Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the government for a redress of grievances.
Once a caffeine related headache kicks in, it will not go away with just caffeine.
Headaches feed in on themselves. This is why people with migraines are told to take their medication when they feel the headache coming on.
Headaches often cause decreased gastic motility anyway... which is why severe headaches can cause nausea and vomiting.
Your type of misinformation fools people into thinking their headaches are not related to caffeine. They slug down some coffee and their headache doesn't let up... so they say it's not the caffeine. This is just not true.
Thanks for the information. That's exactly for what I was looking.
George Washington University's National Security Archive is the leading non-profit user of the U.S. Freedom of Information Act.
Bravo for GWU for taking responsibility and bringing this information into the public domain. Appreciate the link... it should provide some interesting reading tonight...
Citizens should know what their government is doing! It's a responsibility of being a citizen. Geeks/nerds are citizens too.
This release of information is also being released on the internet which allows for it to be quickly seen and evaluated by the masses. Releasing it onto the internet is indeed releasing it to the public.
What do we learn from such releases of information? "Twenty years ago, on December 20, 1983, Donald Rumsfeld, currently the U.S. Secretary of Defense, held the first of two now-famous meetings with Saddam Hussein in Baghdad."
I agree. The one thing that is keep me and my family from switching to VoIP is 911 access. It comforts me to know that my wife or kids can pick up the phone and get help immediately. Even if they can't talk, at least 911 knows where they are--on the land line.
On voIP, it will redirect your 911 call to the appropriate place... maybe. It may also transfer your address. VoIP will never promise that this will work perfectly without fault for legal reasons.
Japan is trying to switch completely over to VoIP... and all I want is dependable 911 access.
Actually, to clarify, this guy helped me quit... and I'm one of the friends/patients that he helped get off caffeine. When I saw this "ask slashdot" I called and asked him to post it on his site.
I quit all coffee (which was my main habit) and just used those penguin caffeine-full mints. I decreased the number of mints I used by four each day until I was off. I had headaches at the end.
The doc originally suggested that I get off caffeine because I was having heartburn and palpations.
Nah... put the weight of industry behind it. This is America, right? Let the dollar do its thing!
The hardware for one hotspot should last practically forever. Limit the bandwidth to a modest amount and price it cheaply!
Hell, if I just want to check my email, let me purchase the granny speed pack for $2 for an hour. If I want to play online games and need the speed, let me buy the blistering $10 an hour pack. If I want to view p0rn anonymously, let me buy the $25 dirty old man package.
Once a few people start making money at this... it will take off.
I love the free grants and non-profit idea. I just think that there is money to be made... and if the industy gets behind it, it will grow much, much more quickly.
If the RIAA can say that each "illegal" download costs them a zillion dollars... then surely WiFi ISPs can value their services for $10 an hour.
If you can download tens of songs per hour, a $10 investment in anonymous access is a steal! You can download hundreds of zillions worth of songs for that $10!
I was thinking about selling my copies of GTA on ebay. However, if it's going to be banned, it's soon going to be worth a mint.
Maybe I should wait, huh?
AC
Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the government for a redress of grievances.
Parents should just do their job.
AC
This is not the first time he has done this... please see this post as well...
6 122
http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=91251&cid=785
This is absolutely not true.
Once a caffeine related headache kicks in, it will not go away with just caffeine.
Headaches feed in on themselves. This is why people with migraines are told to take their medication when they feel the headache coming on.
Headaches often cause decreased gastic motility anyway... which is why severe headaches can cause nausea and vomiting.
Your type of misinformation fools people into thinking their headaches are not related to caffeine. They slug down some coffee and their headache doesn't let up... so they say it's not the caffeine. This is just not true.
AC
Thanks for the information. That's exactly for what I was looking.
George Washington University's National Security Archive is the leading non-profit user of the U.S. Freedom of Information Act.
Bravo for GWU for taking responsibility and bringing this information into the public domain. Appreciate the link... it should provide some interesting reading tonight...
Saddam Hussein greets Donald Rumsfeld video
Citizens should know what their government is doing! It's a responsibility of being a citizen. Geeks/nerds are citizens too.
This release of information is also being released on the internet which allows for it to be quickly seen and evaluated by the masses. Releasing it onto the internet is indeed releasing it to the public.
What do we learn from such releases of information?
"Twenty years ago, on December 20, 1983, Donald Rumsfeld, currently the U.S. Secretary of Defense, held the first of two now-famous meetings with Saddam Hussein in Baghdad."
Source
AC
Yes, of course we have that... but I do not think that we are required to post the information after specific amount of time.
I was specifically talking about the 30 year rule.
AC
Why doesn't the US do this?
AC
I agree. The one thing that is keep me and my family from switching to VoIP is 911 access. It comforts me to know that my wife or kids can pick up the phone and get help immediately. Even if they can't talk, at least 911 knows where they are--on the land line.
On voIP, it will redirect your 911 call to the appropriate place... maybe. It may also transfer your address. VoIP will never promise that this will work perfectly without fault for legal reasons.
Japan is trying to switch completely over to VoIP... and all I want is dependable 911 access.
AC
Actually, to clarify, this guy helped me quit... and I'm one of the friends/patients that he helped get off caffeine. When I saw this "ask slashdot" I called and asked him to post it on his site.
I quit all coffee (which was my main habit) and just used those penguin caffeine-full mints. I decreased the number of mints I used by four each day until I was off. I had headaches at the end.
The doc originally suggested that I get off caffeine because I was having heartburn and palpations.
AC
Here's one doctor's experience and suggestions getting off caffeine.
He describes his difficulty quitting cold turkey... and describes ways of cutting down.
When I tried to quit, I found this helpful.
AC
Nah... put the weight of industry behind it. This is America, right? Let the dollar do its thing!
The hardware for one hotspot should last practically forever. Limit the bandwidth to a modest amount and price it cheaply!
Hell, if I just want to check my email, let me purchase the granny speed pack for $2 for an hour. If I want to play online games and need the speed, let me buy the blistering $10 an hour pack. If I want to view p0rn anonymously, let me buy the $25 dirty old man package.
Once a few people start making money at this... it will take off.
I love the free grants and non-profit idea. I just think that there is money to be made... and if the industy gets behind it, it will grow much, much more quickly.
If the RIAA can say that each "illegal" download costs them a zillion dollars... then surely WiFi ISPs can value their services for $10 an hour.
If you can download tens of songs per hour, a $10 investment in anonymous access is a steal! You can download hundreds of zillions worth of songs for that $10!