Without a central authority, even this is dangerous: simply print out a fake card with a fake phone number on it. [wish I cared enough to inveigh for or against bitcoin or ssl at this point.]
I propose that a control group would have to be one of children that have not built up a tolerance to refined sugars, and that such a control group is nearly impossible to find in the US today.
1. Possibly. How big and rich is the district? (Okay, turns out I was born there. Median income $70k with 600k people...) 2. We own those air waves. We should not relinquish that. 3. Posted in the government section and meeting pretty much all of the criteria in the FAQ (well, certainly not neutral.) Other than broadcast media being a little on the old-guard for technology, I think this is reasonable.
There are ample peer reviewed studies showing that doctors medical decisions are influenced by things as simple as free dug samples for their patients. "Just take the money" is a very bad idea.
(Here's one of those studies, for example: http://baywood.metapress.com/app/home/contribution.asp?referrer=parent&backto=issue,9,13;journal,49,167;linkingpublicationresults,1:300313,1 )
If the argument is that tracking users furthers commerce and getting in the way of it is Luddite, shouldn't they start by railing against the evils of cash?
This is just funny. I think "If you think that ANYONE has the right to harrass and intimidate people, for any reason, you are a complete fuckwad" is a wonderfully self-referential phrase that should not soon be forgotten.
While I'm no fan of Jack Thompson, I'm suddenly a little scared of the CAN-SPAM act. It's one thing for an elected official to stop accepting my calls, return my mail unread, and filter my email into the trash. It's another, much scarier, thing for that official to threaten me with fines and imprisonment for trying to influence legislation in the most accessible method available. We're not talking about fraud or bribery here, just annoying, obnoxious, and protected speech.
According to the link above: Amateurs who make their own ammonium perchlorate composite propellants will also need an ATF permit to move ammonium perchlorate composite propellant within the state it is made.
I was having breakfast at a Cafe just above the PATH station. About three stories underground directly under WTC 1, the "north tower" that was the
first one struck. I thought it was a train derailing or hitting a wall and
I quickly picked up my juice and walked toward the escalators. As I stood
up the fire alarms went off, looking up I saw what I thought was smoke.
(There was renovation down there, it was probably just plaster dust kicked
up by the impact.) Four cops bolted toward the escalators shouting "out of
the way!"
When I got to the top of the escalators there were at least two cops
directing people out of the building, not with "Stay Calm, go slow" but with
"Keep it moving, Faster!" I heard another cop, as I got near a side exit I
don't normally use, yelling at a security guard, "It wasn't a BOMB! It was
an airplane!" I was thinking that was spin control or something. I stepped
outside and there was a smattering of debris. It looked like a vacant lot
around an abandoned building, cinder block-like debris. It took me five
seconds to realize that that meant I probably should be walking faster, it
seemed to take other people a lot more time to realize.
When I got across the street I looked up and saw about 2/3 or the way up the north side that the WTC was on fire, from corner to corner, in an oval reaching two or three stories down and five or six up. Not a lot of smoke, but a wall of fire. I walked around East toward the subway I use, and looked up to see that the East side was almost identically damaged, but with less damage. Sheets of ash were floating down like a hundred giants' notebooks had been ripped apart and thrown to the wind. I got about a block away and stood (next to the cemetary at the oldest church in NYC) looking up. I was thinking that I needed to get to work and start making phone calls that I was okay, but I was rivited. After about five minutes I saw a body falling from the tower and I walked, shaking, to the 4-5 train which I took on the 20 minute trip uptown.
When I got off at 60th street, 80 blocks away, I could see a dense clouds of smoke. There is a brokerage downstairs from my office, and I stopped to watch some footage. People said "A second plane hit the WTC" on TV, which I didn't believe. They showed the footage and it was horrifying.
A friend and I were IMing (phones were down, but no problem with the internet, other than to news sites.) At one point she said "You have no idea how strange the skyline looks with
only one tower!" She apparently had an amazing view of the scene.
I have absolutely asked questions I didn't know the answer to in interviews. If you get an answer you have solved your problem AND located your new hire.
I completely concur: I have bought products one click from/.'s front page because the ads/products were perfectly targeted and were things I would not have discovered on my own. I would actually MISS the ads here.
Nobody cares what your undergraduate degree is, and you'll have plenty of experience when you graduate. You'll be a better human being and much happier if you don't kill yourself with geekthink before you learn how to write in English.
As an IT manager, my #1 criteria for hiring is, "Will this person creep everyone else out, or does he/she speak English and know how to behave in civilised society?"
By taking part in the Mozilla project I would hope that developers realized that their work would be used by others to generate revenue. It was kinda the point. And those who want to avoid Netscape's consumerism can, as pointed out, use Mozilla directly
I enjoyed at least one of Netscape's revenue generating features: When I indicated I was under 13 so that I would not have to fill out the registration forms, I was taken directly to netscape's Kid Zone. At least they are paying attention to what they're doing.
It's a book review, not a website review.
(At least that's my guess as to why there's no quiz to be found.)
Re:Your Dogbert is an InDUHvidual - put him to sle
on
Linux Failover?
·
· Score: 1
To address your P.S.: This is so completely true. It feels like the real power of the internet is lost on many of the ISPs. The wonderful rerouting of packets that is supposed to take place only happens on the macro level, leaving smaller outtages to have major impacts on a few sites at a time.
Re:How Much / What Type of redundancy
on
Linux Failover?
·
· Score: 1
Speaking of geographical displacement: Does anyone know of a good way to mirror a live filesystem to a remote location?
I.E. how does one mirror a web site, including session data, between two facilities?
Re:Your Dogbert is an InDUHvidual - put him to sle
on
Linux Failover?
·
· Score: 1
Unfortunately this does not address the topic at hand: Multiple redundancy with no single point of failure. What might be more accurately proposed are
two (2) ServerIron switches.
At least, I'm fairly certain Foundry Networks makes products that support fail-over in a load balancer. Certainly Arrowpoint and F5 products support this.
So it's time for us to take advantage of this website and the chance it gives us to organize. We should all be writing our representatives to ask them to pressure the library of congress to digitize their collection (At least those with expired copyrights.)
And we should write directly to the LOC to express our opinions as well.
Without a central authority, even this is dangerous: simply print out a fake card with a fake phone number on it. [wish I cared enough to inveigh for or against bitcoin or ssl at this point.]
I propose that a control group would have to be one of children that have not built up a tolerance to refined sugars, and that such a control group is nearly impossible to find in the US today.
Or a decade ago: http://m.slashdot.org/story/18188
The anger and misogyny in your post is getting in the way of communicating the (in my opinion accurate and justified) content of your message.
I can't believe I typed that poorly on a full sized keyboard. *hangs head in shame*
1. Possibly. How big and rich is the district? (Okay, turns out I was born there. Median income $70k with 600k people...)
2. We own those air waves. We should not relinquish that.
3. Posted in the government section and meeting pretty much all of the criteria in the FAQ (well, certainly not neutral.) Other than broadcast media being a little on the old-guard for technology, I think this is reasonable.
There are ample peer reviewed studies showing that doctors medical decisions are influenced by things as simple as free dug samples for their patients. "Just take the money" is a very bad idea.
(Here's one of those studies, for example: http://baywood.metapress.com/app/home/contribution.asp?referrer=parent&backto=issue,9,13;journal,49,167;linkingpublicationresults,1:300313,1 )
If the argument is that tracking users furthers commerce and getting in the way of it is Luddite, shouldn't they start by railing against the evils of cash?
This is just funny. I think "If you think that ANYONE has the right to harrass and intimidate people, for any reason, you are a complete fuckwad" is a wonderfully self-referential phrase that should not soon be forgotten.
While I'm no fan of Jack Thompson, I'm suddenly a little scared of the CAN-SPAM act. It's one thing for an elected official to stop accepting my calls, return my mail unread, and filter my email into the trash. It's another, much scarier, thing for that official to threaten me with fines and imprisonment for trying to influence legislation in the most accessible method available. We're not talking about fraud or bribery here, just annoying, obnoxious, and protected speech.
Read the whole article and you discover that purchasing the motors would also require a license.
According to the link above:
Amateurs who make their own ammonium perchlorate composite propellants will also need an ATF permit to move ammonium perchlorate composite propellant within the state it is made.
That would be building 7, which collapsed in the evening of Sept. 11. FYI.
Can't preserve it. Got to cut into it and see if anyone managed to survive.
I was having breakfast at a Cafe just above the PATH station. About three stories underground directly under WTC 1, the "north tower" that was the first one struck. I thought it was a train derailing or hitting a wall and I quickly picked up my juice and walked toward the escalators. As I stood up the fire alarms went off, looking up I saw what I thought was smoke. (There was renovation down there, it was probably just plaster dust kicked up by the impact.) Four cops bolted toward the escalators shouting "out of the way!"
When I got to the top of the escalators there were at least two cops directing people out of the building, not with "Stay Calm, go slow" but with "Keep it moving, Faster!" I heard another cop, as I got near a side exit I don't normally use, yelling at a security guard, "It wasn't a BOMB! It was an airplane!" I was thinking that was spin control or something. I stepped outside and there was a smattering of debris. It looked like a vacant lot around an abandoned building, cinder block-like debris. It took me five seconds to realize that that meant I probably should be walking faster, it seemed to take other people a lot more time to realize.
When I got across the street I looked up and saw about 2/3 or the way up the north side that the WTC was on fire, from corner to corner, in an oval reaching two or three stories down and five or six up. Not a lot of smoke, but a wall of fire. I walked around East toward the subway I use, and looked up to see that the East side was almost identically damaged, but with less damage. Sheets of ash were floating down like a hundred giants' notebooks had been ripped apart and thrown to the wind. I got about a block away and stood (next to the cemetary at the oldest church in NYC) looking up. I was thinking that I needed to get to work and start making phone calls that I was okay, but I was rivited. After about five minutes I saw a body falling from the tower and I walked, shaking, to the 4-5 train which I took on the 20 minute trip uptown.
When I got off at 60th street, 80 blocks away, I could see a dense clouds of smoke. There is a brokerage downstairs from my office, and I stopped to watch some footage. People said "A second plane hit the WTC" on TV, which I didn't believe. They showed the footage and it was horrifying.
A friend and I were IMing (phones were down, but no problem with the internet, other than to news sites.) At one point she said "You have no idea how strange the skyline looks with only one tower!" She apparently had an amazing view of the scene.
I have absolutely asked questions I didn't know the answer to in interviews. If you get an answer you have solved your problem AND located your new hire.
I completely concur: I have bought products one click from /.'s front page because the ads/products were perfectly targeted and were things I would not have discovered on my own. I would actually MISS the ads here.
Aren't I a good little consumer?
Get a liberal arts degree.
Nobody cares what your undergraduate degree is, and you'll have plenty of experience when you graduate. You'll be a better human being and much happier if you don't kill yourself with geekthink before you learn how to write in English.
As an IT manager, my #1 criteria for hiring is, "Will this person creep everyone else out, or does he/she speak English and know how to behave in civilised society?"
My company has a "Evil Genius" title.
By taking part in the Mozilla project I would hope that developers realized that their work would be used by others to generate revenue. It was kinda the point. And those who want to avoid Netscape's consumerism can, as pointed out, use Mozilla directly
I enjoyed at least one of Netscape's revenue generating features: When I indicated I was under 13 so that I would not have to fill out the registration forms, I was taken directly to netscape's Kid Zone. At least they are paying attention to what they're doing.
It's a book review, not a website review. (At least that's my guess as to why there's no quiz to be found.)
To address your P.S.: This is so completely true. It feels like the real power of the internet is lost on many of the ISPs. The wonderful rerouting of packets that is supposed to take place only happens on the macro level, leaving smaller outtages to have major impacts on a few sites at a time.
I.E. how does one mirror a web site, including session data, between two facilities?
two (2) ServerIron switches.
At least, I'm fairly certain Foundry Networks makes products that support fail-over in a load balancer. Certainly Arrowpoint and F5 products support this.
So it's time for us to take advantage of this website and the chance it gives us to organize. We should all be writing our representatives to ask them to pressure the library of congress to digitize their collection (At least those with expired copyrights.)
And we should write directly to the LOC to express our opinions as well.