It isn't like it takes much thought to point out that it is silly bigotry designed to score some points with his base and move on to more intellectual concerns, though. A few interns write some press statements decrying this instead of reading Facebook at their desk.
Yeah, once the cost is down they'll sell like hotcakes. After switching to lithium ion line trimmer I won't be going back to ICE for any lawn equipment as I replace things that break down. A car would be great, although I expect I'll be in for one last ICE car when my current one needs replaced.
Eh, there's a lot of assumptions there regarding biology that don't hold up under scrutiny. We do exclude some folks with certain medical conditions from the army but I'm not sure why ambiguous gender would be one of them.
"Inbred" isn't really a thing with viruses, but I digress. While you're correct that drift could occur, it is easy to test in an ELISA if the antigens are still equivalent to the wild type strain as far as the immune system is concerned.
Those seem like pretty benign policy items to set. The shower stuff might be a little harder on the social norms, but not any inherently more problematic than showering with LBG service members. Easier still if they just go full communal Starship Troopers style. If the Army can train recruits into being more ok with killing people than the general population, they can handle social awkwardness.
The reason you can get lifelong immunity (10 or 20 years, anyhow, since that is how long your B cells live) from the vaccine is that these viruses don't mutate much and with attenuated live virus you're getting the whole organism. So all of its proteins would have to mutate enough to evade the immune system at once. Like with us, many proteins will be highly conserved. With fast mutating, killed virus or antigen only vaccines you might need to get one every year like flu. Comparing efficacy across lots is probably done by ELISA and would be very easy. I don't have firsthand knowledge with MMR testing but each manufacturer would be required to run a QA lab that would routinely check the lots being manufactured. No one made a giant vat in the 70s that we are still consuming.
A salesman dropped by yesterday saying there were extending fiber in my area, and while it was competitive price/performance to Spectrum/TW Cable it was a lot more for a lot less compared to WOW which we've been using so no sale... I had been excited thinking they'd be offering gigabit but it was just 25 megabit when the local cable co's are starting baseline offers at 100 these days.
I know this is Slashdot so we have to point this out every time a correlative study comes out, but as stated above, correlated does imply causation. If there is no correlation you're not going to find causation. You generally have to do some more work after the correlation is elucidated to have conclusive evidence of causation, but if you already have a mechanism (ie, head trauma causes CTE) then you're most of the way there. It'd be a hard thing to get sample size for but it'd be awesome data to see CTE relative to position, too. I'm sure the linemen are more likely to get it than the field goal kicker.
We didn't buy much we hadn't intended to buy already but waited to see if went on sale. It was still better than the first one, that was just a bizarre collection of junk.
Settings > Notifications
There isn't much reason to leave most of that on, especially if it is hurting your productivity. You don't leave the sound effect for a new email message on, do you?
That's a good point... it'd be like offering a 'human translator' device that worked for humans raised by wolves... there's no reason to expect a dog to have the same language/dialect as another when they're raised independently.
It does make it easier to compare prices, though, since otherwise different online stores have different shipping costs for the same items and it can be hard to see the shipping cost without nearly checking out on some sites.
Usually I ignore the purported discount on Amazon, as they are just listing MSRP. It actually makes me ignore their adverts more since I know that the discount cited is nonsense. If they end up forced to display 'real' discounts then I suppose I might take them more seriously. They're often still the cheapest but not by nearly the margin the % off MSRP would indicate.
Maybe... but if the law is changed to allow longer expiration then someone else is shouldering the liability by extending it, so the manufacturer still may not care so long as they can wash their hands of it.
They'll probably just shrug. To them, the expiration date is like a warranty. "We can't vouch for the safety/efficacy of the product after the expiration date" is all they need to say. It'd be like because you know a guy that has a 10 year old Honda, Honda should warranty all their cars for 10 years. Its the hospital that would get in trouble for giving you pills past the expiration date.
You travel with full blister sheets of a variety of medicines? Anyhow, it is easy to figure out what they are if you forget, you just google up the markings. It isn't like olden days when they'd be in random split capsules.
It might not make them cheaper to slap the longer expiration on there, though. If they aren't keeping the manufacturing line active then there are startup and shutdown costs. If they don't forecast demand well then there'll be more shortages, etc. For nominal manufacturing costs it should be produced at some constant sustainable rate.
I don't see how any of those are relevant to a cash exchange during a Craigslist transaction.
It isn't like it takes much thought to point out that it is silly bigotry designed to score some points with his base and move on to more intellectual concerns, though. A few interns write some press statements decrying this instead of reading Facebook at their desk.
So you don't think a pragmatic solution and hoping that the doomsayers are wrong about the tipping point is worthwhile?
Yeah, once the cost is down they'll sell like hotcakes. After switching to lithium ion line trimmer I won't be going back to ICE for any lawn equipment as I replace things that break down. A car would be great, although I expect I'll be in for one last ICE car when my current one needs replaced.
Microbes can digest lignin now so we can't repeat the carboniferous period. Ergo, it is only slightly less finite in quantity than the various metals.
Eh, there's a lot of assumptions there regarding biology that don't hold up under scrutiny. We do exclude some folks with certain medical conditions from the army but I'm not sure why ambiguous gender would be one of them.
"Inbred" isn't really a thing with viruses, but I digress. While you're correct that drift could occur, it is easy to test in an ELISA if the antigens are still equivalent to the wild type strain as far as the immune system is concerned.
Those seem like pretty benign policy items to set. The shower stuff might be a little harder on the social norms, but not any inherently more problematic than showering with LBG service members. Easier still if they just go full communal Starship Troopers style. If the Army can train recruits into being more ok with killing people than the general population, they can handle social awkwardness.
The reason you can get lifelong immunity (10 or 20 years, anyhow, since that is how long your B cells live) from the vaccine is that these viruses don't mutate much and with attenuated live virus you're getting the whole organism. So all of its proteins would have to mutate enough to evade the immune system at once. Like with us, many proteins will be highly conserved. With fast mutating, killed virus or antigen only vaccines you might need to get one every year like flu. Comparing efficacy across lots is probably done by ELISA and would be very easy. I don't have firsthand knowledge with MMR testing but each manufacturer would be required to run a QA lab that would routinely check the lots being manufactured. No one made a giant vat in the 70s that we are still consuming.
A salesman dropped by yesterday saying there were extending fiber in my area, and while it was competitive price/performance to Spectrum/TW Cable it was a lot more for a lot less compared to WOW which we've been using so no sale... I had been excited thinking they'd be offering gigabit but it was just 25 megabit when the local cable co's are starting baseline offers at 100 these days.
I know this is Slashdot so we have to point this out every time a correlative study comes out, but as stated above, correlated does imply causation. If there is no correlation you're not going to find causation. You generally have to do some more work after the correlation is elucidated to have conclusive evidence of causation, but if you already have a mechanism (ie, head trauma causes CTE) then you're most of the way there. It'd be a hard thing to get sample size for but it'd be awesome data to see CTE relative to position, too. I'm sure the linemen are more likely to get it than the field goal kicker.
Has anyone you've bought or sold something with on Craigslist specified Bitcoin over cash?
Ha, I think I'll start thinking of cryptocurrencies as beanie baby collections.
We didn't buy much we hadn't intended to buy already but waited to see if went on sale. It was still better than the first one, that was just a bizarre collection of junk.
Got a good deal haggling on appliances! But yeah... it is mostly a giant cell phone kiosk now.
Settings > Notifications There isn't much reason to leave most of that on, especially if it is hurting your productivity. You don't leave the sound effect for a new email message on, do you?
That's a good point... it'd be like offering a 'human translator' device that worked for humans raised by wolves... there's no reason to expect a dog to have the same language/dialect as another when they're raised independently.
It does make it easier to compare prices, though, since otherwise different online stores have different shipping costs for the same items and it can be hard to see the shipping cost without nearly checking out on some sites.
Usually I ignore the purported discount on Amazon, as they are just listing MSRP. It actually makes me ignore their adverts more since I know that the discount cited is nonsense. If they end up forced to display 'real' discounts then I suppose I might take them more seriously. They're often still the cheapest but not by nearly the margin the % off MSRP would indicate.
Maybe... but if the law is changed to allow longer expiration then someone else is shouldering the liability by extending it, so the manufacturer still may not care so long as they can wash their hands of it.
I think you replied to the wrong post.
They'll probably just shrug. To them, the expiration date is like a warranty. "We can't vouch for the safety/efficacy of the product after the expiration date" is all they need to say. It'd be like because you know a guy that has a 10 year old Honda, Honda should warranty all their cars for 10 years. Its the hospital that would get in trouble for giving you pills past the expiration date.
A proper disposal would be a controlled incineration so I suppose you could replicate that easily enough... just don't be by the fumes just in case!
You travel with full blister sheets of a variety of medicines? Anyhow, it is easy to figure out what they are if you forget, you just google up the markings. It isn't like olden days when they'd be in random split capsules.
It might not make them cheaper to slap the longer expiration on there, though. If they aren't keeping the manufacturing line active then there are startup and shutdown costs. If they don't forecast demand well then there'll be more shortages, etc. For nominal manufacturing costs it should be produced at some constant sustainable rate.