What's the 4 things you have to know to be an electrician?
1) 240 will shock you
2) 480 will kill you
3) 4:30 is quitting time
4) The boss is a son of a bitch
Will get you into any electrician's union.
What's the one thing you have to know to be a plumber?
1) Shit don't run uphill
And put "registration required" in the article next time.
Here's an Idea...
on
RIAA Quashed
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· Score: 3, Interesting
If the DMCA allows a subpoena to be send without a court order, then lets set up the filesharing software to track RIAA transactions so that we can issue a subpoena to them each time they sniff around on our shared directories. Turn it around and bury them in a legal morass.
Anyone installing a highly precise weight scale uses this data. Also note that the apparent gravity changes from a high level at the poles to a low level at the equator due to the surface rotational speed of the earth.
I'll leave it as an exercise to the reader to determine how much.
I'm surprised that the RIAA is so stupid as to go after them in the first wave. Just wait til daddy's little 4.0 gpa sweetie from Stanford starts crying on CNN about having to go to court because she listened to a Sheryl Crowe cut off of Kaaza.
Unlicensed is not the same as unregulated and uncontrolled. The FCC does control the frequency and does specify the conditions under which it is used. The bottom line is that the park has no jurisdiction or power to override the FCC. And the FCC says that anyone can use the frequency if they follow the rules.
I'm not a lawyer, but I've been around a lot of contracts and contract disputes. It's my understanding that if you sue someone, it's your responsibility to make a good faith effort to mitigate the damages.
In SCO's case, the damages could be easily mitigated by releasing enough detailed information so that the offending modules can be rewritten. Now we have a good idea why SCO has chosen not to do this, it is not to their short term advantage. They are relying on FUD to boost their stock prices and provide a cash stream to pay Bois and friends.
So the real question is, how will the court interpret the fact that they have refused to mitigate damages? Any lawyers out there that can answer this question?
That's all that needs to be said. It will cost quite a bit more than UPS ground, but you have a 99 percent chance of it arriving undamaged and a 100 percent chance of having any damaged covered by the insurance. That's way more than you can say for UPS.
Is if you have a disgruntled cop as a buyer. What's to stop him from using his superuser privilege to get your personal information and make your life miserable?
First they specify a sample period, perhaps a year. Then they multiply the number of units shipped during that time times the estimated hours per year that the drives are run then divide it by the number of units returned due to failure
For example, shipped 2 million drives last year, each ran 2080 hours ( 8 hours * 52 weeks), roughly 4 trillion hours total. Out of those 2 million units, they got 3466 returns. So the average MTBF was 1.2 million hours.
Not that there's anything wrong with being a Morman, but they do have their own culture, particularly if they live in Utah.
What's the 4 things you have to know to be an electrician? 1) 240 will shock you 2) 480 will kill you 3) 4:30 is quitting time 4) The boss is a son of a bitch Will get you into any electrician's union. What's the one thing you have to know to be a plumber? 1) Shit don't run uphill
And put "registration required" in the article next time.
If the DMCA allows a subpoena to be send without a court order, then lets set up the filesharing software to track RIAA transactions so that we can issue a subpoena to them each time they sniff around on our shared directories. Turn it around and bury them in a legal morass.
Thank you sir, for the quote of the day.
AS/400's come up on ebay all the time. Maybe a little small for your definition of a mainframe, but they will fit in your apartment.
They didn't round up all the units and sell them on ebay. I can think of a couple of companies that would.
http://stommel.tamu.edu/~baum/reid/book1/book/node 32.html
http://stommel.tamu.edu/~baum/reid/book1/book/node 32.html
I guess you missed that simple physics class
I'll leave it as an exercise to the reader to determine how much.
I'm surprised that the RIAA is so stupid as to go after them in the first wave. Just wait til daddy's little 4.0 gpa sweetie from Stanford starts crying on CNN about having to go to court because she listened to a Sheryl Crowe cut off of Kaaza.
Speaking of Boeing, don't forget a visit to Boeing Surplus.
You'd hear the antitrust bitchslap all the way to Redmond. The best Microsoft can hope for is a little offsides pot stirring.
Unlicensed is not the same as unregulated and uncontrolled. The FCC does control the frequency and does specify the conditions under which it is used. The bottom line is that the park has no jurisdiction or power to override the FCC. And the FCC says that anyone can use the frequency if they follow the rules.
Tell it to the FCC. They control the airwaves in your little stadium, not you.
In SCO's case, the damages could be easily mitigated by releasing enough detailed information so that the offending modules can be rewritten. Now we have a good idea why SCO has chosen not to do this, it is not to their short term advantage. They are relying on FUD to boost their stock prices and provide a cash stream to pay Bois and friends.
So the real question is, how will the court interpret the fact that they have refused to mitigate damages? Any lawyers out there that can answer this question?
You'll see that it probably doesn't even apply to North Carolina
I doubt it, although Lexmark would be a fool to push it.
I could find no information on a motherboard, just the processor chip.
The limit is 1 watt EIRP, not 1/10.
That's all that needs to be said. It will cost quite a bit more than UPS ground, but you have a 99 percent chance of it arriving undamaged and a 100 percent chance of having any damaged covered by the insurance. That's way more than you can say for UPS.
It's not like it hasn't happened before.
What with a new $80 shipping and handling charge for warranty repairs.
For example, shipped 2 million drives last year, each ran 2080 hours ( 8 hours * 52 weeks), roughly 4 trillion hours total. Out of those 2 million units, they got 3466 returns. So the average MTBF was 1.2 million hours.