The MBTA started phasing out turnstiles about a year and a half ago, and South Station was one of the first stations to get the new motorized glass panels.
If it doesn't interact by the electromagnetic force, it cannot affect anything chemically. If it doesn't interact by the strong force, it cannot cause nuclear reactions. Even if it interacts by the weak force, the effect would be equivalent to the neutrinos already coursing through us. To my understanding, it's an explanation for effects specifically by gravity, which we already are experiencing.
I worked at MIT last summer in the Games to Teach project. Several games were in development, one of which was Civ III mod that made it more historically accurate. Unfortunately, that never was able to be created due to funding problems (Microsoft ditched us - slashdot bashing anticipated). Also of note was the beginnings of Revolution (briefly mentioned in the article). I am unaware about its current state, but at the point I left, it was to be a total conversion of Neverwinter Nights.
Most of the games were targeted at a middle school level, where the amount of detail in lessons is normally quite low. In this case, the games would be quite useful. For example, a Civilization style game could help provide an overview of events over a wide period of time, while holding the students attention. Other types of games could be used for more in-depth studies. Revolution, for example, had each student play as a person living in a town in the late 1700s. They would experience scripted events based on the actual causes of the revolutionary war. (this may have changed since last summer)
Well, based on the fact that they state that "Some species of algae are ideally suited to biodiesel production due to their high oil content (some as much as 50% oil), and extremely fast growth rates.", I dont think they plan to just harvest from whatever happens to be growing in the swamp. More likely, they are going to pick particular species of algae that do not produce harmful toxins. Not to mention that it was suggested that this be performed in a controlled environment.
BUSH cant be elected again in 2008, but hes the least of the problems; he doesnt even read his reports. Just think if we were stuck with someone like Karl Rove or Dick Cheney...
IIRC, Comcast is actually better about that than attbi was. I used to have ATT Broadband, and they refused to support routers; they wouldnt help you when the service was down (due to construction/etc.) if they knew you had one. Once Comcast ate them, there werent any more problems.
They arent that stupid, the entertainment industries (and MS) have plenty of money left for lobbying. I wouldnt count on many copyrights expiring anytime soon, at the rate that extensions are being added.
"To promote the progress of science and useful arts, by securing for LIMITED times to authors and inventors the exclusive right to THEIR respective writings and discoveries;"
- US Constitution, Article I, Section 8.
Why dont we try adhering to it? It seems that the USPTO and the rest of the government doesnt seem to care about two crucial words in that.
Limited - yeah right, not with all this copyright term extension garbage.
Their - the overworked examiners are the problem here, rushing patents through without even googling for prior art.
They get angry at a university server for linking to illegal files on another computer, but what about sites like ShareReactor or any other sites with bittorrent/ed2k links?
Well, what do you expect with all the half eaten food people leave and spill all over them? I was moved to a different desk temporarily a while ago, and one of the speakers was glued down by cheap coffee.
I should charge more for checking all those damn boxes by hand in Ad-Aware 6.
I wonder if there are any tools that could make tasks like this easier, such as a LiveCD Linux distro that included antivirus and spyware tools for cleaning up windows partitions? That would solve problems such as unidentified worms that disable antivirus software.
I dont have any experience with the D-Link 604, but i used to have a 704P and it kept overheating, at which point i would get terrible ping and dialup speeds. I managed to get a couple more months out of it by adding some fans to the side, but when it did finally die, I couldnt touch it for a few minutes.
I have a Netgear RP612v2 now, its been working perfectly with regard to both the firewall and the network. I would definately say netgear is the better choice.
Lets not even get started on linksys, everything i have bought from them has died on day 1.
Hmm, there was an article in discover or scientific american a while ago about this. The course is not flat or straight, otherwise this race would have been done ages ago.
The MBTA started phasing out turnstiles about a year and a half ago, and South Station was one of the first stations to get the new motorized glass panels.
If it doesn't interact by the electromagnetic force, it cannot affect anything chemically. If it doesn't interact by the strong force, it cannot cause nuclear reactions. Even if it interacts by the weak force, the effect would be equivalent to the neutrinos already coursing through us. To my understanding, it's an explanation for effects specifically by gravity, which we already are experiencing.
Advertisers just need to move on. Look at Google, for example - their text ads are unintrusive, relevant, and do not slow browsing.
My new IBM ThinkPad T42p lasts 4-5 hours/battery, and I haven't tweaked the power management yet.
I worked at MIT last summer in the Games to Teach project. Several games were in development, one of which was Civ III mod that made it more historically accurate. Unfortunately, that never was able to be created due to funding problems (Microsoft ditched us - slashdot bashing anticipated). Also of note was the beginnings of Revolution (briefly mentioned in the article). I am unaware about its current state, but at the point I left, it was to be a total conversion of Neverwinter Nights.
Most of the games were targeted at a middle school level, where the amount of detail in lessons is normally quite low. In this case, the games would be quite useful. For example, a Civilization style game could help provide an overview of events over a wide period of time, while holding the students attention. Other types of games could be used for more in-depth studies. Revolution, for example, had each student play as a person living in a town in the late 1700s. They would experience scripted events based on the actual causes of the revolutionary war. (this may have changed since last summer)
Well, based on the fact that they state that "Some species of algae are ideally suited to biodiesel production due to their high oil content (some as much as 50% oil), and extremely fast growth rates.", I dont think they plan to just harvest from whatever happens to be growing in the swamp. More likely, they are going to pick particular species of algae that do not produce harmful toxins. Not to mention that it was suggested that this be performed in a controlled environment.
According to several star wars references, he does (thats how he becomes vader)
BUSH cant be elected again in 2008, but hes the least of the problems; he doesnt even read his reports. Just think if we were stuck with someone like Karl Rove or Dick Cheney...
IIRC, Comcast is actually better about that than attbi was. I used to have ATT Broadband, and they refused to support routers; they wouldnt help you when the service was down (due to construction/etc.) if they knew you had one. Once Comcast ate them, there werent any more problems.
But somehow the system wont run much faster than one of today's midrange dells...
They arent that stupid, the entertainment industries (and MS) have plenty of money left for lobbying. I wouldnt count on many copyrights expiring anytime soon, at the rate that extensions are being added.
Its called Florida...
Sounds like what spyware companies have been pushing for years...
Welcome to America...
"To promote the progress of science and useful arts, by securing for LIMITED times to authors and inventors the exclusive right to THEIR respective writings and discoveries;"
- US Constitution, Article I, Section 8.
Why dont we try adhering to it? It seems that the USPTO and the rest of the government doesnt seem to care about two crucial words in that.
Limited - yeah right, not with all this copyright term extension garbage.
Their - the overworked examiners are the problem here, rushing patents through without even googling for prior art.
11 days late...
I doubt it, as the purity of the water would be ruined as soon as it made contact with a (likely dirty) surface.
Maybe this is the crap they advertise through the work at home - earn big money spam?
I was at my house in Massachusetts playing Unreal Tournament 2003.
So that means we all have large debt and small penises?
They get angry at a university server for linking to illegal files on another computer, but what about sites like ShareReactor or any other sites with bittorrent/ed2k links?
Well, what do you expect with all the half eaten food people leave and spill all over them? I was moved to a different desk temporarily a while ago, and one of the speakers was glued down by cheap coffee.
I wonder if there are any tools that could make tasks like this easier, such as a LiveCD Linux distro that included antivirus and spyware tools for cleaning up windows partitions? That would solve problems such as unidentified worms that disable antivirus software.
I dont have any experience with the D-Link 604, but i used to have a 704P and it kept overheating, at which point i would get terrible ping and dialup speeds. I managed to get a couple more months out of it by adding some fans to the side, but when it did finally die, I couldnt touch it for a few minutes. I have a Netgear RP612v2 now, its been working perfectly with regard to both the firewall and the network. I would definately say netgear is the better choice. Lets not even get started on linksys, everything i have bought from them has died on day 1.
Hmm, there was an article in discover or scientific american a while ago about this. The course is not flat or straight, otherwise this race would have been done ages ago.