Here in Norway everyone has followed the game online instead of doing actual work. DNB, our largest bank, had to block access to the live coverage. Almost everyone streamed the game making their network slow and it made real work difficult.
If you had read the article you would have seen many examples were rope cargo systems are better than trains. These mostly include moving ore and minerals from mines down steep hills to a harbor.
Also, "In 2007, another non-governmental organization built a gravity powered cargo ropeway in India that serves 2,000 families. It costs just 14,000 dollars and transports agricultural produce downhill while taking manure to fertilize the fields uphill".
"One calculation showed that a ropeway only 1 mile (1,630 metres) long with a difference in altitude of 0.4 miles (645 meters), would require a railway of 15 miles (24 km) to reach the same point. Ropeways were also generally half as expensive to operate when compared to cartage by mules, horses, and oxen."
The article does not state rope ways should replace all trains and trucks.
From TFA:
"In 2007, another non-governmental organization built a gravity powered cargo ropeway in India that serves 2,000 families. It costs just 14,000 dollars and transports agricultural produce downhill while taking manure to fertilize the fields uphill." More at http://ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=48170
The farmer’s federation charges Rs 5 (about 0.10 dollar) per carton from the farmers. This money is used for giving honorarium to the two persons who are engaged in operating the ropeway and for its maintenance, observes Kunwar.
You know, all of these questions were answered in TFA. TFA was actually a very enjoyable A IMHO.
Examples:
"In 2007, another non-governmental organization built a gravity powered cargo ropeway in India that serves 2,000 families. It costs just 14,000 dollars and transports agricultural produce downhill while taking manure to fertilize the fields uphill". More: http://ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=48170
The RopeCon system in Jamaica saves 1,200 truck journeys per day and generates 1,300 kWh of braking energy per day, which is fed back into the power network.
A temporary RopeCon installation was set up for the construction of a tunnel in Austria, where it was used for the transport of rock excavation material. Conveying capacity was 600 tonnes per hour, while engine output was very modest at 30 kW. The line was 270 metres long, with a vertical rise of 23 metres. It eliminated 115,000 truck journeys.
In Norway it is mandatory for all offices to have a natural source of light (e.g. windows) within a certain distance. If you work somewhere this is not possible, say a factory floor, there are strict rules about the quality of the light. Intensity, colors etc.
We have a Wii and Guitar Hero in one of the meeting rooms. It is hardly in use and when it is, it is when someone stays late after work and plays a bit, drinks a few beers. Small consultancy firm, about 30 employees.
Yes it was. I don't remember the exact phrasing. My friend's argument is in the lines of:
-You said it can play games
-You said I could put other OSs on it
I can no longer put other OSs on it, so my machine is broken. If I choose to not update it to keep the other OSs-option, I can no longer play games in the future.
Please provide me with one that works as advertised.
A friend of mine sent a letter to Sony Norway telling them how his PS3 stopped working as advertised. In Norway any consumer electronics should be expected to work in 5 years. As it stands his PS3 just stopped working well short of the five years.
No reply as of yet, but should be fun.
If you are going to do any searching in SharePoint 2010 anytime soon, you'll be using FAST. Unless you buy the stripped down version. Fast is very much in MS's plans.
I have had a few courses in medicine (in Norway, yay) and I must say: After I read a book on how much stuff could go wrong in my body I am amazed I'm ever healthy at all!
..or so the theory goes. Norway's largest newspapers all did stories on this earlier today. Here is from one of them: Vg.no, and here is another dagbladet.no.
The first image from vg is taken with a long shutter time (or long exposure, or what the english expression is) on a tripod.
americans might consider these newspapers NSFW. Most norwegian ads contain a fair amount of tits and ass. just sayin'.
Kind of. To be pedantic (and I hope I remember my Latin correctly), campi is plural of campus, but only in certain cases.
In the original sentence he said "in college campuses (campi?)". "In" triggers the ablative case ("ablative of place"), and plural the plural version of this is "-is" [1][2]. So the correct form would be "in college campis".
So in my opinion he could argue "campus" was now an English word and use say "campuses" in the English fashion, or go Latin all the way.
Not all Latin words ending with -us is -i in plural. All 4th declination nouns have -us in plural as well. E.g. manus/hand.
Here in Norway everyone has followed the game online instead of doing actual work. DNB, our largest bank, had to block access to the live coverage. Almost everyone streamed the game making their network slow and it made real work difficult.
(Norwegian source: http://e24.no/media/dnb-maatte-stenge-tilgangen-til-sjakk-vm/22641053)
As a Norwegian.... http://blog.caranddriver.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/12/Global-Gouging-Fuel-Prices-Around-the-World-1280.jpg
Languages are fluid, and you can't prevent it from happening. You've already lost this battle.
Are you saying he will loose this one?
That's right. loose.
If you had read the article you would have seen many examples were rope cargo systems are better than trains. These mostly include moving ore and minerals from mines down steep hills to a harbor.
Also, "In 2007, another non-governmental organization built a gravity powered cargo ropeway in India that serves 2,000 families. It costs just 14,000 dollars and transports agricultural produce downhill while taking manure to fertilize the fields uphill".
"One calculation showed that a ropeway only 1 mile (1,630 metres) long with a difference in altitude of 0.4 miles (645 meters), would require a railway of 15 miles (24 km) to reach the same point. Ropeways were also generally half as expensive to operate when compared to cartage by mules, horses, and oxen."
The article does not state rope ways should replace all trains and trucks.
From TFA:
"In 2007, another non-governmental organization built a gravity powered cargo ropeway in India that serves 2,000 families. It costs just 14,000 dollars and transports agricultural produce downhill while taking manure to fertilize the fields uphill." More at http://ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=48170
The farmer’s federation charges Rs 5 (about 0.10 dollar) per carton from the farmers. This money is used for giving honorarium to the two persons who are engaged in operating the ropeway and for its maintenance, observes Kunwar.
Examples:
I am not sure, you'll need to provide some pictures of your wife in said bikini so I can investigate further..
Also, Notepad++ has a ROT13 menu option
Only in this case the bees didn't get pissed. It was the government agency charged with overseeing the stick/beehive interaction that got angry.
As far as I have understood it (being a norwegian and following the case very loosely) , Timber Hill never filed suit. It was the Oslo Stock Exchange who discovered it and sent a report to the ( Financial Supervisory Authority of Norway ) who read it and sent the report on to the Ministry of Finance. Said ministry sent it to The National Authority for Investigation and Prosecution of Economic and Environmental Crime in Norway who then sent it to the police asking for an indictment.
The courts then found them guilty.
There is a StarCraft 10 ? Why I am still playing SC2 ?
Stop anthropomorphizing the Trans-Neptunian objects.
They hate it when you do that!
I certainly don't have any windows on my cubicle.
In Norway it is mandatory for all offices to have a natural source of light (e.g. windows) within a certain distance. If you work somewhere this is not possible, say a factory floor, there are strict rules about the quality of the light. Intensity, colors etc.
You want scientific? Ok, here you go: http://www.mathstat.uottawa.ca/~rsmith/Zombies.pdf It is a mathematical model of how the zombies will spread.
It is not as optimistic as cracked.com I am afraid.
We have a Wii and Guitar Hero in one of the meeting rooms. It is hardly in use and when it is, it is when someone stays late after work and plays a bit, drinks a few beers. Small consultancy firm, about 30 employees.
Yes it was. I don't remember the exact phrasing. My friend's argument is in the lines of:
-You said it can play games
-You said I could put other OSs on it
I can no longer put other OSs on it, so my machine is broken. If I choose to not update it to keep the other OSs-option, I can no longer play games in the future.
Please provide me with one that works as advertised.
A friend of mine sent a letter to Sony Norway telling them how his PS3 stopped working as advertised. In Norway any consumer electronics should be expected to work in 5 years. As it stands his PS3 just stopped working well short of the five years.
No reply as of yet, but should be fun.
All of them. They want ~everything~
If you are going to do any searching in SharePoint 2010 anytime soon, you'll be using FAST. Unless you buy the stripped down version. Fast is very much in MS's plans.
People expect a life free of disease,
I have had a few courses in medicine (in Norway, yay) and I must say: After I read a book on how much stuff could go wrong in my body I am amazed I'm ever healthy at all!
Try dagbladet again.
In case it drops of the first page before you get there, this was the picture.
..or so the theory goes. Norway's largest newspapers all did stories on this earlier today. Here is from one of them: Vg.no, and here is another dagbladet.no.
The first image from vg is taken with a long shutter time (or long exposure, or what the english expression is) on a tripod.
americans might consider these newspapers NSFW. Most norwegian ads contain a fair amount of tits and ass. just sayin'.
Kind of. To be pedantic (and I hope I remember my Latin correctly), campi is plural of campus, but only in certain cases.
/hand.
In the original sentence he said "in college campuses (campi?)". "In" triggers the ablative case ("ablative of place"), and plural the plural version of this is "-is" [1][2]. So the correct form would be "in college campis".
So in my opinion he could argue "campus" was now an English word and use say "campuses" in the English fashion, or go Latin all the way.
Not all Latin words ending with -us is -i in plural. All 4th declination nouns have -us in plural as well. E.g. manus
[1] Ablative: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ablative_case#Latin
[2] Campus is second declination: http://www.archives.nd.edu/cgi-bin/words.exe?campus
There is a rather long article on Murdoch's war on the Internet here. It should answer a lot of your questions on what the guy is thinking.
I like your positive attitude!