You have plenty of time to get your general license, which should permit you to use airmail using an amateur radio. But you have to hurry, and come up with the $2500 for equipment.
Ok, I don't know if your background is in business. It seems it is not. However, Zune's place in the market is volatile, and the original article was not premature. It was very timely, if anything. They studied a new product by a major hardware and software player in the technology space, and found that the new product had not been doing as well as expected. This seems to be the consensus raised by other sources, which you would most likely criticize as being premature or poorly informed. These other sources are none other than the Wall Street Journal and the New York Times. What is your source for "The Zune is a huge success," or the even more groundless, "initial performance on the market is incredible?"
A patent will not issue on an invention unless it is non-obvious. Stating that an invention is non-obvious only says that it might be patentable (assuming the application succeeds on all of the other requirements). That statement really doesn't add much to the conversation.
You have a paltry understanding of telenetworking technologies. T1 is NOT ISDN! T1 is 24 aggregated 64kb channels. Just because those channels have the same datarate as 1 ISDN 1b channel, does not mean they are the same thing. However, PRI ISDN has the same speed as 1 T1.
Actually, we did wage cyber-warfare against serbia. Those carbon bombs that we launched over their power stations had a two-fold purpose. The superficial purpose was, of course, making the cities dark so that we could bomb targets more easily. This is silly, however, because they would have turned off all the city lights anyways. The meatier reason for putting their power grid on the fritz is because their military uses some sort of computer networking over powerlines. I no longer have the source for this... I read it on one of the main news sites.
You have plenty of time to get your general license, which should permit you to use airmail using an amateur radio. But you have to hurry, and come up with the $2500 for equipment.
Ok, I don't know if your background is in business. It seems it is not. However, Zune's place in the market is volatile, and the original article was not premature. It was very timely, if anything. They studied a new product by a major hardware and software player in the technology space, and found that the new product had not been doing as well as expected. This seems to be the consensus raised by other sources, which you would most likely criticize as being premature or poorly informed. These other sources are none other than the Wall Street Journal and the New York Times. What is your source for "The Zune is a huge success," or the even more groundless, "initial performance on the market is incredible?"
A patent will not issue on an invention unless it is non-obvious. Stating that an invention is non-obvious only says that it might be patentable (assuming the application succeeds on all of the other requirements). That statement really doesn't add much to the conversation.
Check out Yugop.com. This guy is a master of flash design. Really bleeding edge stuff.
Gotta get ready to move to Canada.
Idiot! Yo-yo Ma is a man, not a woman. God damn peon.
You have a paltry understanding of telenetworking technologies. T1 is NOT ISDN! T1 is 24 aggregated 64kb channels. Just because those channels have the same datarate as 1 ISDN 1b channel, does not mean they are the same thing. However, PRI ISDN has the same speed as 1 T1.
Actually, we did wage cyber-warfare against serbia. Those carbon bombs that we launched over their power stations had a two-fold purpose. The superficial purpose was, of course, making the cities dark so that we could bomb targets more easily. This is silly, however, because they would have turned off all the city lights anyways. The meatier reason for putting their power grid on the fritz is because their military uses some sort of computer networking over powerlines. I no longer have the source for this... I read it on one of the main news sites.