You only need eight people, and one ship that's only 300 by 50 by 30 cubits is enough to carry all the other animals and supplies required to completely start from scratch. Study it out.
" The town will never be the same. After the Tangiers, the big corporations took it all over. Today it looks like Disneyland. And while the kids play cardboard pirates, Mommy and Daddy drop the house payments and Junior's college money on the poker slots. In the old days, dealers knew your name, what you drank, what you played. Today, it's like checkin' into an airport. And if you order room service, you're lucky if you get it by Thursday.
Today, it's all gone. You get a whale show up with four million in a suitcase, and some twenty-five-year-old hotel school kid is gonna want his Social Security Number. After the Teamsters got knocked out of the box, the corporations tore down practically every one of the old casinos. And where did the money come from to rebuild the pyramids? Junk bonds. "
FTA:
MP3tunes had filed for bankruptcy under Chapter 7 code, which envisages liquidation of a company's operation. In the court filing, the company had listed out assets of about $7,800 and liabilities of $2.1 million.
Good luck with that...
They should just sell some of the trillions of dollars worth of song files they're holding on to. According to statutory damages, each song is worth about $150K; they could erase their entire debt by selling just 14 tracks.
I'm excited to be that much closer to Star Trek-type replicators, even if we're still just a half-step into a long journey.
Synthehol and hot Earl Grey tea, here I come!
It's possible AT&T is trying to sell spectrum in sparse markets, where smaller carriers have a better business model. If AT&T can pick up 10mhz in New York, it's worth the price to buy and re-sell 10mhz in Killdeer, North Dakota.
"...could have wider application like disaster recovery."
Carriers already have a low-cost (for them) DIY cellular disaster recovery option, they're called Cells on Wheels or COWs. COWs have their own power sources and can be rolled in for disasters, or to augment coverage for large gatherings (sports events or concerts) and are already set up to integrate to their own established networks.
Verizon grows in wireless was because they had some of the best plans back in the late 90's. Back when Cell Phones charged you for Local, Long Distance calls, roaming fees.... Verizon was one of the first to give people a plan that allows a call to be a call no matter where you were at or who you were calling... A big deal back then. It opened Cell Phones for being a toy for the rich to an every-man tool.
Actually, that was an AT&T Wireless Services plan, the Digital One Rate, introduced in 1998 (the same year that Bell Atlantic and GTE merged to form Verizon Wireless).
I'll charge them 1% of whatever they're going to spend on "boosting security" to advise that they do not build reactors in flood planes or on fault lines.
You only need eight people, and one ship that's only 300 by 50 by 30 cubits is enough to carry all the other animals and supplies required to completely start from scratch. Study it out.
Oh, that's right. Unregulated currency free from government interference. Enjoy!
Isn't it obvious? That's not tidal activity, those plumes are breaching moon-whales.
Warning: incompatible advice detected.
-Same "Ace" Rothstein in Casino
Don't enter into any more agreements with those frackers.
...for your next-gen gaming console that requires a persistent internet connection? Deal with it.
The only games I have and will ever have that require an internet connection are MMOs, because, well, that's the point.
I've been visiting Slashdot less and less, and stories like this show me I've been making the right choice. So where is the core audience moving to?
Found a picture of the submitter. http://img159.imageshack.us/img159/7673/descent.jpg/
"The rest of us" shouldn't be coding. At least according to the article directly before this one. http://developers.slashdot.org/story/12/09/20/2015204/why-non-coders-shouldnt-write-code
They should just sell some of the trillions of dollars worth of song files they're holding on to. According to statutory damages, each song is worth about $150K; they could erase their entire debt by selling just 14 tracks.
Lucky for you they maintain a healthy tour schedule.
I read this book probably a hundred times in junior high.
I'm excited to be that much closer to Star Trek-type replicators, even if we're still just a half-step into a long journey. Synthehol and hot Earl Grey tea, here I come!
Tablet makers should shut down and give the money back to the shareholders.
Fallacy of sunk costs?
What if he was naked outside the ionosphere?
Get your HP short positions in order!
It's possible AT&T is trying to sell spectrum in sparse markets, where smaller carriers have a better business model. If AT&T can pick up 10mhz in New York, it's worth the price to buy and re-sell 10mhz in Killdeer, North Dakota.
Carriers already have a low-cost (for them) DIY cellular disaster recovery option, they're called Cells on Wheels or COWs. COWs have their own power sources and can be rolled in for disasters, or to augment coverage for large gatherings (sports events or concerts) and are already set up to integrate to their own established networks.
Need to make sure the company is guarded against the "mass firings, short term gain pump and dump" schemes that seem to be so popular these days.
Actually, that was an AT&T Wireless Services plan, the Digital One Rate, introduced in 1998 (the same year that Bell Atlantic and GTE merged to form Verizon Wireless).
Actually, we don't call smart criminals anything, because they're never caught and we don't know who they are unless they want us to. Ask Kaiser Soze.
Whoops! Flood planes should be flood plains; though floods do tend to congregate on low-lying planes.
I'll charge them 1% of whatever they're going to spend on "boosting security" to advise that they do not build reactors in flood planes or on fault lines.