Design and build small, modular nukes for cargo ship power plants. It was tried once as a demonstration project. Unfortunately, they pulled the plug on it just before fuel oil prices started to rise enough to make the Savannah economical.
Try telling US citizens residing overseas that US law does not apply
Try telling foreign financial institutions that US Law does not apply to them.
You might think that Lincoln freed the slaves. But you still belong to this country. And in much the same way that your predecessors were returned to their masters regardless of their resident states laws, we still can't outrun our masters.
I used to work for an outfit that did a version of this. Before the Internet, management would release their internal mission and vision statements to the workforce. A few weeks later, some people purportedly not associated with the company would write glowing editorials to the local paper. About what a great company we were. Using all the same buzzwords and phrases from management's internal memos.
The idea behind our system of checks and balances and restricted federal powers is that we should be able to coast through the occasional moron in office. A classic case of The Dilbert Principle in action. This goes against the grain for those who expect a nanny state to run their daily lives. Hence all the screaming and hand-wringing.
In the UAL case, many of the people who profited or got hurt were innocent. Stupid, for not checking out the story. My idea is to leave an unreleased story somewhere that only would be read by people stealing press releases. But in the latter case, it's more likely to fool the greedy as they don't have second sources for the news they acquired.
The key word here is Foreign. Slipping a few bucks to domestic politicians is protected speech. This wasn't passed to prosecute criminal activities overseas. It was passed to keep all the political contribution money here at home.
I haven't been following this story. What exactly did she leak and why was it classified? Did the leak reveal NSA methods and capabilities? Aside from this, what harm would revealing Russian espionage efforts to the public? It makes them look like the shit that they are and gives people and organizations a heads-up about possible threats.
And what will the penalty be? Pay them back the price of the patch?
The interesting part would be if someone installed the patch, ran the benchmarks, published the results and then Intel sued them for an imputed loss of sales.
AFAIK, Verizon does not offer any unlimited plans that do not throttle.
Why not? It's not like they didn't have the capacity available. They did, once the fire department coughed up the extra fee. Why not just have a plan to kick in an excess usage fee once they go over the cap for that month and keep the bandwidth up?
Design and build small, modular nukes for cargo ship power plants. It was tried once as a demonstration project. Unfortunately, they pulled the plug on it just before fuel oil prices started to rise enough to make the Savannah economical.
They have an 800 acre empty lot right in the middle of the city.
n/t
They should restrict the sale and licensing of full sized automobiles* to those 21 and over. Bring in Kei cars for the teenagers.
*And no full auto either.
The US political parties have essentially torn that down.
Maybe not. Trump's election was as much a big f* you to the GOP power structure as it was to the Democrats.
I have this urge to jump up and yell 'Bingo!'
Try telling US citizens residing overseas that US law does not apply
Try telling foreign financial institutions that US Law does not apply to them.
You might think that Lincoln freed the slaves. But you still belong to this country. And in much the same way that your predecessors were returned to their masters regardless of their resident states laws, we still can't outrun our masters.
The beatings will continue until morale improves.
I used to work for an outfit that did a version of this. Before the Internet, management would release their internal mission and vision statements to the workforce. A few weeks later, some people purportedly not associated with the company would write glowing editorials to the local paper. About what a great company we were. Using all the same buzzwords and phrases from management's internal memos.
The idea behind our system of checks and balances and restricted federal powers is that we should be able to coast through the occasional moron in office. A classic case of The Dilbert Principle in action. This goes against the grain for those who expect a nanny state to run their daily lives. Hence all the screaming and hand-wringing.
In the UAL case, many of the people who profited or got hurt were innocent. Stupid, for not checking out the story. My idea is to leave an unreleased story somewhere that only would be read by people stealing press releases. But in the latter case, it's more likely to fool the greedy as they don't have second sources for the news they acquired.
Personally, I hope not.
But But we paid all that money to get our way with the federal.
Hey. State and local politicians have gotta eat too.
The key word here is Foreign. Slipping a few bucks to domestic politicians is protected speech. This wasn't passed to prosecute criminal activities overseas. It was passed to keep all the political contribution money here at home.
"GE To Declare Bankruptcy", "Lockheed Sold to Chinese", etc. Sit back and watch idiots buy fake info and lose billions.
FTFY
I haven't been following this story. What exactly did she leak and why was it classified? Did the leak reveal NSA methods and capabilities? Aside from this, what harm would revealing Russian espionage efforts to the public? It makes them look like the shit that they are and gives people and organizations a heads-up about possible threats.
Play stupid games, win stupid prizes.
Kansas. The settlers that didn't even make it to the West coast.
Some LIDAR units operate through 360 degrees. So no additional units would be needed.
I can just imagine them getting some strange data.
That doesn't make it enforceable.
And what will the penalty be? Pay them back the price of the patch?
The interesting part would be if someone installed the patch, ran the benchmarks, published the results and then Intel sued them for an imputed loss of sales.
AFAIK, Verizon does not offer any unlimited plans that do not throttle.
Why not? It's not like they didn't have the capacity available. They did, once the fire department coughed up the extra fee. Why not just have a plan to kick in an excess usage fee once they go over the cap for that month and keep the bandwidth up?
I see dead people.
So, if I was to use the BCard app, what data would I have access to?