Are there any companies that hope to have a non diesel/gasoline big rig available by then? I know France has a large rail network, but are they going to use small consumer based electric vehicles to move that freight from the marshaling yard to the warehouse?
It might also make them easier and faster to assemble in the first place.
Or it could make them much more slower and expensive.
I'm reminded of when Wozniak developed Breakout. The original circuit design was going to use somewhere over 150 chips. Woz was able to get it down to 44 for the final design, but the version that shipped used over 100 because Atari found Woz's too difficult to manufacture.
Damnit why do people keep saying this.....Hitler never won a government election. He was appointed to Chancellor by Hindenburg, the guy who beat him in the presidential election.
So does Apple have "heart" and give 100% covered health care to it's employees too? Because although the health plan is good, it's not covered completely: https://www.glassdoor.com/Bene...
Sounds like Tim wants the Senate to do something he isn't willing to do himself.
It's amazing how few people realize this. If you talk to politicians or listen to people at TED talks, you'd think that healthcare IT is cutting edge and is changing the way we do medicine in amazing ways. Nothing is further from the truth. Healthcare IT is so far behind the rest of the industry that it's embarrassing. The tech is outdated, and crazy expensive. Look at how hard the U.K. NHS got hit by WannaCry recently for an example.
I worked in IT at a hospital for a few years. They started rolling out a new EMR and integrated billing system while I was there. This system cost over $1,500,000 U.S., and was a freakin' WinForms application......and this was in 2013. Nobody could tell me why it cost so much for a system that was state of the art back when Clinton was president. It's not just that one hospital either, everyone I talk to has the same experience (anecdotal of course).
How do you fix this? For starters, stop having doctors choose which IT system they should use. They are easily jaded, and at the end of the day their nurses and admin staff use the system instead. They end up choosing a system that they will never use.
Try paying hospital IT staff what they're worth. Salaries in that field are below the rest of the industry. On-call rotations and overtime are out of control.
The first IBM PC was release in 1981 with an 8088 processor and optional 8087 math co-processor. While I may be wrong on the date, I am sure of the CPU because I have one of the original system right here.
It's semantics really. The 8088 was a cheaper version of the 8086.....it used the 16-bit x86 instruction set, but the less expensive 8-bit data bus. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
They state: "One "preview sheet" we received from Tucson had a column for whether they received a warrant to crack into the phone", that hardly supports the claim of "most cases". That "preview sheet" lists 14 uses.
Tucson used it 316 times. I would consider 302 out of 316 "most cases".
If they're doing it without a warrant, then maybe we have something to worry about.
Didn't you say that it was with a warrant or consent? If they were given consent, that could explain the 14 part.
Is this one of those cases where the budget was fixed, and the number of inmates decreased, thereby making it look like the price of keeping an inmate increased? The summary itself says that the inmate population decreased by one-quarter, but at the same time the budget is the highest ever.
I don't understand why people put up with it. A decent laser printer is similarly priced to a garbage printer
How many laser printers have built-in scanning capabilities (I'm talking about for home use, not enterprisey stuff)? I can tell you that the only reason I own an inkjet printer is because it has a scanner. You don't see too many standalone scanners these days, unless you really shop around.
I like the ruling, but I think the day of the inkjet cartridge may finally be coming to an end regardless. For the past few decades the "paperless office" has been the Holy Grail of IT, but we were never quite able to reach it. I can remember seeing a statistic about 15 years ago stating that paper usage actually increased because of the ease of printing....If you needed to take something away from your desk, you just printed it and carried it with you. Now that mobile devices are pretty much ubiquitous, you can just carry it on your phone/tablet instead of having to print it.
they included all the normal "company holidays" in the flexible vacation time balance
I once worked at a hospital that did this, and I absolutely despised it. I didn't find out about it until after I accepted the offer.
Holidays like Christmas and New Years had to come out of my vacation time, which was already low enough. I get that a hospital is a true 24x7 operation, but the IT office was closed on those days, so it's not like I could have worked even if I wanted. It became a way of taking forced-vacation.
I think the doctors and nurses get a shift-differential for working those days, but I guess IT isn't considered that critical.
This was one of the primary reasons I ended up leaving it for greener pastures.
Now imagine if he was a poor uninsured working guy..
The folks in the article do have health care. They are required by law to purchase it, remember?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
Sure glad that is working out as intended.
like driver's licenses which need to be renewed for some reason a
I can't speak for everyone, but I don't look anything like the picture that was on my drivers license 20 years ago.
employees pensions
Now I know you're making stuff up :-)
You know what I don't tell my boss? That we use systemd.
.....never have been able to get that old original 2600 to work right with video on modern tv.
For real? My 2600 is hooked up to a 1080p 24" LED TV and seems to work just fine.
I'm using something similar to this instead of the old switchbox:
http://www.mouser.com/ProductD...
I'm just waiting on a beowulf cluster of these things....
- Tax breaks in the new area.
Are there any companies that hope to have a non diesel/gasoline big rig available by then? I know France has a large rail network, but are they going to use small consumer based electric vehicles to move that freight from the marshaling yard to the warehouse?
Thanks, I didn't realize it was an investment fund.
The Alaska Permanent Fund was established in 1976 as the Alaska pipeline construction neared completion
So what will happen to this when the wells go empty?
It might also make them easier and faster to assemble in the first place.
Or it could make them much more slower and expensive.
I'm reminded of when Wozniak developed Breakout. The original circuit design was going to use somewhere over 150 chips. Woz was able to get it down to 44 for the final design, but the version that shipped used over 100 because Atari found Woz's too difficult to manufacture.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
The highest selling model in Vietnam is the Honda Wave (along with the SuperCub), both of which are 4-strokes.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
http://www.thanhniennews.com/b...
Thus I never make it through the SQL query from HR to pull applicants for any position.'
It's easy to get past that form. Instead of putting a check mark in that box, write in ' OR 1=1
You could also just change your name to Bobby Tables.
https://xkcd.com/327/
Yeah but Hitler himself was never elected as a member of the Reichstag, right?
Damnit why do people keep saying this.....Hitler never won a government election. He was appointed to Chancellor by Hindenburg, the guy who beat him in the presidential election.
Godwin would be proud.
Cook should pay salaries and taxes, and the gov't should do the rest.
Considering he isn't doing the taxes part, I'd say he's trying to avoid ALL responsibility.
So does Apple have "heart" and give 100% covered health care to it's employees too? Because although the health plan is good, it's not covered completely:
https://www.glassdoor.com/Bene...
Sounds like Tim wants the Senate to do something he isn't willing to do himself.
IT in medicine sucks terribly for the most part.
It's amazing how few people realize this. If you talk to politicians or listen to people at TED talks, you'd think that healthcare IT is cutting edge and is changing the way we do medicine in amazing ways. Nothing is further from the truth. Healthcare IT is so far behind the rest of the industry that it's embarrassing. The tech is outdated, and crazy expensive. Look at how hard the U.K. NHS got hit by WannaCry recently for an example.
I worked in IT at a hospital for a few years. They started rolling out a new EMR and integrated billing system while I was there. This system cost over $1,500,000 U.S., and was a freakin' WinForms application......and this was in 2013. Nobody could tell me why it cost so much for a system that was state of the art back when Clinton was president. It's not just that one hospital either, everyone I talk to has the same experience (anecdotal of course).
How do you fix this? For starters, stop having doctors choose which IT system they should use. They are easily jaded, and at the end of the day their nurses and admin staff use the system instead. They end up choosing a system that they will never use.
Try paying hospital IT staff what they're worth. Salaries in that field are below the rest of the industry. On-call rotations and overtime are out of control.
The first IBM PC was release in 1981 with an 8088 processor and optional 8087 math co-processor. While I may be wrong on the date, I am sure of the CPU because I have one of the original system right here.
It's semantics really. The 8088 was a cheaper version of the 8086.....it used the 16-bit x86 instruction set, but the less expensive 8-bit data bus.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
They state: "One "preview sheet" we received from Tucson had a column for whether they received a warrant to crack into the phone", that hardly supports the claim of "most cases". That "preview sheet" lists 14 uses.
Tucson used it 316 times. I would consider 302 out of 316 "most cases".
If they're doing it without a warrant, then maybe we have something to worry about.
Didn't you say that it was with a warrant or consent? If they were given consent, that could explain the 14 part.
The price for each inmate has doubled since 2005
Is this one of those cases where the budget was fixed, and the number of inmates decreased, thereby making it look like the price of keeping an inmate increased? The summary itself says that the inmate population decreased by one-quarter, but at the same time the budget is the highest ever.
"If you ain't cheatin', you ain't tryin'"
--Richard Petty
I don't understand why people put up with it. A decent laser printer is similarly priced to a garbage printer
How many laser printers have built-in scanning capabilities (I'm talking about for home use, not enterprisey stuff)? I can tell you that the only reason I own an inkjet printer is because it has a scanner. You don't see too many standalone scanners these days, unless you really shop around.
I like the ruling, but I think the day of the inkjet cartridge may finally be coming to an end regardless. For the past few decades the "paperless office" has been the Holy Grail of IT, but we were never quite able to reach it. I can remember seeing a statistic about 15 years ago stating that paper usage actually increased because of the ease of printing....If you needed to take something away from your desk, you just printed it and carried it with you. Now that mobile devices are pretty much ubiquitous, you can just carry it on your phone/tablet instead of having to print it.
they included all the normal "company holidays" in the flexible vacation time balance
I once worked at a hospital that did this, and I absolutely despised it. I didn't find out about it until after I accepted the offer.
Holidays like Christmas and New Years had to come out of my vacation time, which was already low enough. I get that a hospital is a true 24x7 operation, but the IT office was closed on those days, so it's not like I could have worked even if I wanted. It became a way of taking forced-vacation.
I think the doctors and nurses get a shift-differential for working those days, but I guess IT isn't considered that critical.
This was one of the primary reasons I ended up leaving it for greener pastures.