Not only has the idea been around, but it has actually been performed multiple times. This was the just the first islet transplant from a [keyword]living[/keyword] donor. While still a great scientific event, the poster has misled and over-hyped this story.
The Japanese case is the first to be performed successfully using cells from a living donor. Previous cases involved donors who had died or who used their own reprocessed cells, which are injected back into their body.
Just KNOWING that creatures an be a hatched after that long stalled period makes you wonder about what life really is.. Offtopic, but this seems to help imply that death and birth don't really have beginnings or ends. Kind of scary to me at least.
Let me explain a little more. The massive paper forms were the worst. As soon as OpenSRS and the like came along, InterNIC's methods didn't even make sense. Nevertheless, they continued to charge $35/year. I remember trying to transfer a domain away from them which was immensly painful and purchasing humans.com from another person. The transfer took over half a year which is completely unacceptable. They would only let you make changes by paper forms or forms by e-mail, to which they would take months to even respond to, or never. To try to do anything over the phone with them took being on hold, patience and and all they would tell you was to refill and resend the forms. Then when they did respond to you, they would just tell you (barely legibally or understablly) that some minute detail was off, and you'd have to start all over again. And of course lets never forget the lawsuit brought agaisnt them for tying to hoard names and advertise on every unclaimed web-address. They were a horrible company to deal with and I would never do business with them again.
Getting unneccesarily technical, solely because your comment prompted me to actually look into that, you're correct, but Russia has been rated as having an overall more educated workforce and more importantly a higher overall investment attractiveness, but there is however, concern for corruption in doing business in Russia.
If you've been keeping up at all with the terrorist politics, you'd know they only deal with two dollar bills! They had suitcases full of them in their sieged airplanes.
After all they do have Jefferson's face on them, IMHO our greatest president, and surely he would be incarcerated in today's U.S... And for more than cultivating masses of hemp.
Then again, the code can also be distributed at v2 by someone else and still maintained at that version. Besides I can't imagine developers not liking v3.
either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version
I think you misunderstand- this is at the option of the code's creator. This is there for the coder's safety and so that the GPL can be enhanced for the benefit of free software not commercialization. Read more. They want to avoid future legal troubles, not control the code.
But who gets paid the money and who determines how much? Can rates increase as GPL'd software develops? Is money paid to Richard Stahlman [sic] to distribute through the FSF? Seems an easy way to get around this anyway would just be to have small closed-source scripts that would only be called from the GPL'd code. After all, what's wrong with that? (so long as they're not redistributing their code, just letting use of it as a service)
In some cases, it was better to not turn in anything at all.
Your professor probably thought he was preventing carelessness and half-assed studying, but in reality he's doing more to stifle learning and trying than anything. If you're a student in the class and think you might know how to work problem 4 in the HW but aren't for sure, and you just don't attempt doing it to be on the safe side, you haven't kinetically learned anything from trying then. Nor is your attempt ever graded or corrected so that you can understand better how the problem is correctly worked, so you stand no better than before. A good class is coming out knowing more and enjoying the subject more, not a frustrating grade.
ROFL! Yea I fucking hate you too. But on a more serious note people tired at work and during the day are much more likely to have traffic accidents, make mistakes, especially M.D.'s whose jobs are critical and be less effective at work. Those proposed numbers don't measure a lot of things which I'm sure would overcome the 10,000 barrels a day cost. Even higher A/C costs. It's just not worth it. I'd like to see DST completely repealed.
This is exactly why the United States needs to donate more money to basic research. Of late science has seemed unimportant to the government, research funds have reduced and things aren't being done to provoke technologies. Instead of the government subsidizing all sorts of medications from the drug industries, there just needs to be more research towards more permanent alternatives and a reduction in patent powers. There are gene therapies for AIDS coming out and candidates for vaccines, but yet the US government still spends more money on sending current drugs out than actually thinking long term. This is sad when a small country like Korea has gotten ahead of the US and they certainly have in stem cell research and now potetially gene therapy. It would be great to have California's CIRM on a larger level.
I too was expecting some pinball player profile with mad skills. Like the Billy Mitchell - the all time Pacman champion of the world of pinball. Has society moved past this now? I mean these perfect scores do get you recognition, but still wouldn't you feel you missed achieving other things you could have been doing?
Okay, the compressed air tank powers the engine, which works like a hydrogen powered engine which requires compression. The electric motor is relatively small and only used in certain low power requiring situations.
My question is why does the engine still look like a gasoline engine with compression chambers, pistons, cylinders, and the works? Is that just like some clipart, or am I completely missing something?
Re: You need to think about HTML, buddy...
on
**No Title**
·
· Score: 1
I've coded multiple websites! And I do know that
"<br> <br> <br> <br> <br> <br> "
would leave a space before that last quotation. Last time I checked, HTML formatting doesn't come up as words.
Well, actually an ending quotation mark should never be by itself on a line. There should have been at least one character before it, or some characters from the preceding line pulled down.
Why should you be afraid of something that actually has the possible potential to repair cells, destroy dangerous cell intruders, and maintain ideal chemical levels in cells? Sounds like a dream to me. Can you imagine being better than well?
"Do you honestly feel that your information, and the Internet, is safer in the hands of a private unregulated "not for profit" US registered company that is given it's power by the US government and gives most (if not all) of it's contracts for vital services to US for-profit companies?"
Yes, and there's no doubt in my mind. There is a very simple reason to this. If we didn't like the way the way the current body is regulating it, everyone, or even just few, could actually go so far as to use another regulating body. Even if the transition was very slow, there could still be a shift in the regulating body. Don't like a regualating choice the government made? Tough luck, you don't get to choose anyone else. Additidonally, think Carnivore^10.
Has anyone had any experiences with the lengthy compilation having a bad impact on their hard drive? I've long been wondering and considering trying Gentoo. And to those who are very experienced in Gentoo, has all the learning/tweaking/compiling been worth the extra power/costumizability in the end?
Thanks for another dupe (Front page news 36 hours ago).. Well, if nothing else, this one has a few more details.
In related news, the declassified document now shows Laden originally planned to use spoons isntead of box cutters to hijack the planes...
/who came up with that anyway? I've never picked up a spoon and thought, "wow that's a pretty input device.."?
Not only has the idea been around, but it has actually been performed multiple times. This was the just the first islet transplant from a [keyword]living[/keyword] donor. While still a great scientific event, the poster has misled and over-hyped this story.
Read more
The Japanese case is the first to be performed successfully using cells from a living donor. Previous cases involved donors who had died or who used their own reprocessed cells, which are injected back into their body.
Just KNOWING that creatures an be a hatched after that long stalled period makes you wonder about what life really is.. Offtopic, but this seems to help imply that death and birth don't really have beginnings or ends. Kind of scary to me at least.
Let me explain a little more. The massive paper forms were the worst. As soon as OpenSRS and the like came along, InterNIC's methods didn't even make sense. Nevertheless, they continued to charge $35/year. I remember trying to transfer a domain away from them which was immensly painful and purchasing humans.com from another person. The transfer took over half a year which is completely unacceptable. They would only let you make changes by paper forms or forms by e-mail, to which they would take months to even respond to, or never. To try to do anything over the phone with them took being on hold, patience and and all they would tell you was to refill and resend the forms. Then when they did respond to you, they would just tell you (barely legibally or understablly) that some minute detail was off, and you'd have to start all over again. And of course lets never forget the lawsuit brought agaisnt them for tying to hoard names and advertise on every unclaimed web-address. They were a horrible company to deal with and I would never do business with them again.
There used to be nothing worse than Network Solutions.
Getting unneccesarily technical, solely because your comment prompted me to actually look into that, you're correct, but Russia has been rated as having an overall more educated workforce and more importantly a higher overall investment attractiveness, but there is however, concern for corruption in doing business in Russia.
'our hackers are the best in the world.'
A lot of script kiddies claim that..
If you've been keeping up at all with the terrorist politics, you'd know they only deal with two dollar bills! They had suitcases full of them in their sieged airplanes.
After all they do have Jefferson's face on them, IMHO our greatest president, and surely he would be incarcerated in today's U.S... And for more than cultivating masses of hemp.
Then again, the code can also be distributed at v2 by someone else and still maintained at that version. Besides I can't imagine developers not liking v3.
/., GPL 3 is likely to include changes to take into account international copyright law and a new strategy to cope with the threat of patents, according to Moglen.
Posted a month or so ago on
either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version
I think you misunderstand- this is at the option of the code's creator. This is there for the coder's safety and so that the GPL can be enhanced for the benefit of free software not commercialization. Read more. They want to avoid future legal troubles, not control the code.
But who gets paid the money and who determines how much? Can rates increase as GPL'd software develops? Is money paid to Richard Stahlman [sic] to distribute through the FSF? Seems an easy way to get around this anyway would just be to have small closed-source scripts that would only be called from the GPL'd code. After all, what's wrong with that? (so long as they're not redistributing their code, just letting use of it as a service)
In some cases, it was better to not turn in anything at all.
Your professor probably thought he was preventing carelessness and half-assed studying, but in reality he's doing more to stifle learning and trying than anything. If you're a student in the class and think you might know how to work problem 4 in the HW but aren't for sure, and you just don't attempt doing it to be on the safe side, you haven't kinetically learned anything from trying then. Nor is your attempt ever graded or corrected so that you can understand better how the problem is correctly worked, so you stand no better than before. A good class is coming out knowing more and enjoying the subject more, not a frustrating grade.
ROFL! Yea I fucking hate you too. But on a more serious note people tired at work and during the day are much more likely to have traffic accidents, make mistakes, especially M.D.'s whose jobs are critical and be less effective at work. Those proposed numbers don't measure a lot of things which I'm sure would overcome the 10,000 barrels a day cost. Even higher A/C costs. It's just not worth it. I'd like to see DST completely repealed.
This is exactly why the United States needs to donate more money to basic research. Of late science has seemed unimportant to the government, research funds have reduced and things aren't being done to provoke technologies. Instead of the government subsidizing all sorts of medications from the drug industries, there just needs to be more research towards more permanent alternatives and a reduction in patent powers. There are gene therapies for AIDS coming out and candidates for vaccines, but yet the US government still spends more money on sending current drugs out than actually thinking long term. This is sad when a small country like Korea has gotten ahead of the US and they certainly have in stem cell research and now potetially gene therapy. It would be great to have California's CIRM on a larger level.
Well interactive TV can't get much worse than MTV's TRL and similar with all the little LOL OMG!! MUDVAYNE IS SOO COOL AND EXCITING AND ORIGINAL!
He's making "liberal TV" But he says he's not.
Nah, I'd guess it to be more like Robot Wars 24/7.
I too was expecting some pinball player profile with mad skills. Like the Billy Mitchell - the all time Pacman champion of the world of pinball. Has society moved past this now? I mean these perfect scores do get you recognition, but still wouldn't you feel you missed achieving other things you could have been doing?
Okay, the compressed air tank powers the engine, which works like a hydrogen powered engine which requires compression. The electric motor is relatively small and only used in certain low power requiring situations.
My question is why does the engine still look like a gasoline engine with compression chambers, pistons, cylinders, and the works? Is that just like some clipart, or am I completely missing something?
I've coded multiple websites! And I do know that
"<br>
<br>
<br>
<br>
<br>
<br> "
would leave a space before that last quotation. Last time I checked, HTML formatting doesn't come up as words.
"
"
Well, actually an ending quotation mark should never be by itself on a line. There should have been at least one character before it, or some characters from the preceding line pulled down.
Why should you be afraid of something that actually has the possible potential to repair cells, destroy dangerous cell intruders, and maintain ideal chemical levels in cells? Sounds like a dream to me. Can you imagine being better than well?
"Do you honestly feel that your information, and the Internet, is safer in the hands of a private unregulated "not for profit" US registered company that is given it's power by the US government and gives most (if not all) of it's contracts for vital services to US for-profit companies?"
Yes, and there's no doubt in my mind. There is a very simple reason to this. If we didn't like the way the way the current body is regulating it, everyone, or even just few, could actually go so far as to use another regulating body. Even if the transition was very slow, there could still be a shift in the regulating body. Don't like a regualating choice the government made? Tough luck, you don't get to choose anyone else. Additidonally, think Carnivore^10.
Has anyone had any experiences with the lengthy compilation having a bad impact on their hard drive? I've long been wondering and considering trying Gentoo. And to those who are very experienced in Gentoo, has all the learning/tweaking/compiling been worth the extra power/costumizability in the end?