The constitutional guarantee of due process of law, found in the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments to the U.S. Constitution, prohibits all levels of government from arbitrarily or unfairly depriving individuals of their basic constitutional rights to life, liberty, and property.
The Shara Desert is where the Morocco government is building out a 585-megawatt, half-million solar panel power plant that covers 6,178 acres.
Concentrated solar power plants use the Sun's energy to heat water and produce steam that spins energy-generating turbines. The system at Ouarzazate uses 12-meter-tall parabolic mirrors to focus energy onto a fluid-filled pipeline. The pipeline's hot fluid—393 degrees Celsius (739 degrees Fahrenheit)—is the heat source used to warm the water and make steam. The plant doesn't stop delivering energy at nighttime or when clouds obscure the sun; heat from the fluid can be stored in a tank of molten salts.
I got tired of hackers beating down the doors of the CMS and occasionally crashing the website. After I converted the website to static pages, the hackers went away because there was nothing to hack.
...which is exactly what every popular CMS does...
The Joomla! CMS took six seconds or longer to load itself before displaying a dynamically-generated page on one of my websites. After I converted the website to static pages, each page loaded in less than five seconds. More tweaking is needed to reduce the load times. The average Internet user has an attention span of a goldfish (i.e., six seconds or less).
We are now only discovering the terrible price of web standardisation and brower stability.
Web design was a lot simpler when the lowest common speed was a 56K dial-up. Now that everyone is connected to the Internet with a fire hose on the last mile, most web designers don't even stop to optimize their pages.
It's easier for someone that smart to actually make money hiding behind a corporation.
The tax laws overwhelmingly favors the corporation over the individual. I would think it would be difficult to run stolen quarters through a corporation unless it had a coin-op business in place. The IRS loves to trace money. The appearance of $200,000 in quarters inside a corporation will need a logical explanation.
Here's an alternative story in the NY Times that defines the merely affluent as between $114,000 and $394,000, and the affluent as greater than $394,000.
[...] the big jar on my dresser when filled usually yields close to $500 when I cash them in.
That's a mixture of old and new coins. If the stolen quarters were all brand new, it would tip off someone that something suspicious was going on. Especially if the quarters popped up in regular batches in a particular geographic area.
But they haven't, it still sucks, and you still get no respect.
Things have gotten better but I never stayed in web dev after my six-month internship. I went on do video game testing, help desk and desktop support, PC refresh projects, building out a data center, and computer security over the last 20 years. I don't have to worry about an AI replacing me since I'll probably be doing something else that doesn't require an AI yet.
Yeah, and Dreamweaver is still a thing, but the WYSIWYG isn't that great.
I started my technical career in the late 1990's by debugging the HTML output from Dreamweaver. Whenever the designers tried to implement a complicated table (a new feature back then), I had to wade through all the extraneous text to fix the problem that caused the table to go visually FUBAR. I got no respect because I was the QA intern.
I can't deny that. I was misdiagnosed as being mentally retarded due to an undiagnosed hearing loss as a kid and spent eight years in special ed. I skipped high school and went straight four years at community college (two years for remedial courses, two years for major courses). A decade later I went back to community college to learn computer programming and made the college president's list for maintaining a 4.0 GPA in my classes.
Be all smug about your so called diet but you're failing.
I'm not one of those extremists who eat 27 grams of carbs per day. My diet works because it was the same diet my late father was given after he became diabetic and got out of the hospital. I was forced to go on it because he was living with me for two months. My mood swings leveled out after I lost 20 pounds. That was four years ago. This is a journey of ups, downs and plateaus.
I have more respect for fat asses who admit that they're fat asses and don't give a damn.
I don't. They're the ones who have given up. Then again, you probably feel comfortable around people who have given up.
Unless you're a world class bodybuilder you probably can do without all the food.
I've read a few books.
You can't outrun your fork.
The only time I ever outrun my fork when weight training pushed up from 325 pounds to 400 pounds on 2,000+ calories per day. I stopped weight training and settled down to 350 pounds because I had trouble finding 4XL shirts.
A 350lb person on a 2000 calorie a day diet will lose weight, no exceptions.
The last time I ate 2,000+ calories per day was when I did weight training, going from 325 pounds to 400 pounds. I fell back to 350 pounds after I stopped weight training and went on a 150 grams low-carb diet four years ago. My calorie intake is probably less than 1,500 calorie per day these days.
If I wrote "computer scientist" instead of "computer engineer," I would get a lot of comments explaining how computer scientists didn't need to know hardware at all.
The problem is that in the US, we have trouble sometimes telling what aristocracy looks like because we shortsightedly removed all noble titles.
The Wall Street Journal ran an article a few years ago that the affluent ($100M+) were pissed off that the merely affluent ($10M+) looked exactly like them in terms of conspicuous consumption.
Dirty Harry would murder a hundred innocent bystanders to get that punk who thought he could get away.
Dirty Harry stretched what was permissible for a police detective to do under the law but he would have never murdered bystanders to get at one punk.
In the U.S. it's called "due process of law".
The constitutional guarantee of due process of law, found in the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments to the U.S. Constitution, prohibits all levels of government from arbitrarily or unfairly depriving individuals of their basic constitutional rights to life, liberty, and property.
http://legal-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/Due+Process+of+Law
The Shara Desert is where the Morocco government is building out a 585-megawatt, half-million solar panel power plant that covers 6,178 acres.
Concentrated solar power plants use the Sun's energy to heat water and produce steam that spins energy-generating turbines. The system at Ouarzazate uses 12-meter-tall parabolic mirrors to focus energy onto a fluid-filled pipeline. The pipeline's hot fluid—393 degrees Celsius (739 degrees Fahrenheit)—is the heat source used to warm the water and make steam. The plant doesn't stop delivering energy at nighttime or when clouds obscure the sun; heat from the fluid can be stored in a tank of molten salts.
http://gizmodo.com/watch-a-massive-solar-power-plant-take-shape-in-the-sah-1752261396
Also if the CMS goes down the site still is live.
I got tired of hackers beating down the doors of the CMS and occasionally crashing the website. After I converted the website to static pages, the hackers went away because there was nothing to hack.
But people don't like frames being used.
Frames are so 1990-ish.
...which is exactly what every popular CMS does...
The Joomla! CMS took six seconds or longer to load itself before displaying a dynamically-generated page on one of my websites. After I converted the website to static pages, each page loaded in less than five seconds. More tweaking is needed to reduce the load times. The average Internet user has an attention span of a goldfish (i.e., six seconds or less).
Oh, that's already well in progress.
Seems like all those IE6-only intranet websites are finally fading from existence.
http://hampsterdance.com/classics/originaldance.htm
We are now only discovering the terrible price of web standardisation and brower stability.
Web design was a lot simpler when the lowest common speed was a 56K dial-up. Now that everyone is connected to the Internet with a fire hose on the last mile, most web designers don't even stop to optimize their pages.
Use a static HTML generator to eliminate the overhead of a CMS.
It's easier for someone that smart to actually make money hiding behind a corporation.
The tax laws overwhelmingly favors the corporation over the individual. I would think it would be difficult to run stolen quarters through a corporation unless it had a coin-op business in place. The IRS loves to trace money. The appearance of $200,000 in quarters inside a corporation will need a logical explanation.
This was actually predicted in the movie "The Big Bus".
FTFY
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Big_Bus
I think it might be this link. I don't have my WSJ login at work to verify.
http://blogs.wsj.com/totalreturn/2014/09/03/wealth-adviser-serving-the-merely-affluent/
Here's an alternative story in the NY Times that defines the merely affluent as between $114,000 and $394,000, and the affluent as greater than $394,000.
http://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/11/09/the-21st-century-silver-spoon/
[...] the big jar on my dresser when filled usually yields close to $500 when I cash them in.
That's a mixture of old and new coins. If the stolen quarters were all brand new, it would tip off someone that something suspicious was going on. Especially if the quarters popped up in regular batches in a particular geographic area.
The guy wasn't bright enough to use a Coinstar machine, take the receipt and get some Ding-Dongs with his cash.
But they haven't, it still sucks, and you still get no respect.
Things have gotten better but I never stayed in web dev after my six-month internship. I went on do video game testing, help desk and desktop support, PC refresh projects, building out a data center, and computer security over the last 20 years. I don't have to worry about an AI replacing me since I'll probably be doing something else that doesn't require an AI yet.
Yeah, and Dreamweaver is still a thing, but the WYSIWYG isn't that great.
I started my technical career in the late 1990's by debugging the HTML output from Dreamweaver. Whenever the designers tried to implement a complicated table (a new feature back then), I had to wade through all the extraneous text to fix the problem that caused the table to go visually FUBAR. I got no respect because I was the QA intern.
You're a fucking retard.
I can't deny that. I was misdiagnosed as being mentally retarded due to an undiagnosed hearing loss as a kid and spent eight years in special ed. I skipped high school and went straight four years at community college (two years for remedial courses, two years for major courses). A decade later I went back to community college to learn computer programming and made the college president's list for maintaining a 4.0 GPA in my classes.
Be all smug about your so called diet but you're failing.
I'm not one of those extremists who eat 27 grams of carbs per day. My diet works because it was the same diet my late father was given after he became diabetic and got out of the hospital. I was forced to go on it because he was living with me for two months. My mood swings leveled out after I lost 20 pounds. That was four years ago. This is a journey of ups, downs and plateaus.
I have more respect for fat asses who admit that they're fat asses and don't give a damn.
I don't. They're the ones who have given up. Then again, you probably feel comfortable around people who have given up.
150 grams of carbs isn't low carb at all.
An average American male eats 2,512 calories and 296 carbs per day. So I'm restricting myself to one-half the average.
http://livehealthy.chron.com/average-american-diet-calorie-intake-2960.html
The stuff you post just doesn't gel together in a reasonable fashion.
This is Slashdot. You must be new around here.
Unless you're a world class bodybuilder you probably can do without all the food.
I've read a few books.
You can't outrun your fork.
The only time I ever outrun my fork when weight training pushed up from 325 pounds to 400 pounds on 2,000+ calories per day. I stopped weight training and settled down to 350 pounds because I had trouble finding 4XL shirts.
If you train employees in technologies other than the ones they need for their job, they'll start looking elsewhere!
Who knew that competitors would value Cisco Certification more than Cisco does?
A 350lb person on a 2000 calorie a day diet will lose weight, no exceptions.
The last time I ate 2,000+ calories per day was when I did weight training, going from 325 pounds to 400 pounds. I fell back to 350 pounds after I stopped weight training and went on a 150 grams low-carb diet four years ago. My calorie intake is probably less than 1,500 calorie per day these days.
If I wrote "computer scientist" instead of "computer engineer," I would get a lot of comments explaining how computer scientists didn't need to know hardware at all.
The problem is that in the US, we have trouble sometimes telling what aristocracy looks like because we shortsightedly removed all noble titles.
The Wall Street Journal ran an article a few years ago that the affluent ($100M+) were pissed off that the merely affluent ($10M+) looked exactly like them in terms of conspicuous consumption.
Or maybe it's because ITIL is a bucket of shite?
It is for a company that's not ITIL certified. If the company is already ITIL-certified, than everything falls into place.