Unless the efficiency is too low and the economics don't support it. Then we would be better off building battery banks and displacing future CO2 production with renewables. Existing CO2 can be removed from the atmosphere pretty quickly by photosynthesis.
What's stopping the EU from taking the position that they have similar access to users data stored on American servers? Google/Facebook provide services to Europeans, Europe has the right to access their data to support 'investigations'.
First of all, I don't see any definitions of the extent of the US law. Does it only apply to the data of US persons in support of a US investigation? Then I don't see a problem with granting the EU the same sorts of access to EU persons for the same reasons. Nowhere is it stated that the US wants to go on fishing expeditions through non US persons data. But if this is the case, then I don't see where European officials shouldn't have the same rights.
... security threat. The details that they are dancing around is that encrypted public service radios have been hacked. The information is out there, just like DVD and Blu-ray rippers. Patches are available for digital trunking scanners and SDR receivers.
This is more about Motorola having made a promise to their customers which they can not keep. And as anyone involved with software knows, nobody can keep in the long term.
since management thinks it must be the best kind of environment
So why do the managers get their own offices? Following their arguments, they must not be performing as well. That star CEO your company hired should be sitting in the middle of the shop floor, with all the assembly-line workers yakking about football pools and whether Ford or Chevy make the shittiest pickup trucks.
usually a brief synopses.. cease fire stand down.. creation values us all the same? new duopoly math lends to; 2+1= 1 too many, for most of us unchosens? it's all batfarm now? creation (electricity goo & magnets, plus a special unvisible ingredient) provides more than enough of everything we need with no personal gain motive? no signup or subscription fees ever.. that's the spirit.. the hills are alive.. thanks again
They say it looks like effects we are familiar with. But the actual observations didn't match existing models. So they did some simulations and determined that this is actually a hybrid of a thin film interference effect and internal reflections.
That's why people that age learned sequences of where to click
Right. Muscle memory. I don't have to look down at my car's audio system to figure out which button does what. If it's a software-generated UI, each location on the screen changes function depending on what mode the app is in. Or if some developer with too much time decided to move functions around in the menu. For an ATM, this isn't that big a deal. Witness the millenials staring at some machine with their mouth hanging open as they have to re-read the same menu every time. Just to make sure the function they want is still there.
Plano, Texas and Purchase, New York are corporate offices. Bottling plants are spread all over the place. So yeah, office jobs. Sadly, they didn't consider replacing Ramon Laguarta with a very small shell script.
But that's not a plate reader error. That sort of thing has been happening since cops carried hard copy lists of plate numbers to watch for, updated infrequently or typed by some fat-fingered slob.
... how stupid do they have to be to accept the ANPR output blindly? If the reader 'hits' on a possible stolen vehicle plate, it's going to dump that data out for the cops to read (so they can actually pull the person over). And once the data comes up, it takes a special kind of moron not to realize that the plate on the car they are stopping doesn't match the screen data. Not to mention model, year, color, etc.
Now, I've received a red light ticket where the ANPR mistook a 'Q' on a plate for an 'O' and mailed me the ticket with (evidently) no human intervention. Because the vehicle description that came up was for a late model red Chevy Suburban. And my vehicle is a 40 year old green Landcruiser.
I worked with a guy who our company was sending to visit a remote site. Company policy was to buy economy class airline tickets for employees' business travel. His response: "Get me a first class ticket or I'm not going. Don't like it? Then fire me." He flew first class. And guess what. It was a legitimate business expense.
When you deal with people at executive levels, they often have personal services contracts. And if part of that contract says you scoop up my dog's shit or you pick all the brown M&Ms out of the bowl, then you do it. As far as the tax evasion part: As long as the pop-scooping and M&M sorting is reported as income and that exec pays taxes on it, there is no evasion.
Unless the efficiency is too low and the economics don't support it. Then we would be better off building battery banks and displacing future CO2 production with renewables. Existing CO2 can be removed from the atmosphere pretty quickly by photosynthesis.
I wonder if it needs energy to do this
Of course. But that problem has been solved
What's stopping the EU from taking the position that they have similar access to users data stored on American servers? Google/Facebook provide services to Europeans, Europe has the right to access their data to support 'investigations'.
First of all, I don't see any definitions of the extent of the US law. Does it only apply to the data of US persons in support of a US investigation? Then I don't see a problem with granting the EU the same sorts of access to EU persons for the same reasons. Nowhere is it stated that the US wants to go on fishing expeditions through non US persons data. But if this is the case, then I don't see where European officials shouldn't have the same rights.
This is more about Motorola having made a promise to their customers which they can not keep. And as anyone involved with software knows, nobody can keep in the long term.
Was that a Famas?
since management thinks it must be the best kind of environment
So why do the managers get their own offices? Following their arguments, they must not be performing as well. That star CEO your company hired should be sitting in the middle of the shop floor, with all the assembly-line workers yakking about football pools and whether Ford or Chevy make the shittiest pickup trucks.
I'm listening to rap, not music.
usually a brief synopses.. cease fire stand down.. creation values us all the same? new duopoly math lends to; 2+1= 1 too many, for most of us unchosens? it's all batfarm now? creation (electricity goo & magnets, plus a special unvisible ingredient) provides more than enough of everything we need with no personal gain motive? no signup or subscription fees ever.. that's the spirit.. the hills are alive.. thanks again
Press 4 for English
They say it looks like effects we are familiar with. But the actual observations didn't match existing models. So they did some simulations and determined that this is actually a hybrid of a thin film interference effect and internal reflections.
I can think of a few uses for Catherine Zeta-Jones.
Why would a password be sent to a spellcheck service?
Because you keep misspelling A#1b0Q^xK2-
That's why people that age learned sequences of where to click
Right. Muscle memory. I don't have to look down at my car's audio system to figure out which button does what. If it's a software-generated UI, each location on the screen changes function depending on what mode the app is in. Or if some developer with too much time decided to move functions around in the menu. For an ATM, this isn't that big a deal. Witness the millenials staring at some machine with their mouth hanging open as they have to re-read the same menu every time. Just to make sure the function they want is still there.
And then once they are there they can listen to this
I've been in places where the volume was so high it was distracting to have a conversation.
It's to encourage to you finish your coffee and get the hell out of there. So they can free up those seats for more customers.
... the cops. Every time they start pounding on my front door, I've got to flush my stash.
Plano, Texas and Purchase, New York are corporate offices. Bottling plants are spread all over the place. So yeah, office jobs. Sadly, they didn't consider replacing Ramon Laguarta with a very small shell script.
'training' their robots
It's R2D2's brother, H-1B.
But that's not a plate reader error. That sort of thing has been happening since cops carried hard copy lists of plate numbers to watch for, updated infrequently or typed by some fat-fingered slob.
Now, I've received a red light ticket where the ANPR mistook a 'Q' on a plate for an 'O' and mailed me the ticket with (evidently) no human intervention. Because the vehicle description that came up was for a late model red Chevy Suburban. And my vehicle is a 40 year old green Landcruiser.
B...b...but they have Jesus in their hearts.
I worked with a guy who our company was sending to visit a remote site. Company policy was to buy economy class airline tickets for employees' business travel. His response: "Get me a first class ticket or I'm not going. Don't like it? Then fire me." He flew first class. And guess what. It was a legitimate business expense.
When you deal with people at executive levels, they often have personal services contracts. And if part of that contract says you scoop up my dog's shit or you pick all the brown M&Ms out of the bowl, then you do it. As far as the tax evasion part: As long as the pop-scooping and M&M sorting is reported as income and that exec pays taxes on it, there is no evasion.
Note that Israel is at a latitude of 31 degrees (North)
They didn't launch from Israel. So East-West and 31 degrees North don't really apply here.
using a gas hob
I think you've got far greater problems than some lousy PM2.5 particles.