The Rust Belt in particular began its decline decades ago. You might as well blame Carter and Reagan if you're looking for targets. And what exactly would killing NAFTA do, other than hike prices massively, screwing over consumers. If you're going to attack any trade relationship, get general agreement with the NAFTA and EU countries to nail China's balls to the wall for its cheap steal.
NAT may do a good job obscuring internal topology, but it does saw at considerable cost; breaking the end to end concept of the original ARPANET structure, requiring more resources, and creating far greater complexity for routers. Yes, a flat address space that sits in the public address space might, on the surface, expose more devices, but this is where firewalls come into play. I can still have a rather complex topology, but now I have to worry less about routing and connection tables, and can use less resource expensive techniques like tagging.
It was never IPv6's intention to be more secure, and you're right that many existing issues will remain with IPv6, and there will likely be new ones, but one thing is certain, if the solution is NAT, then that solution is worse than the disease it purports to cure. And it isn't as if NAT can't be vulnerable in its own way, and the only way to make it less vulnerable is, you guessed it, firewalls, authentication, and other security measures which are also needed in an IPv6 world.
Christ, the kooks do come out when the topic of vaccination comes around.
As with all fucking morons, they seem to believe that just because they have some opinion, no matter how retarded that opinion is and no matter how much it proves them to be worthless contemptible creatures, they think that opinion is enough to create a "controversy".
They are indeed the most disgusting worthless vile things that have ever existed.There are simple worms with barely any kind of gut at all who have more right to live, and more neurons.
They should pull their licenses, with a five year ban on practicing unless they take a full year of immunology courses and write a 150,000 word essay on how vaccines work.
There's no more likelihood of civil war come November 9th than there was eight years ago when Obama became President. Yes, there will be some miserable losers, and this time they'll have a miserable loser in Donald Trump, but they'll do what they did eight years ago, be assholes on the Internet and get on with their lives.
Which, as Nate Silver pointed out, is a very poor example considering the lack of polling at the time, and the fact that even with the limited data, there was some indication of Truman pulling ahead.
If Ecuador has decided to shut off his Internet access to stop him from trying to fuck around with the US election, I have a feeling that they wouldn't be any more tolerant of him using alternative means to continue the campaign. I honestly think that his days hanging out in the Ecuadorian Embassy are numbered, and too much pursuing of his October Surprise strategy is likely to mean he's shown the door.
Circumstantial may mean there's a question mark, but it doesn't mean "no evidence at all". Certainly Russia would gain greatly from a President who was less willing to stand behind the US's European allies, and who, all in all, would likely represent a more inward-gazing US. Russia has no hope in hell of ever militarily dominating the West, but if it can divide, then it gains a great deal of strategic space.
Clinton's victory means the general policy towards Russia that has, by and large, been the US's strategy since the Truman Administration, remains intact, so it is clearly in Russia's interest to try to help the person that at least might represent a break with that strategy.
Yes, it is circumstantial, and there is a possible counterargument that not even Putin actually would want someone as potentially unpredictable as Donald Trump in the White House, but I still lean towards Russia wanting a more isolationist Administration in the White House, much as it wants the European Union and NATO to be weakened. These three entities; the US, the EU and NATO represent significant checks on Russia's ability to project its power, and if any or all of them can be weakened or eliminated, it is of enormous strategic advantage to Russia.
Ah yes, the real damaging ones are just around the corner...
It's less than three weeks away, and no modern presidential candidate has ever come from this far behind at this late a date, so if Assange and Friends really are interested in tanking the Clinton campaign, to wait until this late date, AFTER millions have already cast their ballots, would be idiotic.
The alternative explanation is that there really isn't anything there so odious that it's going to make a difference, and this is just Assange's latest "Look at me!" bid.
Probably his last, too, if the rumors that Ecuador is in discussions to kick his ass out of the embassy.
It's pretty doubtful that any kind of pre-biotic organic matter could even survive where there is a large biosphere with thousands of species that eat such matter are around. As to not observing things, well, no one has observed a quark, or indeed, any elementary particle, and we can only infer their existence from other lines of evidence. Does that mean electrons are impossible, or does it just mean that direct observation is not the only way you confirm a theory?
Beyond that, other aspects of your post amount to straw men. There's no reason to believe DNA was the first means of passing hereditable traits, or that the earliest self-replicating molecules were much like life we observe today.
The big advantage of the content Netflix itself produces, or at least buys outright, is that it can show it in all the countries it is available in. So while a specific show, like the Marvel series, may be considered "niche" when one looks at one single market, the viewership in all markets for even a niche show can be substantial.
I don't know, Shades by the third to last episode is the only bad guy that's making any sense at all. Diamondback may be channeling Samuel L Jackson's Bible quoting from Pulp Fiction, but he comes off as reckless to the point of stupidity. Cottonmouth at least tried to be strategic.
Comparing committing a felony to receiving state benefits is a false comparison, and I think you know it. The constitution protects the voting franchise, and does not permit its limitation save through due process (in other words the courts). A felony may be voluntary, but that doesn't mean every voluntary act is a felony.
One way or the other, there are going to be a very large number of people who cannot achieve sufficient employment, as we currently understand it, to pay for their rent and food. I don't give a rat's ass about Libertarian principles (I think the entire group of Anarchist and Libertarian philosophies to be unworkable in practice), what I do know is that people are going to have to have some ability to survive when AI and robots are doing even many low-skill service industry jobs, and even performing many mid-level skill jobs. Whether it's UBI or it's much higher minimum wages, the corporate world is going to have to pay if it wants to heavily automate, and the practice of corporations to hide behind some sort of Libertarian pronouncements about the unworthiness of people receiving state money won't cut it.
What I love about Stranger Things is that when I watched it with my daughter, and we're watching the opening scene in the basement with the kids eating pizza and playing D&D, I turned to her and said, "That was me and my friends in 1983".
I think the long term is likely to be a heavy mix of both; licensing material from other studios, along with producing its own. Netflix largely got into this because of House of Cards, which, as I understand it, had already had a first season in the can and Netflix shelled out for it. It was the great experiment, and its success convinced Netflix that it could work at least in some capacity as its own network.
I think the long-term game for Netflix is probably convincing more studios to make content for it to distribute, and that is disruptive. Amazon is moving in the same direction, so I think we are seeing the first waves of what will be a heavy disruption of the traditional model. The more content the online services have, the more people will cut the cord, and the long term outlook for the traditional TV networks looks pretty grim.
The biggest problem I have with Cage is that it just seems to crawl through the middle of the series. Now that I'm near the end things are actually happening again, but yes, it seems to be the least of the Marvel shows on Netflix. Still, it's better than a lot of the network crap, and being that it is Netflix, they can push the boundaries more. I still think jessica Jones was the best of them, if for no other reason than David Tennant makes one of the best super villains I've ever seen in any medium.
It's my understanding that Venus's closer proximity to the sun isn't the most significant reason for its heat up. For whatever reason, a proper carbon cycle didn't evolve or broke down, thus leading to increasing amounts of CO2. No doubt greater solar radiation played a part, but at least by current theories, Venus does lie within the "Goldilocks Zone", albeit close to the inner edge. By the same token, Mars lies towards the outer edge of the Goldilocks zone, and the chief reason it doesn't have any significant amount of liquid water is simply because its gravity isn't sufficient to hold on to a dense atmosphere, and the dense atmosphere it once had dissipated into space.
One theory I've read as to why the carbon cycle may have failed on Venus is that the lack of a satellite, in particular a large satellite like the Moon, meant that plate tectonics never developed, and thus you didn't have a carbon "conveyor belt".
Well yes, if you're willing to just simply invent whole new definitions for words, you can make any claim you want. After all, I'm the strongest human being who ever lived, if you define human being as being a group of which I'm the only member.
The Rust Belt in particular began its decline decades ago. You might as well blame Carter and Reagan if you're looking for targets. And what exactly would killing NAFTA do, other than hike prices massively, screwing over consumers. If you're going to attack any trade relationship, get general agreement with the NAFTA and EU countries to nail China's balls to the wall for its cheap steal.
NAT may do a good job obscuring internal topology, but it does saw at considerable cost; breaking the end to end concept of the original ARPANET structure, requiring more resources, and creating far greater complexity for routers. Yes, a flat address space that sits in the public address space might, on the surface, expose more devices, but this is where firewalls come into play. I can still have a rather complex topology, but now I have to worry less about routing and connection tables, and can use less resource expensive techniques like tagging.
It was never IPv6's intention to be more secure, and you're right that many existing issues will remain with IPv6, and there will likely be new ones, but one thing is certain, if the solution is NAT, then that solution is worse than the disease it purports to cure. And it isn't as if NAT can't be vulnerable in its own way, and the only way to make it less vulnerable is, you guessed it, firewalls, authentication, and other security measures which are also needed in an IPv6 world.
Christ, the kooks do come out when the topic of vaccination comes around.
As with all fucking morons, they seem to believe that just because they have some opinion, no matter how retarded that opinion is and no matter how much it proves them to be worthless contemptible creatures, they think that opinion is enough to create a "controversy".
They are indeed the most disgusting worthless vile things that have ever existed.There are simple worms with barely any kind of gut at all who have more right to live, and more neurons.
They should pull their licenses, with a five year ban on practicing unless they take a full year of immunology courses and write a 150,000 word essay on how vaccines work.
Bad mouthing isn't fraud.
There's no more likelihood of civil war come November 9th than there was eight years ago when Obama became President. Yes, there will be some miserable losers, and this time they'll have a miserable loser in Donald Trump, but they'll do what they did eight years ago, be assholes on the Internet and get on with their lives.
Which, as Nate Silver pointed out, is a very poor example considering the lack of polling at the time, and the fact that even with the limited data, there was some indication of Truman pulling ahead.
http://fivethirtyeight.com/fea...
If Ecuador has decided to shut off his Internet access to stop him from trying to fuck around with the US election, I have a feeling that they wouldn't be any more tolerant of him using alternative means to continue the campaign. I honestly think that his days hanging out in the Ecuadorian Embassy are numbered, and too much pursuing of his October Surprise strategy is likely to mean he's shown the door.
Circumstantial may mean there's a question mark, but it doesn't mean "no evidence at all". Certainly Russia would gain greatly from a President who was less willing to stand behind the US's European allies, and who, all in all, would likely represent a more inward-gazing US. Russia has no hope in hell of ever militarily dominating the West, but if it can divide, then it gains a great deal of strategic space.
Clinton's victory means the general policy towards Russia that has, by and large, been the US's strategy since the Truman Administration, remains intact, so it is clearly in Russia's interest to try to help the person that at least might represent a break with that strategy.
Yes, it is circumstantial, and there is a possible counterargument that not even Putin actually would want someone as potentially unpredictable as Donald Trump in the White House, but I still lean towards Russia wanting a more isolationist Administration in the White House, much as it wants the European Union and NATO to be weakened. These three entities; the US, the EU and NATO represent significant checks on Russia's ability to project its power, and if any or all of them can be weakened or eliminated, it is of enormous strategic advantage to Russia.
Ah yes, the real damaging ones are just around the corner...
It's less than three weeks away, and no modern presidential candidate has ever come from this far behind at this late a date, so if Assange and Friends really are interested in tanking the Clinton campaign, to wait until this late date, AFTER millions have already cast their ballots, would be idiotic.
The alternative explanation is that there really isn't anything there so odious that it's going to make a difference, and this is just Assange's latest "Look at me!" bid.
Probably his last, too, if the rumors that Ecuador is in discussions to kick his ass out of the embassy.
Phishing is a tool that can be used by scammers or hackers. In this case, yes, it was hacking.
From what I can tell, Trump's only real strategy here is to use his presidential bid as a launching point for a TV network.
These people got plenty of practice from quote mining scientists' statements in the "Climategate" emails.
It's pretty doubtful that any kind of pre-biotic organic matter could even survive where there is a large biosphere with thousands of species that eat such matter are around. As to not observing things, well, no one has observed a quark, or indeed, any elementary particle, and we can only infer their existence from other lines of evidence. Does that mean electrons are impossible, or does it just mean that direct observation is not the only way you confirm a theory?
Beyond that, other aspects of your post amount to straw men. There's no reason to believe DNA was the first means of passing hereditable traits, or that the earliest self-replicating molecules were much like life we observe today.
The big advantage of the content Netflix itself produces, or at least buys outright, is that it can show it in all the countries it is available in. So while a specific show, like the Marvel series, may be considered "niche" when one looks at one single market, the viewership in all markets for even a niche show can be substantial.
I don't know, Shades by the third to last episode is the only bad guy that's making any sense at all. Diamondback may be channeling Samuel L Jackson's Bible quoting from Pulp Fiction, but he comes off as reckless to the point of stupidity. Cottonmouth at least tried to be strategic.
Comparing committing a felony to receiving state benefits is a false comparison, and I think you know it. The constitution protects the voting franchise, and does not permit its limitation save through due process (in other words the courts). A felony may be voluntary, but that doesn't mean every voluntary act is a felony.
One way or the other, there are going to be a very large number of people who cannot achieve sufficient employment, as we currently understand it, to pay for their rent and food. I don't give a rat's ass about Libertarian principles (I think the entire group of Anarchist and Libertarian philosophies to be unworkable in practice), what I do know is that people are going to have to have some ability to survive when AI and robots are doing even many low-skill service industry jobs, and even performing many mid-level skill jobs. Whether it's UBI or it's much higher minimum wages, the corporate world is going to have to pay if it wants to heavily automate, and the practice of corporations to hide behind some sort of Libertarian pronouncements about the unworthiness of people receiving state money won't cut it.
Armrests were removable on Boeing 727s at the time.
http://fortune.com/2016/06/07/...
What I love about Stranger Things is that when I watched it with my daughter, and we're watching the opening scene in the basement with the kids eating pizza and playing D&D, I turned to her and said, "That was me and my friends in 1983".
I think the long term is likely to be a heavy mix of both; licensing material from other studios, along with producing its own. Netflix largely got into this because of House of Cards, which, as I understand it, had already had a first season in the can and Netflix shelled out for it. It was the great experiment, and its success convinced Netflix that it could work at least in some capacity as its own network.
I think the long-term game for Netflix is probably convincing more studios to make content for it to distribute, and that is disruptive. Amazon is moving in the same direction, so I think we are seeing the first waves of what will be a heavy disruption of the traditional model. The more content the online services have, the more people will cut the cord, and the long term outlook for the traditional TV networks looks pretty grim.
The biggest problem I have with Cage is that it just seems to crawl through the middle of the series. Now that I'm near the end things are actually happening again, but yes, it seems to be the least of the Marvel shows on Netflix. Still, it's better than a lot of the network crap, and being that it is Netflix, they can push the boundaries more. I still think jessica Jones was the best of them, if for no other reason than David Tennant makes one of the best super villains I've ever seen in any medium.
It's my understanding that Venus's closer proximity to the sun isn't the most significant reason for its heat up. For whatever reason, a proper carbon cycle didn't evolve or broke down, thus leading to increasing amounts of CO2. No doubt greater solar radiation played a part, but at least by current theories, Venus does lie within the "Goldilocks Zone", albeit close to the inner edge. By the same token, Mars lies towards the outer edge of the Goldilocks zone, and the chief reason it doesn't have any significant amount of liquid water is simply because its gravity isn't sufficient to hold on to a dense atmosphere, and the dense atmosphere it once had dissipated into space.
One theory I've read as to why the carbon cycle may have failed on Venus is that the lack of a satellite, in particular a large satellite like the Moon, meant that plate tectonics never developed, and thus you didn't have a carbon "conveyor belt".
Yes, Office Open XML as an example. Suspiciously by the same company now claiming Windows is the most open.
Well yes, if you're willing to just simply invent whole new definitions for words, you can make any claim you want. After all, I'm the strongest human being who ever lived, if you define human being as being a group of which I'm the only member.