing investigation involved a state hazardous materials team, fire and police officials, health officials, environmental officials and code enforcement officials. The Deebs were told to stay in a hotel while the slew of officials investigated and emptied the basement.
So while reaction from the official quoted is troubling--it sounds like initial response was spot on and it would have been irresponsible of the Fire Department not to check it out.
Simple and very true.
Choose to allow the market and control it, or outlaw the market and have no control over it.
And amazing number of posters are complaining that because it's a shadow market there is a lack of control.
I like the idea of G2G selling.
I sure as heck am not paying $75 for one HD movie I would watch and a pair of drink coasters.
I am sure there are many like me who would have bough the first movie on the day of release if it wasn't burdened with the 2 sequels.
Like Highlander, there should be only one.
Between the government, with its vast powers, and a commercial endeavor making a buck from readers reading at no cost.
Particularly since option out of the NYT's data mining is as easy as not visiting the site, while staying out of the governments data warehouse would probably take something like being unborn.
Our Tapeback up system is capable of saving 160 Gigs of data an hour.
The client was on a 10BaseT lan, and the throughput on a 10 Mbit lan is abou 4 Gig an hour. To get the 'advertised' though put they would have needed to upgrade their backbone to Gigabit.
Nothign like being hte tech having to explain that limitation our system is you network backbone.
Wow this whole thing is pure spin. Read original article. The Fire Department responds to a fire on the premises. Unrelated to the fire they find (quoting from the newspaper article linked): Vessels of chemicals were all over the furniture and the floor, authorities said. The ensuing investigation involved a state hazardous materials team, fire and police officials, health officials, environmental officials and code enforcement officials. The Deebs were told to stay in a hotel while the slew of officials investigated and emptied the basement. So while reaction from the official quoted is troubling--it sounds like initial response was spot on and it would have been irresponsible of the Fire Department not to check it out.
How are they supposed to know about tax ramifications when there is no law covering it? At the moment /no one/ knows the answer to those questions.
Simple and very true. Choose to allow the market and control it, or outlaw the market and have no control over it. And amazing number of posters are complaining that because it's a shadow market there is a lack of control. I like the idea of G2G selling.
I sure as heck am not paying $75 for one HD movie I would watch and a pair of drink coasters. I am sure there are many like me who would have bough the first movie on the day of release if it wasn't burdened with the 2 sequels. Like Highlander, there should be only one.
Between the government, with its vast powers, and a commercial endeavor making a buck from readers reading at no cost. Particularly since option out of the NYT's data mining is as easy as not visiting the site, while staying out of the governments data warehouse would probably take something like being unborn.
Our Tapeback up system is capable of saving 160 Gigs of data an hour. The client was on a 10BaseT lan, and the throughput on a 10 Mbit lan is abou 4 Gig an hour. To get the 'advertised' though put they would have needed to upgrade their backbone to Gigabit. Nothign like being hte tech having to explain that limitation our system is you network backbone.