Oh well, strike that. I started writing from memory and recalled enough to find the article, but upon reading it anew, I was off on the peripheral details. The theory is as stated though.
From the article:
"Standing with chest pushed forward and buttocks pushed back (the so-called Donald Duck posture that exaggerates the lumbar curve). "
Interestingly, I read an article about a photographer who noticed, while taking images of indigenous people, this exact posture. What she also noticed was that there were 80 year old women bending over from the waist with no apparent pain while picking vegetables. This diverged into reviewing old plates in medical textbooks which showed a much greater curvature at the top and bottom of the spine; an "S" shape, as opposed to our "J" shape. She now teaches a method based on her observations.
I can't find the article I originally read, but it posited that the company was being financed, and helmed by the Chinese. This LA Times article lays out pretty much the same information:
http://www.latimes.com/busines...
I like the carefully worded, "...nor slept with a legally underage woman.". Age of consent in Belize is 16 and that hardly qualifies one as a "woman". At least he's got the chops for the job.
One might construe from "unlimited" that it means unlimited use of a service as described. Not, unlimited until you reach a cap where you'll receive a 2nd tier service.
As for its impact on other customers, either you can manage an "unlimited" offering, or you can't. The term is deceptive, despite being in the contract. They simply need to find another descriptor for their service.
Interesting, but I'm not sure you are correct. It was a significant amount of time after Win95 had been released that newshell.exe became available for testing. It was purely cosmetic and was, as I recall, 2.8megs in size. In fact, I'm sure I have a copy of it here somewhere.
As someone who ran a mechanic/used car shop from the late 70s through the early 90s and raced modified stock class, I don't have the same view as you. In fact, I built a '79 Mustang pace car for racing, never intending it to do much street driving, sold it to a kid who I recently ran into it. He had driven that thing to California, went to college and when graduated drove it back to Texas years later before selling it himself. I never would have tried it, but it served him well enough.
Drum brakes suck, I'll grant you that, but brakes never failed without adequate warning. I've dropped many a hot engine into a beat up 60's shell and driven the hell out of it. Power steering? Doesn't really matter unless you're pulling into a tight parking spot too fast. One wouldn't notice it going out above 35mph. Hard to start? Only if you didn't understand how your choke operated so that you could properly adjust it.
Older cars are noisy, leaky things and may not handle corners as well as modern cars, but weren't death traps or I would have been dead long ago. I'll take a '72 Challenger RT with a 340 and A727 over a new one any day (Thermoquad is the finest carburetor ever made). I still choose to drive a '77 Silverado that has over 300,000 miles on the original engine and suspension. Nope, don't agree at all.
You've got me regarding FreeBSD, but everything under Palemoon can be easily exported over to Firefox if the project started faltering. I began using it shortly after having Australis pushed onto me and haven't a single regret.
...where he posted a video where a woman who had been arrested over a DWI had her social security and home address read aloud at the station. He then laughed about it and defended his actions until we finally got the mods to awaken and remove the video. He's a real piece of work.
...and a P-38 can opener from 1967, and a $1.60 knife from AliExpress that looks like a key. Darn handy and well-made (considering the price).
Also, a disassembled 1/8" SnapOn swivel joint. Knock out the pin holding the two sides together, place a keyring in the holes from each half, join the male and female side and voila!...a bulletproof quick-release for two sets of keys.
I ran to a fork the moment they forced that horrible Australis onto everyone. You just don't force a completely new UI on users with something used as often as a browser. While learning a new layout isn't difficult, muscle memory is a powerful thing.
I wasn't saying I was a proponent, just that in order to maintain the current course it would become necessary. For that matter, there could be voluntary sterilization, but that is both an old idea and one which originated within the US.
I'm all for a 30 hour work week, but many who work long hours do so to maintain a reasonable lifestyle.
I often work 65 hours a week and very much doubt my loss in productivity would be commensurate with the decrease in hours.
There's a reason we off-shored our manufacturing, there's a reason we allow undocumented workers into this country, and that reason is found in the fact that the average citizen evaluates the strength of his dollar based upon the price of manufactured goods and home prices. While the value of the US dollar has fallen, it is largely hidden by the fact of cheap goods and affordable housing. So, not likely to change unless one is willing to change the current debt driven economy and push through some very rough years.
What if a way was found to increase longevity? What if Ray Kurzweil's vision were realized? How superfluous would the common worker be then? There's plenty of room on earth for more people, but that would require reverting to a much earlier state that most individuals wouldn't be in favor of.
Really? A vast segment of society has already become superfluous. Yes, you can subsidize people's lives, but then you have a growing segment of indolent society. The downside to that is a population of people with no sense of self-accomplishment, character... basically a broken feedback loop. Being that individuals require such, they form their own sub-society which is diametrically opposed to the normal societal model and seek from that their self-worth in negative ways. They become opposed to the "norm".
Unless you are willing to consider a revival of eugenics, we are headed down a dark path.
Something along the lines of PayPal, where they place a small random charge to your bank account, or credit card and have you recite the amount would be a start. The old InterNIC offered PGP verification.
This has been going on for a long time, and not just with GoDaddy. There was quite a bit written about it a number of years ago, which included ISPs selling lists of unresolved DNS queries. Thus, along with misspellings, people checking to see if a domain name was available were finding them quickly snatched up.
I suppose you are against vulnerability reporting as well? Bringing issues to light is a way of raising public awareness to force pressure towards resolution.
It doesn't require any special skill to exploit weak authentication requirements, so I doubt the article will result in a mass theft of domains.
This is exactly why I used PGP verification with InterNIC back in the day.
My experience has been different. I can't say I buy the "science" behind it, but I have found that some of the treatments do work. Before anyone writes this off to placebo effect, let me explain.
I first tried some Hylands runny nose pills on my daughter, who was already on medication from a doctor without success. They worked. I later used them with my son and I never had to resort to anything else.
If that's not enough for you, my wife just recently used some kind of homeopathic medication in our aged cat's drinking water that she had picked up from the pet store. The cat is around 18 years old and frequently gets a bladder infection which has never been stopped with anything but antibiotics. Using the homeopathic preparation resulted in her doing a complete turn-around within two days.
We've got a friend who opened an integrative medical practice (she is an MD), and utilizes homeopathy within it. As I said, I can't buy the bizarre explanation that accompanies the practice, but there does seem to be something to it, although I've never used it for myself. I can say that if it is valid for the reasons they state, we're all toast due to the amount of medication which ends up back in our water supply.
Unless things have changed, you cannot obtain American citizenship without renouncing your Australian one. At the time I was considering an Australian citizenship, only immigrants could hold dual-citizenship.
I think OP should absolutely go for it. It opens up work opportunities that otherwise might not exist. The expense to renounce is minor. I have a friend who's family has lived in Mexico for generations, yet all have returned to Italy to obtain citizenship. His children all have dual-citizenship because of the work opportunities afforded from holding an EU citizenship.
Penny for your thoughts?
Oh well, strike that. I started writing from memory and recalled enough to find the article, but upon reading it anew, I was off on the peripheral details. The theory is as stated though.
Interestingly, I read an article about a photographer who noticed, while taking images of indigenous people, this exact posture. What she also noticed was that there were 80 year old women bending over from the waist with no apparent pain while picking vegetables. This diverged into reviewing old plates in medical textbooks which showed a much greater curvature at the top and bottom of the spine; an "S" shape, as opposed to our "J" shape. She now teaches a method based on her observations.
The article: http://www.npr.org/sections/go...
Her website: http://gokhalemethod.com/
Yeah? So what's the point of posting anonymously??
Should I be worried since my tax dollars have been subsidizing Tesla's loss of almost 300 million dollars last year?
I can't find the article I originally read, but it posited that the company was being financed, and helmed by the Chinese. This LA Times article lays out pretty much the same information: http://www.latimes.com/busines...
I like the carefully worded, "...nor slept with a legally underage woman.". Age of consent in Belize is 16 and that hardly qualifies one as a "woman". At least he's got the chops for the job.
One might construe from "unlimited" that it means unlimited use of a service as described. Not, unlimited until you reach a cap where you'll receive a 2nd tier service. As for its impact on other customers, either you can manage an "unlimited" offering, or you can't. The term is deceptive, despite being in the contract. They simply need to find another descriptor for their service.
I hope it turns out better for them than when they held a press conference to demonstrate their new crash avoidance system: https://www.youtube.com/watch?... http://jalopnik.com/5533328/vo... ....or a few months later when their pedestrian avoidance tech proved to be a autonomous Death Race 2000 contender:
http://jalopnik.com/5648126/vo...
If I may suggest, please take a look into uMatrix as a superior option.
Interesting, but I'm not sure you are correct. It was a significant amount of time after Win95 had been released that newshell.exe became available for testing. It was purely cosmetic and was, as I recall, 2.8megs in size. In fact, I'm sure I have a copy of it here somewhere.
Drum brakes suck, I'll grant you that, but brakes never failed without adequate warning. I've dropped many a hot engine into a beat up 60's shell and driven the hell out of it. Power steering? Doesn't really matter unless you're pulling into a tight parking spot too fast. One wouldn't notice it going out above 35mph. Hard to start? Only if you didn't understand how your choke operated so that you could properly adjust it.
Older cars are noisy, leaky things and may not handle corners as well as modern cars, but weren't death traps or I would have been dead long ago. I'll take a '72 Challenger RT with a 340 and A727 over a new one any day (Thermoquad is the finest carburetor ever made). I still choose to drive a '77 Silverado that has over 300,000 miles on the original engine and suspension. Nope, don't agree at all.
You've got me regarding FreeBSD, but everything under Palemoon can be easily exported over to Firefox if the project started faltering. I began using it shortly after having Australis pushed onto me and haven't a single regret.
...where he posted a video where a woman who had been arrested over a DWI had her social security and home address read aloud at the station. He then laughed about it and defended his actions until we finally got the mods to awaken and remove the video. He's a real piece of work.
Why not use Palemoon?
Also, a disassembled 1/8" SnapOn swivel joint. Knock out the pin holding the two sides together, place a keyring in the holes from each half, join the male and female side and voila! ...a bulletproof quick-release for two sets of keys.
I ran to a fork the moment they forced that horrible Australis onto everyone. You just don't force a completely new UI on users with something used as often as a browser. While learning a new layout isn't difficult, muscle memory is a powerful thing.
I'm all for a 30 hour work week, but many who work long hours do so to maintain a reasonable lifestyle.
I often work 65 hours a week and very much doubt my loss in productivity would be commensurate with the decrease in hours.
There's a reason we off-shored our manufacturing, there's a reason we allow undocumented workers into this country, and that reason is found in the fact that the average citizen evaluates the strength of his dollar based upon the price of manufactured goods and home prices. While the value of the US dollar has fallen, it is largely hidden by the fact of cheap goods and affordable housing. So, not likely to change unless one is willing to change the current debt driven economy and push through some very rough years.
What if a way was found to increase longevity? What if Ray Kurzweil's vision were realized? How superfluous would the common worker be then? There's plenty of room on earth for more people, but that would require reverting to a much earlier state that most individuals wouldn't be in favor of.
Unless you are willing to consider a revival of eugenics, we are headed down a dark path.
Something along the lines of PayPal, where they place a small random charge to your bank account, or credit card and have you recite the amount would be a start. The old InterNIC offered PGP verification.
For the benefit of anyone tired of paying to be cloaked, Google Domains offers privacy free of charge.
This has been going on for a long time, and not just with GoDaddy. There was quite a bit written about it a number of years ago, which included ISPs selling lists of unresolved DNS queries. Thus, along with misspellings, people checking to see if a domain name was available were finding them quickly snatched up.
It doesn't require any special skill to exploit weak authentication requirements, so I doubt the article will result in a mass theft of domains.
This is exactly why I used PGP verification with InterNIC back in the day.
I first tried some Hylands runny nose pills on my daughter, who was already on medication from a doctor without success. They worked. I later used them with my son and I never had to resort to anything else.
If that's not enough for you, my wife just recently used some kind of homeopathic medication in our aged cat's drinking water that she had picked up from the pet store. The cat is around 18 years old and frequently gets a bladder infection which has never been stopped with anything but antibiotics. Using the homeopathic preparation resulted in her doing a complete turn-around within two days.
We've got a friend who opened an integrative medical practice (she is an MD), and utilizes homeopathy within it. As I said, I can't buy the bizarre explanation that accompanies the practice, but there does seem to be something to it, although I've never used it for myself. I can say that if it is valid for the reasons they state, we're all toast due to the amount of medication which ends up back in our water supply.
Unless things have changed, you cannot obtain American citizenship without renouncing your Australian one. At the time I was considering an Australian citizenship, only immigrants could hold dual-citizenship. I think OP should absolutely go for it. It opens up work opportunities that otherwise might not exist. The expense to renounce is minor. I have a friend who's family has lived in Mexico for generations, yet all have returned to Italy to obtain citizenship. His children all have dual-citizenship because of the work opportunities afforded from holding an EU citizenship.