Actually the 65 year requirement is much older than that. It was first put in place by Bismarck. Clearly at the time most epople were expected to be dead by then.
I don't know anything about the law but I think you are wrong. There have been plenty of candidates in American history who worked openly with the Soviet Union as members of Communist affiliated parties (seriously, the whole 20th century up to WW2, at least!). But let's take the 'collusion with Russia' story at face value. What exactly is the crime? Posting three thousand articles on Facebook is the century- ago equivalent of publishing a bunch of pamphlets. That's not a crime.. arguing your case in the public forum is the very definition of Western democracy. This dossier thing seems to me to have duped both parties as well as the FBI. Is that a crime? Even if it is, I haven't heard anyone accuse Trump of being the guilty party, except maybe being guilty of being peed on by a bunch of Russian models (and based on everything I've seen to date, if that video ever came out he would be tweeting about look how hot the girls are). And this whole 'manipulate elections' narrative- there's already a term for that: "Running a campaign." And finally, "adversary":= "enemy
Or, a nerd hooks up with a pretty and smart young blonde with a whatever size cup, and wants to put a ring on her finger that every mother fucker can see from across the room. It might be seen as a waste of money, but she is going to see it every single day, and it helps keep the players off her. Buy an H or I diamond with a surface flaw that you can hide under the setting. You can get bulk that will make her friends swoon. This stuff matters.
Undoing moderation to correct the physiology error in your post. Not a heart attack. Elevated core temperature manifests acutely with seizures and coma (that's why it's called heat 'stroke'). If core temperature goes up more slowly the toxicity is renal failure from breakdown of muscle proteins (rhabdomyolysis), which destroy the renal tubular system. There is a mechanism for myocardial ischemia related to increased blood viscosity, but this is not typical.
That is, more or less, why Gatorade was invented. And you are right- I should have been more forceful. This poser is trying to sound like they know something about physiology, which they most certainly do not. I'm just calling out the bullshit. That's you, bluefoxlucid. Put up or shut up.
Nitpick: you have the mechanism wrong. Physical impact to the chest does not typically induce ventricular fibrillation; quite the opposite in fact: it induces a pause in the cardiac rhythm that in the past was actually a treatment for fibrillation (google 'precordial thump'). This is, incidentally, the basis for drunk Dr. McCoy beating on the dead Klingon's chest in the last of the original Star Trek movies. Sudden cardiac death in athletes is thought to be related to electrolyte abnormalities in people who have undiagnosed rhythm disorders, all of which are rare (I believe the most common one is Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome).
Uber is turning into a very expensive joke. They can't even afford their business model. Google and Apple can afford to spend a few billion to build their own fucking towns, make people opt-in by moving there, and not have human driven cars at all. In fact, I'm surprised they haven't done this already. The problems with these auto-driven cars all seem to now be related to integrating with the existing traffic; the driving around part seems to be a done deal.
seriously am i the only person who remembers listening to the handshake noises that your modem used to make? it was the confirmation that you were connected to the world outside your own! i specifically miss the ker-shploink noise of the V.42 modems, which occupy a spot in my heart right next to zmodem
If you talk to Vail locals who knew the original founders (there's plenty still around), they will tell you that Vail's site was chosen in part because it's on the opposite side of Vail Pass from Denver, thus making it hard for large numbers of people to get in after a big snow dump. I don't think Vail would want this tunnel thing.
With respect, you have missed the point (completely). This isn't about finding a screening test. This is an objective, likely quantitative readout from a standard imaging study that can be used as an endpoint in clinical trials. Most clinical trials in this area fail because they use some sort of subjective behavioral scoring system, rather than a quantity that can be measured (with a very expensive ruler) from the patient. And... 2% of the population? That's a fucking wet dream for a big pharmaceutical company. This finding has the potential to take autism from the realm of voodoo into a treatable clinical entity.
It's when you are in the "midst of a mundane task that just has to get done" that distractions have the worst effect. Distractions "help you stay engaged"? I'm surprised this fucker hasn't founded a startup based around this idiocy. San Francisco is awash with stupid money.
FYI, what happened yesterday was in no sense "economic meltdown." That was a bunch of rich people being caught with their pants down. The effect on economies remains to be seen.
Pedestrians either get hit in the street or parking lot, or they get pinned against the wall of a garage (where else are the cars?). In the latter case, the crush injury happens irrespective of the presence of the adhesive layer. We should consider edge cases, but this is a bona fide genius idea. Add a dispersive gel layer underneath the adhesive and this might make a real difference.
Disclaimer: I am a trauma surgeon, and do crash reconstruction work on the side.
I still have my original Motorola pager. Whenever they try to give me one of these crappy new pieces of shit, I tell them that I am the doctor they were warned about in their customer service training, and that they should decide how much blood they want to shed. I think that they have actually written it off by now; no one has bugged me about it for a couple of years.
It is highly amusing to me that young doctors who care about having the newest iThing get jealous of my pager.
Offtopic, perhaps, but I'm looking at the front page of Slashdot. For the first time in years, no fucking political/sociological/pseudo-tech clickbait bullshit. Finally.
If this is the new boss, I'm all for it. I care a lot about politics, privacy, and economics. I come to Slashdot for other stuff.
You're giving Soylent way too much credit. Nestle and Mead-Johnson have sold healthy-people formulas (along with a bunch of others for sick people) for decades. Soylent have reinvented these into what is, by all accounts, a shittier-tasting version.
Actually the 65 year requirement is much older than that. It was first put in place by Bismarck. Clearly at the time most epople were expected to be dead by then.
I don't know anything about the law but I think you are wrong. There have been plenty of candidates in American history who worked openly with the Soviet Union as members of Communist affiliated parties (seriously, the whole 20th century up to WW2, at least!). But let's take the 'collusion with Russia' story at face value. What exactly is the crime? Posting three thousand articles on Facebook is the century- ago equivalent of publishing a bunch of pamphlets. That's not a crime.. arguing your case in the public forum is the very definition of Western democracy. This dossier thing seems to me to have duped both parties as well as the FBI. Is that a crime? Even if it is, I haven't heard anyone accuse Trump of being the guilty party, except maybe being guilty of being peed on by a bunch of Russian models (and based on everything I've seen to date, if that video ever came out he would be tweeting about look how hot the girls are). And this whole 'manipulate elections' narrative- there's already a term for that: "Running a campaign." And finally, "adversary" := "enemy
Doesn't have to be bullshit. Think 'Loudness War' writ onto vinyl, with some laser-cut stamping thing no less
Agree. Now I'm watching for the downmods on your comment. You are 100% fucking right.
How is it that Stephen Hawking won every prize there is except the Nobel? Discovering something revolutionary about black holes would seem to qualify.
undoing stupid mod
This +4 Insightful comment is plagiarized from Wolf Richter.
Or, a nerd hooks up with a pretty and smart young blonde with a whatever size cup, and wants to put a ring on her finger that every mother fucker can see from across the room. It might be seen as a waste of money, but she is going to see it every single day, and it helps keep the players off her. Buy an H or I diamond with a surface flaw that you can hide under the setting. You can get bulk that will make her friends swoon. This stuff matters.
Undoing moderation to correct the physiology error in your post. Not a heart attack. Elevated core temperature manifests acutely with seizures and coma (that's why it's called heat 'stroke'). If core temperature goes up more slowly the toxicity is renal failure from breakdown of muscle proteins (rhabdomyolysis), which destroy the renal tubular system. There is a mechanism for myocardial ischemia related to increased blood viscosity, but this is not typical.
Only lefties ride bikes for ideological reasons. Your friend sounds eminently practical.
That is, more or less, why Gatorade was invented. And you are right- I should have been more forceful. This poser is trying to sound like they know something about physiology, which they most certainly do not. I'm just calling out the bullshit. That's you, bluefoxlucid. Put up or shut up.
Nitpick: you have the mechanism wrong. Physical impact to the chest does not typically induce ventricular fibrillation; quite the opposite in fact: it induces a pause in the cardiac rhythm that in the past was actually a treatment for fibrillation (google 'precordial thump'). This is, incidentally, the basis for drunk Dr. McCoy beating on the dead Klingon's chest in the last of the original Star Trek movies. Sudden cardiac death in athletes is thought to be related to electrolyte abnormalities in people who have undiagnosed rhythm disorders, all of which are rare (I believe the most common one is Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome).
Uber is turning into a very expensive joke. They can't even afford their business model. Google and Apple can afford to spend a few billion to build their own fucking towns, make people opt-in by moving there, and not have human driven cars at all. In fact, I'm surprised they haven't done this already. The problems with these auto-driven cars all seem to now be related to integrating with the existing traffic; the driving around part seems to be a done deal.
Yes. It's "He *who fights*, and runs away, lives to fight another day." The essence of modern asymmetric warfare.
seriously am i the only person who remembers listening to the handshake noises that your modem used to make? it was the confirmation that you were connected to the world outside your own! i specifically miss the ker-shploink noise of the V.42 modems, which occupy a spot in my heart right next to zmodem
If you talk to Vail locals who knew the original founders (there's plenty still around), they will tell you that Vail's site was chosen in part because it's on the opposite side of Vail Pass from Denver, thus making it hard for large numbers of people to get in after a big snow dump. I don't think Vail would want this tunnel thing.
With respect, you have missed the point (completely). This isn't about finding a screening test. This is an objective, likely quantitative readout from a standard imaging study that can be used as an endpoint in clinical trials. Most clinical trials in this area fail because they use some sort of subjective behavioral scoring system, rather than a quantity that can be measured (with a very expensive ruler) from the patient. And ... 2% of the population? That's a fucking wet dream for a big pharmaceutical company. This finding has the potential to take autism from the realm of voodoo into a treatable clinical entity.
It's when you are in the "midst of a mundane task that just has to get done" that distractions have the worst effect. Distractions "help you stay engaged"? I'm surprised this fucker hasn't founded a startup based around this idiocy. San Francisco is awash with stupid money.
George Wallace won Georgia as a 3rd party candidate in 1968. We may safely presume he was at some point "polling in the double digits."
If you believe it can short the motherboard, why not the screen? They share the same power supply lines.
FYI, what happened yesterday was in no sense "economic meltdown." That was a bunch of rich people being caught with their pants down. The effect on economies remains to be seen.
Pedestrians either get hit in the street or parking lot, or they get pinned against the wall of a garage (where else are the cars?). In the latter case, the crush injury happens irrespective of the presence of the adhesive layer. We should consider edge cases, but this is a bona fide genius idea. Add a dispersive gel layer underneath the adhesive and this might make a real difference.
Disclaimer: I am a trauma surgeon, and do crash reconstruction work on the side.
I still have my original Motorola pager. Whenever they try to give me one of these crappy new pieces of shit, I tell them that I am the doctor they were warned about in their customer service training, and that they should decide how much blood they want to shed. I think that they have actually written it off by now; no one has bugged me about it for a couple of years.
It is highly amusing to me that young doctors who care about having the newest iThing get jealous of my pager.
If this is the new boss, I'm all for it. I care a lot about politics, privacy, and economics. I come to Slashdot for other stuff.
Thanks.
You're giving Soylent way too much credit. Nestle and Mead-Johnson have sold healthy-people formulas (along with a bunch of others for sick people) for decades. Soylent have reinvented these into what is, by all accounts, a shittier-tasting version.