A loan guarantee is a subsidy. The alternative would be to get your loan guaranteed by a AAA rated insurance company, if such a thing still exists, and you would have to pay them a pretty hefty insurance premium for that.
As the government is essentially acting as a credit insurer here, if they give out enough of these guarantees, there will be claims on some of them, so there is an actual cost involved.
Tim Cook is a brilliant operations manager, but does he have the vision to see that an giant sized iPod touch would be hugely successful when nobody else had thought of the idea? Jonathan Ive might be able to pull things like that off.
Did the Playbook fail because it had a 7" screen, or did it fail because it can't do email without being tethered to a Blackberry phone? I don't have an opinion on the screen size, but not doing email is a complete dealbreaker for me.
The copyright owner could supply the binary for the free version as binary only. As they are the copyright owner, they are the only people that can sue for copyright violation (see eg Righthaven or ACS:Law), and they aren't going to sue themselves.
It is a criminal case, which is usually handled by the government. If it was in England, Apple would complain to Trading Standards in the appropriate council area. Trading Standards officers would investigate, and if they think there is a case to answer, send a report to the Director of Public Prosecution. The DPP would then decide whether or not to initiate a prosecution against the company. Private prosecutions are possible, but very rare.
It already supported it. You set it up as an exchange account with the server m.hotmail.com. What is new is that you can now select hotmail as the option and it does it for you. Any existing exchange accounts configured to use the hotmail server now have the hotmail icon rather than the exchange one.
France is probably where you are most likely to see the winner of the first round lose the second round. It is conceivable that the National Front candidate could come first with around 20% of the the vote, and the other 80% of the vote is split between a very long list of other candidates. People either support and vote National Front, or absolutely hate them and will vote for any other candidate to keep them out, so in the second round, the other 80% will vote for the second place candidate no matter who it is.
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, current president of Iran is an engineer. Margaret Thatcher, former prime minister of the UK is a scientist. I'm sure there are plenty of other examples.
I find pdf doesn't work that well on a small screen. Either you design the pdf for A6 sized paper, which doesn't look so good printed on A4 or on my 24" desktop screen, or you end up with something on your portable device that is either too small to read or requires lots of sideways scrolling. Maybe you should do the journal in something like docbook format, and use that to generate pdfs and ebook files.
British phones don't roam outside their chosen network while inside the UK anyway, with the exception of Orange and T-Mobile, which are now the same company. This thing would pretend to be a mast for your phone company so it does connect.
In the UK, the British Computer Society, or it might be called the Chartered Institute of IT, is a member of the Engineering Council, so if you pass their exams, you have engineer status.
Having said that, the call centre monkeys on first line support at my ISP call themselves "support engineers", and that is perfectly legal.
Or the naysayers who claim it is impossible to go faster than the speed of light. This http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-15471118 is what happens when scientists make an observation that appears to go against our current understanding of the laws of physics. This level of disclosure and scrutiny is not happening with the cold fusion claim.
I think it will work, because it will stop some of the more blatant fakes and move it out of the big highstreet stores. Yes there will still be fakes, but at least people will know they are buying them, and know where to go if they don't want to buy them.
1. The website owner can sue the MPAE[1] for libel, and as this is England, they can expect a very very large compensation payment. 2. The MPAE could be prosecuted under Section 3 of the Computer Misuse Act 1990 (less likely to happen)
Lets imagine for example you are an estate agent (realtor). People will come in and ask you to let them know every time a particular type of property becomes available for sale. You would most likely do that by email. That isn't spam because people have asked you to send it, but you could easily have 500 people on your list.
You can get a judgement in the High Court, and you can transfer that judgement to courts in other EU countries. Otherwise you might have difficulty enforcing the judgement, but yes, the law does apply unless you block UK IP addresses.
The EU has no powers over the actual laws on embryo experiments, or as the other side would call it, chopping up babies for spare parts. I'm pretty sure if you look at countries like Ireland or Portugal it is already illegal there.
Actually ESPN, owned by Disney show some Premier League matches, and all of the Scottish league matches. They have a slot on Sky, on Top-up TV (terrestial pay tv) and Virgin (cable).
A loan guarantee is a subsidy. The alternative would be to get your loan guaranteed by a AAA rated insurance company, if such a thing still exists, and you would have to pay them a pretty hefty insurance premium for that.
As the government is essentially acting as a credit insurer here, if they give out enough of these guarantees, there will be claims on some of them, so there is an actual cost involved.
Newsbin were originally a UK based site. They were forced offshore, then they went for blocking it.
KMail no longer has the bounce feature though. Bouncing is frowned upon because spam usually has fake "From:" addresses.
Tim Cook is a brilliant operations manager, but does he have the vision to see that an giant sized iPod touch would be hugely successful when nobody else had thought of the idea? Jonathan Ive might be able to pull things like that off.
Did the Playbook fail because it had a 7" screen, or did it fail because it can't do email without being tethered to a Blackberry phone? I don't have an opinion on the screen size, but not doing email is a complete dealbreaker for me.
BT - A telecoms company formerly known as British Telecom. It is the largest and the incumbent operator similar to AT&T and the Baby Bells in the USA.
The copyright owner could supply the binary for the free version as binary only. As they are the copyright owner, they are the only people that can sue for copyright violation (see eg Righthaven or ACS:Law), and they aren't going to sue themselves.
It is a criminal case, which is usually handled by the government. If it was in England, Apple would complain to Trading Standards in the appropriate council area. Trading Standards officers would investigate, and if they think there is a case to answer, send a report to the Director of Public Prosecution. The DPP would then decide whether or not to initiate a prosecution against the company. Private prosecutions are possible, but very rare.
It already supported it. You set it up as an exchange account with the server m.hotmail.com. What is new is that you can now select hotmail as the option and it does it for you. Any existing exchange accounts configured to use the hotmail server now have the hotmail icon rather than the exchange one.
France is probably where you are most likely to see the winner of the first round lose the second round. It is conceivable that the National Front candidate could come first with around 20% of the the vote, and the other 80% of the vote is split between a very long list of other candidates. People either support and vote National Front, or absolutely hate them and will vote for any other candidate to keep them out, so in the second round, the other 80% will vote for the second place candidate no matter who it is.
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, current president of Iran is an engineer. Margaret Thatcher, former prime minister of the UK is a scientist. I'm sure there are plenty of other examples.
I find pdf doesn't work that well on a small screen. Either you design the pdf for A6 sized paper, which doesn't look so good printed on A4 or on my 24" desktop screen, or you end up with something on your portable device that is either too small to read or requires lots of sideways scrolling. Maybe you should do the journal in something like docbook format, and use that to generate pdfs and ebook files.
British phones don't roam outside their chosen network while inside the UK anyway, with the exception of Orange and T-Mobile, which are now the same company. This thing would pretend to be a mast for your phone company so it does connect.
I think Oracle would object to that patent.
In the UK, the British Computer Society, or it might be called the Chartered Institute of IT, is a member of the Engineering Council, so if you pass their exams, you have engineer status.
Having said that, the call centre monkeys on first line support at my ISP call themselves "support engineers", and that is perfectly legal.
Or the naysayers who claim it is impossible to go faster than the speed of light. This http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-15471118 is what happens when scientists make an observation that appears to go against our current understanding of the laws of physics. This level of disclosure and scrutiny is not happening with the cold fusion claim.
I think it will work, because it will stop some of the more blatant fakes and move it out of the big highstreet stores. Yes there will still be fakes, but at least people will know they are buying them, and know where to go if they don't want to buy them.
1. The website owner can sue the MPAE[1] for libel, and as this is England, they can expect a very very large compensation payment.
2. The MPAE could be prosecuted under Section 3 of the Computer Misuse Act 1990 (less likely to happen)
[1] Motion Pictures Association of Europe
It does it when it thinks it is 2am
Radio controlled watches and clocks use that to set the time. My watch checks that signal every day at 2am and adjusts itself to the correct time.
Lets imagine for example you are an estate agent (realtor). People will come in and ask you to let them know every time a particular type of property becomes available for sale. You would most likely do that by email. That isn't spam because people have asked you to send it, but you could easily have 500 people on your list.
You can get a judgement in the High Court, and you can transfer that judgement to courts in other EU countries. Otherwise you might have difficulty enforcing the judgement, but yes, the law does apply unless you block UK IP addresses.
That's high treason, not libel.
The EU has no powers over the actual laws on embryo experiments, or as the other side would call it, chopping up babies for spare parts. I'm pretty sure if you look at countries like Ireland or Portugal it is already illegal there.
Actually ESPN, owned by Disney show some Premier League matches, and all of the Scottish league matches. They have a slot on Sky, on Top-up TV (terrestial pay tv) and Virgin (cable).