Write it out on archival paper, put it in a sealed ceramic pot and bury it on the lee side of a travelling sand dune. - Ceramic so metal detectors won't find it. - how high up on the dune is determined by how fast the dune is travelling, and how long you want it to stay buried. - make the average density of the pot plus contents the same as the sand, so it neither sinks nor floats.
Then they document all released code, labelling it as either released by Microsoft or owned by $third_party.
If $third_party wants to enforce their copyright, then $third_party becomes liable for its maintenance.
The infringement is for using "yellow". Not a particular shade or PMS color, just "yellow".
That leaves red, pink, orange, green, blue, purple, brown, black, grey, and white. (Did I miss any?)
So about ten more trademarks and the market is locked. Not exactly unlimited.
the problem with the boycott is that 99%+ of the users aren't active contributors, just passive viewers. So a boycott won't change the viewership numbers very much. heck, most of the people who would boycott are probably no script/adblock anyway, so there's no lost impressions there.
You are probably right about that percentage, but you miss the point that even the passive viewers are here for the comments and the links to interesting tech stuff. If the active users go away there will be nothing left to passively view.
... nobody can make it happen on a large scale at cost, let alone at a profit...
That applies now.
The only reason it is not economically feasible is because it is so cheap to dig fossil fuels out of the ground. Allegedly, we are now past peak oil, and the price of fossil fuels should start going up. Eventually it will be economical to produce synthetic hydrocarbon fuels using solar/nuclear/other power and either biomass or CO2 and water - either because the technology has improved, or the products have risen in value, or more likely, both.
He's saying he's paid retail up to the amount he uses (12 or 25 c/kWh). (Connection charges are not included.)
When he generates an excess they only pay him wholesale for that. (2c/kWh)
I think it is actually a reasonable model.
Maintaining the lines is a pretty fixed cost = connection fee.
Generate less than you use = you pay retail on the diff like everyone else.
Generate more than you use = you collect wholesale on what you sell, same as other power suppliers.
They make a profit on selling your excess power, you get free energy storage.
Any mobile phone in AU can call the emergency number (000) regardless of blacklists, whitelists, whether you've paid the bill, or anything else. If the phone is still functional and can get a signal, you can call the cops, ambulance, and/or fire brigade.
Your government has nukes, artillery, tanks, bombers, etc. Are you going to demand access to these too? After all your logic seems to be 'whatever government can has, I want too'.
Any objective reading of the second amendment would seem to indicate that that is the case. If you don't like it, you should work to get the second amendment changed, not work to violate your constitution.
These policy prices are largely determined by the re-insurers, not the insurance companies you deal with directly. This is a much smaller group of much larger companies. I would have no difficulty believing they were colluding to raise prices.
When he was threatened with a lawsuit the problem magically went away. Obviously, he had the power to fix it. If it took threatening him to get him to fix it, then he deserved the threat.
It wasn't budget cuts that got rid of woodshop and metalwork classes, it was the combination of legal liability and feminism. - Little Jimmy cuts his finger on a chisel, mummy and daddy to sue the school. - Woodwork and metalwork are mainly of interest to boys and are therefore sexist. They should learn "home economics" instead.
That's pretty much what Oz did when we converted. The open road limit was 60 mph, and went to 100 km/h (~ 62 mph). Same with the in-town limit of 35 mph which went to 60 km/h (~37 mph). Made it much more acceptable to most drivers.
It is also perfectly fine for the prevention of "grab the cop's gun and shoot him" scenario. As long as bypassing the mechanism takes more than a few seconds, it would save lives.
Carbon dioxide does act as a greenhouse gas. However, at some point there is enough to essentially block that radiation window, and from that point extra carbon dioxide has very little direct effect on temperature*.
*It probably still has indirect effects by by affecting the biosphere.
But it is 6 degrees above the boiling point of liquid nitrogen. Cooling things only that far is a lot cheaper than going down to liquid helium temps.
If your pixels are 0.4 x 0.4 metre you can get pretty damn close.
Write it out on archival paper, put it in a sealed ceramic pot and bury it on the lee side of a travelling sand dune.
- Ceramic so metal detectors won't find it.
- how high up on the dune is determined by how fast the dune is travelling, and how long you want it to stay buried.
- make the average density of the pot plus contents the same as the sand, so it neither sinks nor floats.
That's ordinary NSLs. What about the the double-secret NSLs?
Then they document all released code, labelling it as either released by Microsoft or owned by $third_party.
If $third_party wants to enforce their copyright, then $third_party becomes liable for its maintenance.
The infringement is for using "yellow". Not a particular shade or PMS color, just "yellow".
That leaves red, pink, orange, green, blue, purple, brown, black, grey, and white. (Did I miss any?)
So about ten more trademarks and the market is locked. Not exactly unlimited.
the problem with the boycott is that 99%+ of the users aren't active contributors, just passive viewers. So a boycott won't change the viewership numbers very much. heck, most of the people who would boycott are probably no script/adblock anyway, so there's no lost impressions there.
You are probably right about that percentage, but you miss the point that even the passive viewers are here for the comments and the links to interesting tech stuff. If the active users go away there will be nothing left to passively view.
That applies now.
The only reason it is not economically feasible is because it is so cheap to dig fossil fuels out of the ground.
Allegedly, we are now past peak oil, and the price of fossil fuels should start going up. Eventually it will be economical to produce synthetic hydrocarbon fuels using solar/nuclear/other power and either biomass or CO2 and water - either because the technology has improved, or the products have risen in value, or more likely, both.
He's saying he's paid retail up to the amount he uses (12 or 25 c/kWh). (Connection charges are not included.)
When he generates an excess they only pay him wholesale for that. (2c/kWh)
I think it is actually a reasonable model.
Maintaining the lines is a pretty fixed cost = connection fee.
Generate less than you use = you pay retail on the diff like everyone else.
Generate more than you use = you collect wholesale on what you sell, same as other power suppliers.
They make a profit on selling your excess power, you get free energy storage.
Any mobile phone in AU can call the emergency number (000) regardless of blacklists, whitelists, whether you've paid the bill, or anything else.
If the phone is still functional and can get a signal, you can call the cops, ambulance, and/or fire brigade.
Your government has nukes, artillery, tanks, bombers, etc. Are you going to demand access to these too? After all your logic seems to be 'whatever government can has, I want too'.
Any objective reading of the second amendment would seem to indicate that that is the case. If you don't like it, you should work to get the second amendment changed, not work to violate your constitution.
Four thousand light years is actually quite a long way.
These policy prices are largely determined by the re-insurers, not the insurance companies you deal with directly.
This is a much smaller group of much larger companies. I would have no difficulty believing they were colluding to raise prices.
Red or black, depending on where he set the ribbon.
What?
It's a gram and a half of sodium. It's 3.8 grams of salt.
When he was threatened with a lawsuit the problem magically went away. Obviously, he had the power to fix it. If it took threatening him to get him to fix it, then he deserved the threat.
Australian Ombudsmen kick arse. They have some pretty tough powers over whoever they are monitoring, and they aren't afraid to use it.
It wasn't budget cuts that got rid of woodshop and metalwork classes, it was the combination of legal liability and feminism.
- Little Jimmy cuts his finger on a chisel, mummy and daddy to sue the school.
- Woodwork and metalwork are mainly of interest to boys and are therefore sexist. They should learn "home economics" instead.
I'm also curious about what it was that made the more comfortable cabins weigh more.
Waterbeds. Those buggers are heavy.
That's pretty much what Oz did when we converted. The open road limit was 60 mph, and went to 100 km/h (~ 62 mph). Same with the in-town limit of 35 mph which went to 60 km/h (~37 mph).
Made it much more acceptable to most drivers.
It is also perfectly fine for the prevention of "grab the cop's gun and shoot him" scenario. As long as bypassing the mechanism takes more than a few seconds, it would save lives.
They will if you turn the sensitivity up to "I need to search the hot chick" levels.
Some of them will. Not necessarily all. See http://www.fantastic-voyage.net//
Carbon dioxide does act as a greenhouse gas. However, at some point there is enough to essentially block that radiation window, and from that point extra carbon dioxide has very little direct effect on temperature*.
*It probably still has indirect effects by by affecting the biosphere.