I really think you are confused. This "blue screen" is the one that DOS-based Windows displayed when a program had stopped responding. If you were lucky, you could kill the program and save your work before memory was totally corrupted. In NT-based Windows, the system remains stable when one application hangs because of separate memory spaces. You can keep working after you kill the bad app. In either case, you lose whatever you were doing in the bad app, but in the latter, at least the system remains stable.
In case people didn't really buy into that quaint Enlightenment notion of limited government in the future, they added the ninth and tenth amendments to clarify that the federal government has only the rights enumerated and that not enumerating a right for the people (or the states) doesn't mean they don't have it.
"refineddisplayparcelsuited" is not a common phrase, and this isn't Master Mind where the attacker gets hints when he correctly selects part of the password.
I love how we spend so much time picking passwords that are hard for people to guess-- or remember-- when computer programs can only be written in a practical matter to try the most common dictionary words or "hunter2"-type passwords. Past that, it's all brute force whether you used "j$b01[BaP*@" or "refineddisplayparcelsuited" because the program has no idea how much of the character set your password used until it's been cracked.
She explained that since they called her it seemed legitimate.
Isn't that reverse logic? Anyone can call anyone. If some guy walks up to me on the street and offers to sell me a watch, does that seem safer than going to a jeweler's shop?
If that were the case, kids who are overfed carbohydrates would be smarter and taller, not fatter and dumber.
Now who's drawing premature conclusions!
Here's the legendary Slashdot car analogy. Put an 850 CFM Holley on a straight six in a 1960s Pontiac Lemans. Will that turn it into a GTO? No! The human body can't process those calories any faster. They have to be changed into glucose.
Your implication that being overweight makes kids dumber is so stupid, I wonder what your motivation is.
You are right. But then without tax and revenue from licensing how will the government function?
No income tax there? No VAT or sales tax? No vehicle licensing fees? No drivers' license fees? No fuel taxes? These bogus "licenses" are just the way "progressive" governments enact regressive taxes to keep the rabble from starting their own businesses and possibly challenging the elite.
Trying to make a law suit against current valid law is just idiotic. Try to change the law instead, well if you can.
This is not a rule to follow in a democratic form of government. If it were, then we'd have to have left the Jim Crow laws in place because, after all, they were "valid". Perhaps the government has no right to tell people what, or who, they are allowed to carry in their vehicles.
If I was a paid government shill, I wouldn't be taking public transport to work everyday.
VP Biden did when he was a senator. But he's also an attention-whore who makes five times the average US household money and still doesn't have any money left at the end of the year for charity. With those budgeting skills, he probably NEEDS to take the train.
There are crazy people who seem to think that giving the monolithic federal government more power is going to increase, rather than decrease, their liberty.
We are becoming a country where the rich can do anything they want to everyone else.
Comcast and CenturyLink are corporations; they are not "rich" people, corporate personhood aside. More importantly, they are public utilities. Government has created corporations and offered privileges to utilities, so that's where the problem lies-- not with "rich" people.
Talking heads discussing the weather does not constitute a "weather report" any more than a talking head discussing politics constitutes "news".
Of course, the irony is the fact that weather reports have uncertainty due to the element of randomness, so every weather report is not necessarily "fiction" but it's not "true" either.
The fifth amendment also prohibits depriving people of their right to liberty without due process. I'm pretty sure that "liberty" involves moving about freely.
This assumes that what you want out of a legislative body is quantity. That's pretty much the opposite, since nearly every law Congress passes restricts freedom (or at least transfers it from one group of people to another) and thus, getting something done is usually bad.
I really think you are confused. This "blue screen" is the one that DOS-based Windows displayed when a program had stopped responding. If you were lucky, you could kill the program and save your work before memory was totally corrupted. In NT-based Windows, the system remains stable when one application hangs because of separate memory spaces. You can keep working after you kill the bad app. In either case, you lose whatever you were doing in the bad app, but in the latter, at least the system remains stable.
In case people didn't really buy into that quaint Enlightenment notion of limited government in the future, they added the ninth and tenth amendments to clarify that the federal government has only the rights enumerated and that not enumerating a right for the people (or the states) doesn't mean they don't have it.
That's exactly why I still use an analog modem with strong encryption for all my communications. Old-school, and rock soNO CARRIER
Are you being sarcastic? The tool to do that is 18 years old, and it's called "cascading style sheets".
"refineddisplayparcelsuited" is not a common phrase, and this isn't Master Mind where the attacker gets hints when he correctly selects part of the password.
I love how we spend so much time picking passwords that are hard for people to guess-- or remember-- when computer programs can only be written in a practical matter to try the most common dictionary words or "hunter2"-type passwords. Past that, it's all brute force whether you used "j$b01[BaP*@" or "refineddisplayparcelsuited" because the program has no idea how much of the character set your password used until it's been cracked.
Isn't that reverse logic? Anyone can call anyone. If some guy walks up to me on the street and offers to sell me a watch, does that seem safer than going to a jeweler's shop?
Borrowed from Westinghouse-type air brakes on trains.
Not in this nanny world! People don't let their kids play in the yard anymore, for fear a roving priest might molest them.
Now who's drawing premature conclusions!
Here's the legendary Slashdot car analogy. Put an 850 CFM Holley on a straight six in a 1960s Pontiac Lemans. Will that turn it into a GTO? No! The human body can't process those calories any faster. They have to be changed into glucose.
Your implication that being overweight makes kids dumber is so stupid, I wonder what your motivation is.
It's 2 GB per process-- period-- unless the /3GB switch is used. This is virtual memory, so it's not affected by hardware.
The usable RAM varies depending on hardware. It will be something less than 4 GB. I have seen machines with as little as 2.8 GB available.
Not necessarily in that order... but then we're talking about someone who could only come up with the handle "Femitheist".
He's on about bad science nonsense. You know, the kind that is based on politics.
Snakeheads aren't carp. Snakeheads actually taste good.
The OP was a clumsy attempt at humor, but I have issue with claiming that Daimler would be OK with allowing an $18-50 million sale go away.
No income tax there? No VAT or sales tax? No vehicle licensing fees? No drivers' license fees? No fuel taxes? These bogus "licenses" are just the way "progressive" governments enact regressive taxes to keep the rabble from starting their own businesses and possibly challenging the elite.
This is not a rule to follow in a democratic form of government. If it were, then we'd have to have left the Jim Crow laws in place because, after all, they were "valid". Perhaps the government has no right to tell people what, or who, they are allowed to carry in their vehicles.
Broken Window Fallacy trolls...
VP Biden did when he was a senator. But he's also an attention-whore who makes five times the average US household money and still doesn't have any money left at the end of the year for charity. With those budgeting skills, he probably NEEDS to take the train.
There are crazy people who seem to think that giving the monolithic federal government more power is going to increase, rather than decrease, their liberty.
Comcast and CenturyLink are corporations; they are not "rich" people, corporate personhood aside. More importantly, they are public utilities. Government has created corporations and offered privileges to utilities, so that's where the problem lies-- not with "rich" people.
Talking heads discussing the weather does not constitute a "weather report" any more than a talking head discussing politics constitutes "news".
Of course, the irony is the fact that weather reports have uncertainty due to the element of randomness, so every weather report is not necessarily "fiction" but it's not "true" either.
The fifth amendment also prohibits depriving people of their right to liberty without due process. I'm pretty sure that "liberty" involves moving about freely.
This assumes that what you want out of a legislative body is quantity. That's pretty much the opposite, since nearly every law Congress passes restricts freedom (or at least transfers it from one group of people to another) and thus, getting something done is usually bad.
Probably chicory (which is more of a lavender color) or creeping charlie. I guess you could steep the roots and see if it tastes like camp coffee. :-P
One time event? I don't think artificial turf is exempt from the laws of physics. It's going to need repair, cleaning, and eventual replacement.