Strictly speaking, of course, I don't have to prove my innocence, I just have to create a reasonable doubt in the jury's mind. That's how the criminal justice system works in the USA. How it works where you live, I've no idea.
If your print is in one of those databases, you are being searched.
I don't know what you mean by the word "searched," but it's not one I've encountered, and at 68, I've probably run across every meaning for "searched" that there is. Just running a database search looking for a match to a fingerprint is not searching any of the people who's prints are in that search, which is one of the reasons you don't need a warrant do search your own databases. I have never had my home, person, car or workspace searched by any law enforcement agency, which fits the meaning almost everybody has for that word. And no, if my print were found at a crime scene, I wouldn't have to prove my innocence; it would be up to them to prove my guilt, at least in the USofA.
Even worse, with every crime investigation, you will be searched without probable cause. It is a genie that can't be put back into the bottle.
Oh, for heaven's sake, put your tinfoil hat back on and get back on your meds! I was first fingerprinted when I joined the navy back in '69, and I've been fingerprinted since then by at least one other (county, not federal) agency since then. And, in the 48 years since that fingerprinting, I've never been searched by any investigative agency, with or without probable cause, nor been a Person of Interest in an investigation. I also have a number of friends who's fingerprints are in on record with one or more branch of the US Military, and none of them have ever been bothered this way.
I'm impressed by that developer's skill, but not in a good way. That's exactly the kind of brain fart error strncpy is designed to prevent. I presume, then, that this developer never bothered to make sure that the destination string was large enough for the job, and I hope that his next performance review reflected his carelessness.
So why wasn't the first thing you did having your cow-orker install a less user-hostile editor such as nano (my personal favorite, but YMMV) and use that instead? You know the old saying, "It's a poor workman who blames his tools."
You aren't the only one. I run Fedora on both my desktop and my laptop, and my sister, who isn't really a techie, runs Xubuntu. Yes, she still has a netbook with Windows on it, but that was to run Windows-only software for school. Now that it's not needed for that, she's seriously considering getting rid of Windows completely, and putting Xubuntu on it as well.
They may "love" Canonical and Ubuntu to death but Linux will continue.
Yes, I'm sure that when it comes to Linux, Microsoft would just love to emulate Elmira Duff and lock them away where they can love them and squeeze them and care for them and squeeze them and feed them and squeeze them for ever and ever.
Considering the number of bees in a hive, and the number of beekeepers who are going to want to get into this, I hope that they're going with IPv6, because there's no way you're going to keep them all in range of a single router, and there's nowhere near enough IPv4 addresses available for this.
If that were true, the standard for criminal and civil cases would be the same, and there'd be no reason to describe them in two different ways. In a civil case, the jury finds for the side that's most likely right, but in a criminal case, they must acquit unless they're sure the defendant's guilty.
"Probably" isn't good enough in a criminal case, where the standard is "beyond a reasonable doubt." This is, or was, a civil case where the standard is "the preponderance of evidence." That means that if the plaintiff can persuade the jury that there's a 51% chance that they're right, they win.
If you really want to see how much some people want cookies, you need to see Little Ol' Bosko and the Cannibals. Just remember, this was made back in the '30s, when people's attitudes were different, and don't be too quick to take offense.
The "resources" are trees, glue and ink. Not the cleanest method.
And at the end of the year, when they're replaced, how many of them get recycled, how many of them end up in landfills, and how many end up being burned, adding to the CO2 being thrown into the atmosphere? How much of the paper used was already recycled, and how many trees had to be cut down, adding to deforestation, just to print them? Printing the yellow pages, or even regular phone books today is just adding to a pointless ecological disaster, and I'm not going to spend even one second mourning their passing.
If you want old time FPS fun without worrying about such details as what's plausible, try out Redneck Rampage, the expansion pack Redneck Rampage: Suckin' Grits on Route 66 and the sequel Redneck Rampage Rides Again! Lots of surrealistic violence at several different difficulty levels. Yes, the clipping's a tad careless so that if you kill somebody behind a barrier their arm might stick through, but for me, at least, that just adds to the charm. Written for DOS, it plays under Windows, or in DOSBox, and if you're running Linux, it works just fine under Wine.
Actually, it translates to, "Will be OK for at least a week after this date." That's so that you can buy something on the last day and have some time to use it.
If we can change its velocity by 1 cm/s, after 1 year, its position will have changed by almost 316 K. That may not sound like much, but it would probably be enough to change a grazing impact to a very near miss. And, of course, the faster the projectile, the higher the kinetic energy is and the more effective it is. And if we can't get a higher impact velocity, we can always make the projectile more massive; this won't raise the kinetic energy much, but it will improve the momentum which might be enough.
The fact that you think a throw away email address prevents facebook from tracking you, logged in or not, shows how unprepared you are to comment on this subject.
I'm talking about somebody who uses it only for work, and only at work. Let them get my IP address and even my MAC address; it's not my computer, not my connection. Once I leave that company, there's nothing left that they can track.
Participation was not optional, in my case, if I wanted to keep my high-paying IT job. Our clients used facebook as the sole method for registration and tracking in mandatory activities.
So? Just create a throw-away email account, use that only for Facebook and put as little info into your profile as you can manage, all work related. Then, all you have to do is delete your account when you're through with it, along with the email address (or, if that's not practical, just walk away from that address) and nobody who knows you only through Facebook can find you.
I know that I'm going to get flamed for this, but correlation does not equal causation. It does, however, suggest it, and in your case, the suggestion is quite reasonable. The big problem here is that it's rather difficult to find out just what really happened, unless an appropriate investigation is carried out shortly after the incident, including examining a sample of the bees, to find out just what killed them. Judging only by what you wrote, this didn't happen, and what you have is, alas, only a single example. I hope this never happens to you again, but if it does, collect some of the dead bees and have the cause of death determined. If, and only if they died from the pesticide, you'll have some evidence to offer.
Of course they vent some heat. However, so does central heating, and it requires extra energy to move it around. Hypocausts don't, making them as efficient as possible.
...the flue gasses take away some (a lot of) the heat that burning generated and you can't use the gasses in the home because they're toxic.
You're a tad behind the times here. The Romans were using hypocausts to heat public buildings (and occasional private homes for the wealthy) in late Republican times, and there's evidence that other cultures were using them centuries earlier.
A hypocaust consisted of a furnace under the building, a space under the floor filled with hot air and combustion products that heated the building from below and exhaust pipes in the walls to get as much heat as possible into the building before anything was vented to the outside. Basically, it was a passive form of central heating.
People can buy a lot of battery power. Have it installed. Heat with gas or wood, cook with gas, gas hot water.
This isn't always an option. My sister and I live in what started out as our parent's retirement condo, in a gated retirement community. Not only is our condo all electric, the entire development is. That means that there aren't even gas lines underground that we could tap into. Unless you expect us to use propane for cooking and so on, our only choice is electricity, either from the grid, as we do now, or from solar panels. And, as we'd have to get a permit from the Homeowner's Association to put in the propane (fat chance of that ever happening) even that's effectively impossible.
Strictly speaking, of course, I don't have to prove my innocence, I just have to create a reasonable doubt in the jury's mind. That's how the criminal justice system works in the USA. How it works where you live, I've no idea.
If your print is in one of those databases, you are being searched.
I don't know what you mean by the word "searched," but it's not one I've encountered, and at 68, I've probably run across every meaning for "searched" that there is. Just running a database search looking for a match to a fingerprint is not searching any of the people who's prints are in that search, which is one of the reasons you don't need a warrant do search your own databases. I have never had my home, person, car or workspace searched by any law enforcement agency, which fits the meaning almost everybody has for that word. And no, if my print were found at a crime scene, I wouldn't have to prove my innocence; it would be up to them to prove my guilt, at least in the USofA.
Even worse, with every crime investigation, you will be searched without probable cause. It is a genie that can't be put back into the bottle.
Oh, for heaven's sake, put your tinfoil hat back on and get back on your meds! I was first fingerprinted when I joined the navy back in '69, and I've been fingerprinted since then by at least one other (county, not federal) agency since then. And, in the 48 years since that fingerprinting, I've never been searched by any investigative agency, with or without probable cause, nor been a Person of Interest in an investigation. I also have a number of friends who's fingerprints are in on record with one or more branch of the US Military, and none of them have ever been bothered this way.
...with strncpy overflowing the allocated space.
I'm impressed by that developer's skill, but not in a good way. That's exactly the kind of brain fart error strncpy is designed to prevent. I presume, then, that this developer never bothered to make sure that the destination string was large enough for the job, and I hope that his next performance review reflected his carelessness.
So why wasn't the first thing you did having your cow-orker install a less user-hostile editor such as nano (my personal favorite, but YMMV) and use that instead? You know the old saying, "It's a poor workman who blames his tools."
You aren't the only one. I run Fedora on both my desktop and my laptop, and my sister, who isn't really a techie, runs Xubuntu. Yes, she still has a netbook with Windows on it, but that was to run Windows-only software for school. Now that it's not needed for that, she's seriously considering getting rid of Windows completely, and putting Xubuntu on it as well.
why the hell would I let my kid go into IT.
Whatever gave you the idea that you have any control over what line of work your children go into?
They may "love" Canonical and Ubuntu to death but Linux will continue.
Yes, I'm sure that when it comes to Linux, Microsoft would just love to emulate Elmira Duff and lock them away where they can love them and squeeze them and care for them and squeeze them and feed them and squeeze them for ever and ever.
For any one hive, probably, but what happens when you have a beekeeper with eight hives, who wants to track all of them?
Considering the number of bees in a hive, and the number of beekeepers who are going to want to get into this, I hope that they're going with IPv6, because there's no way you're going to keep them all in range of a single router, and there's nowhere near enough IPv4 addresses available for this.
If that were true, the standard for criminal and civil cases would be the same, and there'd be no reason to describe them in two different ways. In a civil case, the jury finds for the side that's most likely right, but in a criminal case, they must acquit unless they're sure the defendant's guilty.
"Probably" isn't good enough in a criminal case, where the standard is "beyond a reasonable doubt." This is, or was, a civil case where the standard is "the preponderance of evidence." That means that if the plaintiff can persuade the jury that there's a 51% chance that they're right, they win.
If you really want to see how much some people want cookies, you need to see Little Ol' Bosko and the Cannibals. Just remember, this was made back in the '30s, when people's attitudes were different, and don't be too quick to take offense.
The "resources" are trees, glue and ink. Not the cleanest method.
And at the end of the year, when they're replaced, how many of them get recycled, how many of them end up in landfills, and how many end up being burned, adding to the CO2 being thrown into the atmosphere? How much of the paper used was already recycled, and how many trees had to be cut down, adding to deforestation, just to print them? Printing the yellow pages, or even regular phone books today is just adding to a pointless ecological disaster, and I'm not going to spend even one second mourning their passing.
If you want old time FPS fun without worrying about such details as what's plausible, try out Redneck Rampage, the expansion pack Redneck Rampage: Suckin' Grits on Route 66 and the sequel Redneck Rampage Rides Again! Lots of surrealistic violence at several different difficulty levels. Yes, the clipping's a tad careless so that if you kill somebody behind a barrier their arm might stick through, but for me, at least, that just adds to the charm. Written for DOS, it plays under Windows, or in DOSBox, and if you're running Linux, it works just fine under Wine.
Actually, it translates to, "Will be OK for at least a week after this date." That's so that you can buy something on the last day and have some time to use it.
If we can change its velocity by 1 cm/s, after 1 year, its position will have changed by almost 316 K. That may not sound like much, but it would probably be enough to change a grazing impact to a very near miss. And, of course, the faster the projectile, the higher the kinetic energy is and the more effective it is. And if we can't get a higher impact velocity, we can always make the projectile more massive; this won't raise the kinetic energy much, but it will improve the momentum which might be enough.
The fact that you think a throw away email address prevents facebook from tracking you, logged in or not, shows how unprepared you are to comment on this subject.
I'm talking about somebody who uses it only for work, and only at work. Let them get my IP address and even my MAC address; it's not my computer, not my connection. Once I leave that company, there's nothing left that they can track.
Participation was not optional, in my case, if I wanted to keep my high-paying IT job. Our clients used facebook as the sole method for registration and tracking in mandatory activities.
So? Just create a throw-away email account, use that only for Facebook and put as little info into your profile as you can manage, all work related. Then, all you have to do is delete your account when you're through with it, along with the email address (or, if that's not practical, just walk away from that address) and nobody who knows you only through Facebook can find you.
I know that I'm going to get flamed for this, but correlation does not equal causation. It does, however, suggest it, and in your case, the suggestion is quite reasonable. The big problem here is that it's rather difficult to find out just what really happened, unless an appropriate investigation is carried out shortly after the incident, including examining a sample of the bees, to find out just what killed them. Judging only by what you wrote, this didn't happen, and what you have is, alas, only a single example. I hope this never happens to you again, but if it does, collect some of the dead bees and have the cause of death determined. If, and only if they died from the pesticide, you'll have some evidence to offer.
Better yet, let's just call it evolution in action.
Of course they vent some heat. However, so does central heating, and it requires extra energy to move it around. Hypocausts don't, making them as efficient as possible.
...the flue gasses take away some (a lot of) the heat that burning generated and you can't use the gasses in the home because they're toxic.
You're a tad behind the times here. The Romans were using hypocausts to heat public buildings (and occasional private homes for the wealthy) in late Republican times, and there's evidence that other cultures were using them centuries earlier.
A hypocaust consisted of a furnace under the building, a space under the floor filled with hot air and combustion products that heated the building from below and exhaust pipes in the walls to get as much heat as possible into the building before anything was vented to the outside. Basically, it was a passive form of central heating.
People can buy a lot of battery power. Have it installed. Heat with gas or wood, cook with gas, gas hot water.
This isn't always an option. My sister and I live in what started out as our parent's retirement condo, in a gated retirement community. Not only is our condo all electric, the entire development is. That means that there aren't even gas lines underground that we could tap into. Unless you expect us to use propane for cooking and so on, our only choice is electricity, either from the grid, as we do now, or from solar panels. And, as we'd have to get a permit from the Homeowner's Association to put in the propane (fat chance of that ever happening) even that's effectively impossible.
I have a bad habit of not proof reding
Well, if you're that dyslexic, you should just hire yourself a poorfraeder.