The company might well be registered with them already. Searching for VMWare, Oracle, SAP on their approved schools page returns a number of training companies with registered technical offerings. Not living anywhere near California, I have no idea what training companies there are, so YMMV.
They should be pushing courses into these countries as hard as possible. By exposing the students to the rest of the world and having them interact with the multitude of other countries and cultures of the other students, you give them an understanding of what the rest of the world is like and a chance to debate it with others.
By cutting them off like this, you now have a group of students who were busy educating themselves now unable to finish that process and that will likely result in the student starting to think "maybe my government is right about the Americans."
It becomes a matter of balance between whether the course material assists the regime or whether the interaction with other students causes more people to question the regime. I think the balance tips heavily in favour of causing questions.
You wouldn't keep it there, but because of the regional market segmentation, PLEX might be 550mil ISK in Jita and 620mil ISK in nullsec somewhere, so you decide to buy a bunch of them, transship to the higher selling market and make a quick profit. Unless you undock from Jita 4-4 and get blown to pieces.
You don't have to ship it yourself, as you could run a courier contract, but they can get stolen and if you price the collateral high enough to not make a loss if they get nicked, then the chances of someone taking the contract up diminishes because of the not-able-to-dock-in-the-delivery-station scams making massive collateral contracts suspect.
May I suggest you stop watching American-made documentaries and switch to those made by the BBC. They certainly don't call the non-Westerners backward and savages. Go and grab the Science and Islam series or When Rome Ruled and you'll see a decent take on history.
Since your comment history strongly suggests you are American and the study was carried out by paleoanthropologists from Oxford University, I can safely say you have no need to be concerned about your tax dollars funding this research.
The three scales, 100k, 500k and 1M, are the points at which certain accounting and audit requirements kick in. At 1M, the full bank of requirements has kicked in and are applicable no matter how far above that limit you get. Maybe there should be a 250M and 1B point with even more requirements, but the SEC seems to think that everything they need at 1B is answered by the requirements at 1M.
You need to dig deeper into the history of Christianity, not just the European version of. Original sin did not exist as a doctrine until Augustine of Hippo and it does not exist at all in the Eastern Orthodox rites. Christ did not atone for the "possible" sin of Adam and Eve, he atoned for our active sinning.
Augustine formalized the doctrine as he needed something to argue against sex as being fun for the Romans.
Eastern Orthodoxy does not accept hereditary guilt or sexually-transmitted original sin and states more logically that humans exist in a fallen state where we are susceptible to sin and require work to rise from that state.
Pure physics-wise, you are correct. Heating the same volume the same amount requires the same amount of heat energy. The difference is the source of the heat energy.
A resistive heater produces the heat by consuming electrical power only, 3400 BTU/hr generated heat requires a bit over 4.2A of 220V electricity to flow through the resistive element. (specs from a Radiant Cove heater unit)
A heat pump is the same as an air conditioner or fridge, just installed with the condensor inside the building and the evaporator outside. The primary heat source is the outside air and the only power is that needed to power the compressor unit to move the working fluid through the cycle. The smallest Fujitsu unit generates 11000 BTU/hr using 3.7A at 220V.
Basically the answer is the same amount of energy is needed for the same heating, but the heat pump uses a different source and an efficient process to produce the heat than a resistive load does.
If you plug the number into a unix timestamp to GMT converter, it returns Wed, 11 Dec 2013 10:52:19 GMT, so it looks like it is a time stamp, probably LastModified or something.
What the GP is calling a wire transfer isn't what we civilized bankers call EFT, it is the Western Union telegraph-style transfers. You pay Western Union, get a unique ID code and send that to someone else who with that ID code can receive cash from another Western Union office elsewhere in the world. No destination bank account needed. That's what is referred to in literature and old movies as "wiring someone the money"
What we, the non-US bankers, call wire transfers are interbank transfers as you describe. In the old days before internet/ATM banking, you'd fill in a form and the bank would transfer the funds electronically via the dedicated wire links between them. We now call them EFTs because the entire process is electronic. Banks should just scrap all their historically-derived terminology and settle for something simpler.
As the set of planets grows, theories will have to change as we have based the original ones on a single sample that may or may not be representative of the full set.
It's like basing an entire theory of construction of buildings on De Aar, South Africa and while it may explain most small towns, the suburbs of most cities, it will fall apart completely when you try and explain Manhatten or wooden houses in the US with it.
Why is it a shame? It's about time scientists stop being apologetic and point out directly how stupid some interviewers are during the live interview. I guess some pedants are going to point out ad-hominim or whatever, but in this sort of case where the interviewer is deliberately ignorant, that is what is needed.
Oh well, back to making planes that don't fly. Or catch fire.
Are you talking about the Tesla?
Nah, more likely Boeing's Dreamliner. The Tesla has nothing on Boeing for self-combusting batteries. At least the Tesla needs major damage to trigger one.:)
Every single night I see murders and stabbings on TV news, and you are citing WIKIPEDIA to "prove" otherwise? You sound like a fucking retarded gun control advocate trying to convince me to give up my primary source of personal protection.
And you've just proved you fall for the sensationalist media like Musk is talking about.
You probably didn't even look at the first paragraph of the Wikipedia page where it clearly states the numbers are pulled from FBI and BJS reports, both government sources that you can go for primary data if you think Wikipedia is fudging the numbers. You also didn't look at the graphs in the articles, nor the data sources behind the graphs, as there is a clear downward trend in most violent crimes. Wikipedia may be untrustworthy, but there are citations and those can be verified.
Well, the fact that it routinely fails to kill or cause massive illness in the millions of people who do eat it makes it fine in my book.
You soft westerners have too low a squeamishness level. Harden up a bit and enjoy your food rather than worrying that it will kill you when obviously it doesn't.
Fish sauce didn't kill the Romans and it won't kill you.
How is this "from people that don't receive any service from them"? If you don't have a solar panel, you don't pay it. If you have panels, but don't sell back to the utility, you don't pay it. If you have a panel, you sell back to them and they have to provide the infrastructure to do so, then you pay the extra.
Hey delt0r, you haven't forgotten our next pool game at Uncle Mike's Free Beer and Pool bar? I need the next contribution ^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H donation ^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H victory for my retirement ^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H record.
I think the problem here might be the word 'constellation'.
And that they're claiming it outperforms any of the other terrestrial telescopes from 70.1 inches up to the 409 inch Gran Telescopio Canarias, and presumably any bigger ones still being built.
The company might well be registered with them already. Searching for VMWare, Oracle, SAP on their approved schools page returns a number of training companies with registered technical offerings. Not living anywhere near California, I have no idea what training companies there are, so YMMV.
They should be pushing courses into these countries as hard as possible. By exposing the students to the rest of the world and having them interact with the multitude of other countries and cultures of the other students, you give them an understanding of what the rest of the world is like and a chance to debate it with others.
By cutting them off like this, you now have a group of students who were busy educating themselves now unable to finish that process and that will likely result in the student starting to think "maybe my government is right about the Americans."
It becomes a matter of balance between whether the course material assists the regime or whether the interaction with other students causes more people to question the regime. I think the balance tips heavily in favour of causing questions.
You wouldn't keep it there, but because of the regional market segmentation, PLEX might be 550mil ISK in Jita and 620mil ISK in nullsec somewhere, so you decide to buy a bunch of them, transship to the higher selling market and make a quick profit. Unless you undock from Jita 4-4 and get blown to pieces.
You don't have to ship it yourself, as you could run a courier contract, but they can get stolen and if you price the collateral high enough to not make a loss if they get nicked, then the chances of someone taking the contract up diminishes because of the not-able-to-dock-in-the-delivery-station scams making massive collateral contracts suspect.
May I suggest you stop watching American-made documentaries and switch to those made by the BBC. They certainly don't call the non-Westerners backward and savages. Go and grab the Science and Islam series or When Rome Ruled and you'll see a decent take on history.
Nah, no Roman would ever condone blocking sex in any form. It was their national past-time.
Since your comment history strongly suggests you are American and the study was carried out by paleoanthropologists from Oxford University, I can safely say you have no need to be concerned about your tax dollars funding this research.
Closer here means culturally and structurally more like the Western civilizations than the pre-Columbus cultures, not physically closer.
The Mediterranean and jungles of South America refer to the expected locations of lost civilization ruins rather than in New England area.
The three scales, 100k, 500k and 1M, are the points at which certain accounting and audit requirements kick in. At 1M, the full bank of requirements has kicked in and are applicable no matter how far above that limit you get. Maybe there should be a 250M and 1B point with even more requirements, but the SEC seems to think that everything they need at 1B is answered by the requirements at 1M.
You need to dig deeper into the history of Christianity, not just the European version of. Original sin did not exist as a doctrine until Augustine of Hippo and it does not exist at all in the Eastern Orthodox rites. Christ did not atone for the "possible" sin of Adam and Eve, he atoned for our active sinning.
Augustine formalized the doctrine as he needed something to argue against sex as being fun for the Romans.
Eastern Orthodoxy does not accept hereditary guilt or sexually-transmitted original sin and states more logically that humans exist in a fallen state where we are susceptible to sin and require work to rise from that state.
So you're that guy. Just bloody well flush the bog when you're done. It's disgusting.
Pure physics-wise, you are correct. Heating the same volume the same amount requires the same amount of heat energy. The difference is the source of the heat energy.
A resistive heater produces the heat by consuming electrical power only, 3400 BTU/hr generated heat requires a bit over 4.2A of 220V electricity to flow through the resistive element. (specs from a Radiant Cove heater unit)
A quick intro to the refrigeration cycle can be found here https://www.swtc.edu/ag_power/air_conditioning/lecture/basic_cycle.htm.
A heat pump is the same as an air conditioner or fridge, just installed with the condensor inside the building and the evaporator outside. The primary heat source is the outside air and the only power is that needed to power the compressor unit to move the working fluid through the cycle. The smallest Fujitsu unit generates 11000 BTU/hr using 3.7A at 220V.
Basically the answer is the same amount of energy is needed for the same heating, but the heat pump uses a different source and an efficient process to produce the heat than a resistive load does.
Or restoring it a day or two later without explanation of whether it was because of the bad PR or a completely screwed up customer support process in replacing a faulty Kindle. http://www.dailydot.com/news/amazon-linn-nygaard-deleted-account-restored/
If you plug the number into a unix timestamp to GMT converter, it returns Wed, 11 Dec 2013 10:52:19 GMT, so it looks like it is a time stamp, probably LastModified or something.
What the GP is calling a wire transfer isn't what we civilized bankers call EFT, it is the Western Union telegraph-style transfers. You pay Western Union, get a unique ID code and send that to someone else who with that ID code can receive cash from another Western Union office elsewhere in the world. No destination bank account needed. That's what is referred to in literature and old movies as "wiring someone the money"
What we, the non-US bankers, call wire transfers are interbank transfers as you describe. In the old days before internet/ATM banking, you'd fill in a form and the bank would transfer the funds electronically via the dedicated wire links between them. We now call them EFTs because the entire process is electronic. Banks should just scrap all their historically-derived terminology and settle for something simpler.
As the set of planets grows, theories will have to change as we have based the original ones on a single sample that may or may not be representative of the full set.
It's like basing an entire theory of construction of buildings on De Aar, South Africa and while it may explain most small towns, the suburbs of most cities, it will fall apart completely when you try and explain Manhatten or wooden houses in the US with it.
Why is it a shame? It's about time scientists stop being apologetic and point out directly how stupid some interviewers are during the live interview. I guess some pedants are going to point out ad-hominim or whatever, but in this sort of case where the interviewer is deliberately ignorant, that is what is needed.
Oh well, back to making planes that don't fly. Or catch fire.
Are you talking about the Tesla?
Nah, more likely Boeing's Dreamliner. The Tesla has nothing on Boeing for self-combusting batteries. At least the Tesla needs major damage to trigger one. :)
Nah, WOPR was more intelligent than the average general and therefore decided the code wasn't 00000000 because that would be stupid.
How often would you try 00000 as the PIN for someone's bank card?
Every single night I see murders and stabbings on TV news, and you are citing WIKIPEDIA to "prove" otherwise? You sound like a fucking retarded gun control advocate trying to convince me to give up my primary source of personal protection.
And you've just proved you fall for the sensationalist media like Musk is talking about.
You probably didn't even look at the first paragraph of the Wikipedia page where it clearly states the numbers are pulled from FBI and BJS reports, both government sources that you can go for primary data if you think Wikipedia is fudging the numbers. You also didn't look at the graphs in the articles, nor the data sources behind the graphs, as there is a clear downward trend in most violent crimes. Wikipedia may be untrustworthy, but there are citations and those can be verified.
Well, the fact that it routinely fails to kill or cause massive illness in the millions of people who do eat it makes it fine in my book.
You soft westerners have too low a squeamishness level. Harden up a bit and enjoy your food rather than worrying that it will kill you when obviously it doesn't.
Fish sauce didn't kill the Romans and it won't kill you.
How is this "from people that don't receive any service from them"? If you don't have a solar panel, you don't pay it. If you have panels, but don't sell back to the utility, you don't pay it. If you have a panel, you sell back to them and they have to provide the infrastructure to do so, then you pay the extra.
Sparkfun has them for $50. https://www.sparkfun.com/products/10138
Hey delt0r, you haven't forgotten our next pool game at Uncle Mike's Free Beer and Pool bar? I need the next contribution ^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H donation ^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H victory for my retirement ^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H record.
You might owe yourself another slap. It's a reflecting telescope. Grins.
I think the problem here might be the word 'constellation'.
And that they're claiming it outperforms any of the other terrestrial telescopes from 70.1 inches up to the 409 inch Gran Telescopio Canarias, and presumably any bigger ones still being built.