You eat margarine don't you? From that example you should know that toxic catalysts don't always end up in the end product - especially since here the end product is a gas.
Part of the problem with Teamviewer is that after being installed it usually runs after every startup so those security holes are always open to anything that can get as far as your PC. I keep on finding it running on machines where the user has not used Teamviewer for well over a year.
VNC on the other hand I can't figure out
You probably had some problem such as firewall software in the way which made such an otherwise utterly trivial task difficult. It doesn't do as much as Teamviewer and is a lot simpler to set up and use, plus there has been around twenty years to shake out the bugs.
should be cooked like a beef steak - it's delicious. You have to cook the meat to be rare or else it gets very tough
You have just amplified my point for me. It cannot be cooked exactly the same way most people cook beef "or else it gets very tough". As for eating it very rare, maybe in the dead of winter in the far south of Australia but otherwise that's a bit of a gastric lottery unless you've killed the animal yourself and are eating it not long afterwards.
When meat is not available (hiking or whatever), fried stuff can be a good distraction from that meat craving. However I've never been vegetarian so haven't gone without eating meat for more than a couple of weeks.
You must be so proud, the only state to have it police commisioner jailed
He was my local cop at one point, not that I ever saw him since he was always in the city up to drug deals or something. My negative mention of Brandis and Dutton should have been a bit of a clue that I agree with you about Joh, Pauline etc, but the redneck term doesn't apply to us all just like you are not all rednecks in SA despite the Coopers bible group gay bashing thing.
Personally I think attempting to substitute vegetarian things for specific meat items is a mistake that will usually result in disappointment. Instead of attempting vegetarian hot dogs I think it's better to just have a vegetarian curry that does not pretend to be anything other than what it is if meat cannot be on the menu. Chunks of tofu disappoint is they are pretending to be chicken, but if they are fried and coated with sweet chilli they are something most people will like (while not resembling meat in any way). As for vat grown meat, I agree, so long as it tastes good, but it may have to be served differently just like there's some things very lean meat doesn't work in and others that very fatty meat doesn't work in. For example Kangaroo is not something that can just be cooked up like a beef steak and taste good, it's far too lean, it's better in something like a Rendang curry. Muscle is very complicated so don't expect something like beef or pork. An interesting thing is how the vegetarian community have embraced quorn, a highly processed food made from vat grown fungus (crumbed and fried it's nice, but once again treating it like meat is likely to dissappoint). I don't know how many vegetarians avoid meat due to dislike of farm practices but those people are likely to be early adopters of vat grown meat.
have their taste buds in their arse as far as I am concerned
When it comes down to it familiar, convenient and bland is what most people eat IMHO, myself included from time to time. If you are going to use totally different ingredients I think trying to get them to taste like something else is a mistake but I'm just a guy who likes some vegetarian food every now and again instead of someone who lives off the stuff. Maybe someone who is a full vegetarian who craves meat gets some joy out of tasteless soy chunks in an imitation of a beef stew, but I'd rather have a minestrone (or something else devised without even thinking of meat) if meat is not on the menu.
Not all equal - teamviewer has quite a few security holes in areas where VNC doesn't even have any access at all (eg. filesystem access). Google "teamviewer security vulnerability" for a bit of a rundown as to why it is a very poor choice in a market full of many other options. Blocking teamviewer as a policy at a business that is a user of a carriers service is a very good idea since it's not just the scammers you have to worry about. A carrier doing the blocking is not such a good idea since many of their clients may have a need for it.
There are several along the coast, they are just not the Great Artesian Basin and are very shallow. Since it only makes up a tiny bit of the water used (and is replenished from the rivers anyway) it's not really relevant. Sorry I work with geophysicists and there are maps of this stuff all over the walls so I needlessly nitpicked.
A test rig a lot smaller than these that is most likely not actually in production apart from during test runs is so close to zero that it can't be taken seriously. http://www.powerplantsonline.com/gasturbinegenerator.htm AC what is your motivation for such ridiculous nitpicking? Do you just want to feel that you are better than somebody else?
We are not all Brandis and Dutton here (just as you are not all Downer the former member for Woodside*) and South Australia with the current weird Bible group/beer/gay bashing thing wins this weeks redneck prize.
* Yes, I'm being a smart arse, he was paid to work for his electorate but was really working for someone else, especially over the East Timor boundary.
I wonder why sugar cane is being grown in what I assume is a pretty dry climate using irrigation
A map showing where sugar cane is grown in Australia will correct that assumption that appears to have grown from watching Mad Max movies. It's a LOT wetter than Nebraska in those places.
Ironically it was another Australian economist from a very small university (Alan Fells from Griffith University at the time) who dreamed up the stupid fake electricity market that has resulted in this price gouging. He's been well rewarded for making some people very rich at the vast expense of energy consumers.
We have a few fucking morons who should forever be ignored among the ranks of Australian economists. The guy that proposed a massive sheep cull to drive up the price of wool (it didn't work - he forgot that cotton exists) is another that should have been ignored (he wasn't - massive rural hardship resulted).
Because it's the entire industry doing the price gouging and not just one middleman that is really just a small chunk of Snowy Mountains Hydro anyway. Blaming one company that doesn't even generate any electricity would be like blaming a single street corner crack dealer for the drug problems of an entire nation.
Now they're going to scream for government protection to outlaw diesel generators
I expect they will. However, the only party in Australia that would listen to those screams owes it's only chance to govern to another party that depends upon the votes of farmers. Price gouging may be driving the utilities into a death spiral of their own making.
Yes, but you need an entire industry to support it that doesn't currently exist in Queensland. One nuke is only theoretically cost effective when you already have a lot of nukes.
The problem here is that the country DID go solar/wind etc
No. It's Queensland, Australia. Coal with a bit of gas to cover peaks and one hydro plant of note.
Why spread misinformation about something you do not know about? Are you being a Good Party Komrade or is there something else behind it? My paycheck depends on the coal industry, so maybe you think you are helping me out, but I'd rather not have people pushing stupid lies for the sake of The Party doing it. Why don't you go and "help" someone else on a topic you actually know something about using truth instead of stupid lies?
The latter, prices have been jacked up to 11. Queensland's electricity comes from coal which is vastly cheaper than imported diesel. The government gets a cut for nearly every kW/h produced so that's why they "let the power company get too greedy". Most of the time they ARE the power company.
The aquifers in question are sitting directly under very large rivers in areas with very high rainfall (1000mm+). When the rivers run dry the aquifer will dry up. It's probably best if you think of it as pumping directly from the river since these canefields are close enough to the rivers to be in the flood plain.
Yes, but it's Queensland, so wind is not there at all and large scale solar still hasn't come on line. It's nearly all coal with gas to cover peaks and a small amount of hydro. "Green" power sources are not there in amounts that can be noticed apart from private rooftop solar which only has very local effects.
Worse than that, they only partially privatized it. Every time the price goes up the government wins. Guess who gets to decide if the price is too high? In Queensland it's close to total government ownership of the entire generation, transmission and distribution systems. The only major exception is the Gladstone power station.
That's a secondary effect. The primary reason is outright price gouging and the government that is supposed to be regulating the price benefiting from the raised price. Most of the utilities are government owned. I left the electricity industry in 1996 when this stupid fake market shit was first coming in.
t's the word "contamination" in the second sentence. It's worth looking up so you don't miss this sort of thing at other times.
So you are shifting the goalposts away from cadmium?
You eat margarine don't you?
From that example you should know that toxic catalysts don't always end up in the end product - especially since here the end product is a gas.
Part of the problem with Teamviewer is that after being installed it usually runs after every startup so those security holes are always open to anything that can get as far as your PC. I keep on finding it running on machines where the user has not used Teamviewer for well over a year.
You probably had some problem such as firewall software in the way which made such an otherwise utterly trivial task difficult. It doesn't do as much as Teamviewer and is a lot simpler to set up and use, plus there has been around twenty years to shake out the bugs.
You have just amplified my point for me. It cannot be cooked exactly the same way most people cook beef "or else it gets very tough".
As for eating it very rare, maybe in the dead of winter in the far south of Australia but otherwise that's a bit of a gastric lottery unless you've killed the animal yourself and are eating it not long afterwards.
When meat is not available (hiking or whatever), fried stuff can be a good distraction from that meat craving.
However I've never been vegetarian so haven't gone without eating meat for more than a couple of weeks.
He was my local cop at one point, not that I ever saw him since he was always in the city up to drug deals or something.
My negative mention of Brandis and Dutton should have been a bit of a clue that I agree with you about Joh, Pauline etc, but the redneck term doesn't apply to us all just like you are not all rednecks in SA despite the Coopers bible group gay bashing thing.
As for vat grown meat, I agree, so long as it tastes good, but it may have to be served differently just like there's some things very lean meat doesn't work in and others that very fatty meat doesn't work in. For example Kangaroo is not something that can just be cooked up like a beef steak and taste good, it's far too lean, it's better in something like a Rendang curry. Muscle is very complicated so don't expect something like beef or pork.
An interesting thing is how the vegetarian community have embraced quorn, a highly processed food made from vat grown fungus (crumbed and fried it's nice, but once again treating it like meat is likely to dissappoint). I don't know how many vegetarians avoid meat due to dislike of farm practices but those people are likely to be early adopters of vat grown meat.
When it comes down to it familiar, convenient and bland is what most people eat IMHO, myself included from time to time. If you are going to use totally different ingredients I think trying to get them to taste like something else is a mistake but I'm just a guy who likes some vegetarian food every now and again instead of someone who lives off the stuff. Maybe someone who is a full vegetarian who craves meat gets some joy out of tasteless soy chunks in an imitation of a beef stew, but I'd rather have a minestrone (or something else devised without even thinking of meat) if meat is not on the menu.
Not all equal - teamviewer has quite a few security holes in areas where VNC doesn't even have any access at all (eg. filesystem access). Google "teamviewer security vulnerability" for a bit of a rundown as to why it is a very poor choice in a market full of many other options.
Blocking teamviewer as a policy at a business that is a user of a carriers service is a very good idea since it's not just the scammers you have to worry about. A carrier doing the blocking is not such a good idea since many of their clients may have a need for it.
There are several along the coast, they are just not the Great Artesian Basin and are very shallow. Since it only makes up a tiny bit of the water used (and is replenished from the rivers anyway) it's not really relevant. Sorry I work with geophysicists and there are maps of this stuff all over the walls so I needlessly nitpicked.
A test rig a lot smaller than these that is most likely not actually in production apart from during test runs is so close to zero that it can't be taken seriously.
http://www.powerplantsonline.com/gasturbinegenerator.htm
AC what is your motivation for such ridiculous nitpicking? Do you just want to feel that you are better than somebody else?
We are not all Brandis and Dutton here (just as you are not all Downer the former member for Woodside*) and South Australia with the current weird Bible group/beer/gay bashing thing wins this weeks redneck prize.
* Yes, I'm being a smart arse, he was paid to work for his electorate but was really working for someone else, especially over the East Timor boundary.
With respect AC, 12.5 MW is fuckall power that is around half the output of a single 1950s jet engine hooked up to a generator set.
A map showing where sugar cane is grown in Australia will correct that assumption that appears to have grown from watching Mad Max movies. It's a LOT wetter than Nebraska in those places.
Ironically it was another Australian economist from a very small university (Alan Fells from Griffith University at the time) who dreamed up the stupid fake electricity market that has resulted in this price gouging. He's been well rewarded for making some people very rich at the vast expense of energy consumers.
We have a few fucking morons who should forever be ignored among the ranks of Australian economists. The guy that proposed a massive sheep cull to drive up the price of wool (it didn't work - he forgot that cotton exists) is another that should have been ignored (he wasn't - massive rural hardship resulted).
Because it's the entire industry doing the price gouging and not just one middleman that is really just a small chunk of Snowy Mountains Hydro anyway.
Blaming one company that doesn't even generate any electricity would be like blaming a single street corner crack dealer for the drug problems of an entire nation.
I expect they will. However, the only party in Australia that would listen to those screams owes it's only chance to govern to another party that depends upon the votes of farmers.
Price gouging may be driving the utilities into a death spiral of their own making.
Yes, but you need an entire industry to support it that doesn't currently exist in Queensland. One nuke is only theoretically cost effective when you already have a lot of nukes.
No.
It's Queensland, Australia.
Coal with a bit of gas to cover peaks and one hydro plant of note.
Why spread misinformation about something you do not know about? Are you being a Good Party Komrade or is there something else behind it? My paycheck depends on the coal industry, so maybe you think you are helping me out, but I'd rather not have people pushing stupid lies for the sake of The Party doing it. Why don't you go and "help" someone else on a topic you actually know something about using truth instead of stupid lies?
The latter, prices have been jacked up to 11. Queensland's electricity comes from coal which is vastly cheaper than imported diesel.
The government gets a cut for nearly every kW/h produced so that's why they "let the power company get too greedy". Most of the time they ARE the power company.
Droughts happen.
The aquifers in question are sitting directly under very large rivers in areas with very high rainfall (1000mm+). When the rivers run dry the aquifer will dry up. It's probably best if you think of it as pumping directly from the river since these canefields are close enough to the rivers to be in the flood plain.
Yes, but it's Queensland, so wind is not there at all and large scale solar still hasn't come on line.
It's nearly all coal with gas to cover peaks and a small amount of hydro.
"Green" power sources are not there in amounts that can be noticed apart from private rooftop solar which only has very local effects.
Worse than that, they only partially privatized it. Every time the price goes up the government wins. Guess who gets to decide if the price is too high?
In Queensland it's close to total government ownership of the entire generation, transmission and distribution systems. The only major exception is the Gladstone power station.
That's a secondary effect. The primary reason is outright price gouging and the government that is supposed to be regulating the price benefiting from the raised price. Most of the utilities are government owned. I left the electricity industry in 1996 when this stupid fake market shit was first coming in.