The requirements are right there in the question: would you support creating a database to track people of a given religion? There's no tweak to the requirements that could make that a palatable task.
Depends on the company. I've been with my current company for about five and a half years; we came in through an acquisition, where the old company had been lowballing everyone. I got a 10% raise at the time of the acquisition, and over the last five years I've gotten about a 115% raise beyond that. (No, that's not a typo, I'm making more than double what I was when we were acquired.)
It depends on the state. In Michigan, for example, items intended for resale aren't taxed. And certain entities are exempt from paying sales taxes (schools, for example). That wouldn't be possible if our sales taxes were set up as you describe.
The problem isn't on the server end, it's on the device end. The root certificates saying "yes, this is Amazon, all is good" are expiring. If the device doesn't trust the server's identity (because it was signed with a new root cert), there's no way for it to download the updates.
You won't even be able to buy from Amazon when you connect to wifi; you'd have to download a new book from your computer then copy that to your Kindle via USB.
You can't have both - if you want to be able to download stuff you're paying a monthly fee for to use offline, it's going to have DRM. Otherwise, you could download everything, then cancel it, and keep watching it indefinitely.
The problem isn't the NSA having offensive weapons. The problem is the NSA knowing that some installations are built on quicksand but not informing the owners.
That's not helping national security, that's degrading it.
Extending it won't encourage the dead author to produce more work, but it can (theoretically) encourage people who are alive now to create works they wouldn't otherwise have done because they'll be able to better provide for their descendants.
They are allowed to break into your hours when you're not home and search your stuff. They just have to get a judge to rubber-stamp a piece of paper first, which doesn't take any great amount of effort.
If you hold back refunds until the first of May, people won't bother to file until April 14th; there's no incentive to file sooner like there is now. So then you're trying to do more work in that tight window.
Roads: funded by the gas taxes they pay for their vehicles.
Medical facilities: not used by corporations, only by individuals.
Police: funded by the property taxes on their facilities.
I'll grant you the legal system, but that doesn't require a 19%, or even 1.9%, tax on corporate income to fund.
Nest has a dumb mode like that, but no motion sensor override. (You can use the sensor instead of the schedule, with the Auto Away feature, but not in addition to.)
That doesn't help your other objections, of course. I just wanted to clarify that point.:)
You only have a say if the loafers - er, lifers - don't outnumber you and outrank you.
As someone who was a union member about a decade ago, you sure couldn't tell it by my union's actions.
The requirements are right there in the question: would you support creating a database to track people of a given religion? There's no tweak to the requirements that could make that a palatable task.
Depends on the company. I've been with my current company for about five and a half years; we came in through an acquisition, where the old company had been lowballing everyone. I got a 10% raise at the time of the acquisition, and over the last five years I've gotten about a 115% raise beyond that. (No, that's not a typo, I'm making more than double what I was when we were acquired.)
Those XP machines shouldn't be connected to the Internet anyways.
It depends on the state. In Michigan, for example, items intended for resale aren't taxed. And certain entities are exempt from paying sales taxes (schools, for example). That wouldn't be possible if our sales taxes were set up as you describe.
The very oldest models will be USB-only; wi-fi wasn't added until the third generation (aka Kindle Keyboard).
The problem isn't on the server end, it's on the device end. The root certificates saying "yes, this is Amazon, all is good" are expiring. If the device doesn't trust the server's identity (because it was signed with a new root cert), there's no way for it to download the updates.
Amazon sent emails out about this over a month ago...
You won't even be able to buy from Amazon when you connect to wifi; you'd have to download a new book from your computer then copy that to your Kindle via USB.
You can't have both - if you want to be able to download stuff you're paying a monthly fee for to use offline, it's going to have DRM. Otherwise, you could download everything, then cancel it, and keep watching it indefinitely.
So she's now only able to be employed in a completely different field. Sounds to me like it did a lot of harm, then.
The bullshit there is the IRS trying to tax you on that foreign income, not that corporations aren't.
As far as I know the US is pretty much the only country that tries to double dip on its citizens' income like that.
The problem isn't the NSA having offensive weapons. The problem is the NSA knowing that some installations are built on quicksand but not informing the owners.
That's not helping national security, that's degrading it.
Yes it is. Everywhere else he's just "the Doctor".
Then you must be the first coming of our new robot overlords. HAIL CALVIN!
A show shouldn't need 40 episodes to hit its stride. Don't blame the network, blame the writers for taking so long to get to the point.
Xerox, Canon, HP, Epson, Samsung, Lexmark, Brother, Ricoh, Dell... there's lots of companies in the market.
Extending it won't encourage the dead author to produce more work, but it can (theoretically) encourage people who are alive now to create works they wouldn't otherwise have done because they'll be able to better provide for their descendants.
When I took it in 2002, it was C++ at the time. I think they switched to Java a year or two later.
They are allowed to break into your hours when you're not home and search your stuff. They just have to get a judge to rubber-stamp a piece of paper first, which doesn't take any great amount of effort.
Obsidian's rights were sublicensed from Red Eagle.
If you hold back refunds until the first of May, people won't bother to file until April 14th; there's no incentive to file sooner like there is now. So then you're trying to do more work in that tight window.
Roads: funded by the gas taxes they pay for their vehicles.
Medical facilities: not used by corporations, only by individuals.
Police: funded by the property taxes on their facilities.
I'll grant you the legal system, but that doesn't require a 19%, or even 1.9%, tax on corporate income to fund.
Nest has a dumb mode like that, but no motion sensor override. (You can use the sensor instead of the schedule, with the Auto Away feature, but not in addition to.)
That doesn't help your other objections, of course. I just wanted to clarify that point. :)