Companies don't do this because they have deeply held legal or ethical principles. They do it because one side of the case makes them more money than the other.
"While the recommended dosage for Nexium, Prevacid and Prilose is just two weeks"
The dosage for most drugs is measured in mass (mg, often)/time, not time alone. How does one meter a dosage in the time domain with no regard to mass (homeopathic medicines excepted, of course)?
Hey, just like now! Despite colloquially calling it a "ban," it is in fact a temporary suspension. And, there have been people from those countries allowed in since it went into effect.
Often, USPS only handles "the last mile," which is why it's a USPS tracking number (because they're responsible for the ultimate delivery). I often see package tracking show items flowing along some path with each hop indicated as "Departed Shipping Partner Facility, USPS Awaiting Item". It appears that the USPS alllows Amazon (UPS? Fedex?) to update their tracking system. Toward the end, it will show up as "Acceptance. Arrived at Post Office", when it's actually handed over to the USPS at my local PO (sometimes one level up from that - distribution hub?). The USPS may even deliver Amazon packages on Sunday.
"will occupy a spot that crosses the Cincinnati and Kentucky border"
Odd, one's city and the other's a state. And the border between them is a river - hard to build an airport across a river.
Turns out that's wrong - they're building a facility at the Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky Airport. Since the article is just paraphrased from an original by the WSJ (paywalled), I suspect the original said something like "near Cincinnati, across the border in Kentucky", and the person paraphrasing is an idiot (Darrell Etherington).
He also mentioned bean counters, so maybe it means Bean Counting Management. But based on his later post, it's clear that even he doesn't know what it means.
lol. Are you so naive as to cite paraphrased hearsay, or are you simply incapable of clicking on a link to the original 9to5 article, which is conveniently located in the summary?
"you mean like the people from LG who acknowledged the problem and made this suggestion?"
Citation needed. Because, the only mentions of "router" by LG in the linked article were obviously parroting the term first used by the person asking for information. Rather than correct them, they just went along.
...no harmful interference is caused and that interference must be accepted that may be caused by the operation of an authorized radio station, by another intentional or unintentional radiator, by industrial, scientific and medical (ISM) equipment, or by an incidental radiator.
Any emission, radiation or induction that endangers the functioning of a radio navigation service or of other safety services or seriously degrades, obstructs or repeatedly interrupts a radiocommunications service operating in accordance with this chapter.
When did we start calling NAT gateways "routers?" A router should at least support, oh, a routing protocol like RIP or OSPF. I don't think most of them can even do simple routing between 2 subnets, without NAT.
But, it's going to be the largest (some say longest) wind farm off of all of Long Island. And that's a long island. Maybe I'll build the tallest and widest wind farm in my backyard! There's not much competition, so it won't take much.
Ultra-Fast Broadband is taken to mean the availability of broadband services at a minimum speed of 100 Mbps Downstream (from the Internet to the user) and a minimum of 50 Mbps Upstream (from user to the Internet).
So, the argument you're going to get is that a digital port and external A/D is mo bettah for HiFi.
Meh. It's not better if it requires a dongle (let's see them put an SPDIF port on a phone:) ), double so if you can't play external audio and draw power at the same time. I regularly plug my phone into stereos and power to play tunes. The headphone jack and USB port work just fine.
Similar with phones lacking user replaceable batteries and memory card slots - that's just planned obsolescence, and form over function. I'm (and I suspect many others) am no longer seeing any useful innovation which would support the traditional 2 year upgrade cycle, so they need to force obsolescence. They better make it cheap then, because I'm not paying hundreds of dollars for fashion and bragging rights.
Companies don't do this because they have deeply held legal or ethical principles. They do it because one side of the case makes them more money than the other.
"While the recommended dosage for Nexium, Prevacid and Prilose is just two weeks"
The dosage for most drugs is measured in mass (mg, often)/time, not time alone. How does one meter a dosage in the time domain with no regard to mass (homeopathic medicines excepted, of course)?
"Dyn was acquired by Oracle the next month,"
Sounds like those who left before were just the early adopters, ahead of the curve.
Hey, just like now! Despite colloquially calling it a "ban," it is in fact a temporary suspension. And, there have been people from those countries allowed in since it went into effect.
"the State Department stopped processing Iraq refugees for six months in 2011" - ABC News
The law clearly leaves that determination solely to the President. This was judicial overreach.
"a company cannot be expected to support unnecessary legacy infrastructure forever."
It all depends on what promises they made in their marketing.
(And those "I agree" things you have to agree to in order to have a functional device? They're unconscionable contracts of adhesion.)
Google: "Look, shiny!"
Google has the attention span of a 3 year old human.
Often, USPS only handles "the last mile," which is why it's a USPS tracking number (because they're responsible for the ultimate delivery). I often see package tracking show items flowing along some path with each hop indicated as "Departed Shipping Partner Facility, USPS Awaiting Item". It appears that the USPS alllows Amazon (UPS? Fedex?) to update their tracking system. Toward the end, it will show up as "Acceptance. Arrived at Post Office", when it's actually handed over to the USPS at my local PO (sometimes one level up from that - distribution hub?). The USPS may even deliver Amazon packages on Sunday.
"They would have to be increasing their shipping output to create 2,000 new jobs. Instead..."
Considering Amazon has double-digit revenue growth, and it's reported that they "shipped more than 1 billion items around the world for the holiday season, more than five times its sales last holiday season", it's obvious that they are increasing their shipping output, by a lot.
"will occupy a spot that crosses the Cincinnati and Kentucky border"
Odd, one's city and the other's a state. And the border between them is a river - hard to build an airport across a river.
Turns out that's wrong - they're building a facility at the Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky Airport. Since the article is just paraphrased from an original by the WSJ (paywalled), I suspect the original said something like "near Cincinnati, across the border in Kentucky", and the person paraphrasing is an idiot (Darrell Etherington).
Also, mountains push water downhill. And, the sun and heavens move around the Earth, along very complex paths. HTH!
He also mentioned bean counters, so maybe it means Bean Counting Management. But based on his later post, it's clear that even he doesn't know what it means.
"help students pass one of the more notoriously exam out there..."
Perhaps if the author had a MacBook, they would have made a less notoriously error.
Read the definition of harmful interference again. Now tell us how a monitor is a radio as used in that definition.
lol. Are you so naive as to cite paraphrased hearsay, or are you simply incapable of clicking on a link to the original 9to5 article, which is conveniently located in the summary?
"you mean like the people from LG who acknowledged the problem and made this suggestion?"
Citation needed. Because, the only mentions of "router" by LG in the linked article were obviously parroting the term first used by the person asking for information. Rather than correct them, they just went along.
"regional offices outside of the USA? Will they have to import American workers"
I'm thinking that local workers don't need US H-1B visas to work in their own country.
Part 15.5
They define "harmful interference" as
Part 15.3
No, your monitor is not a radio device.
When did we start calling NAT gateways "routers?" A router should at least support, oh, a routing protocol like RIP or OSPF. I don't think most of them can even do simple routing between 2 subnets, without NAT.
In this case "router" actually means wireless access point (some of which also have Internet NAT gateways, which some people call routers).
But, it's going to be the largest (some say longest) wind farm off of all of Long Island. And that's a long island. Maybe I'll build the tallest and widest wind farm in my backyard! There's not much competition, so it won't take much.
- CFH, NZ.
(Since neither the summary nor the linked article could be bothered to say...)
No, the headline refers to an "Austronaut Taxi". Seems NASA will be having explorers drive to Australia in spacesuits.
So, the argument you're going to get is that a digital port and external A/D is mo bettah for HiFi.
:) ), double so if you can't play external audio and draw power at the same time. I regularly plug my phone into stereos and power to play tunes. The headphone jack and USB port work just fine.
Meh. It's not better if it requires a dongle (let's see them put an SPDIF port on a phone
Similar with phones lacking user replaceable batteries and memory card slots - that's just planned obsolescence, and form over function. I'm (and I suspect many others) am no longer seeing any useful innovation which would support the traditional 2 year upgrade cycle, so they need to force obsolescence. They better make it cheap then, because I'm not paying hundreds of dollars for fashion and bragging rights.