I don't understand your point. The landline network also needs electricity, to run the switches and all the connected phones.
Or are cellphone towers in your country not connected to the electricity net?
From my experience the windows phones have longer battery life than android devices, they are just more efficient. I would keep my old windows phone just for that. What sucks though is the browser. For example it regularly messes up displaying Facebook, showing it shifted to the side, so you can't see things. And it does not display CNN at all. Well, I guess websites also just don't get tested on this browser.
... they just don't collect all the sensitive information in one place. Maybe they work more effective in the US, with eveyrthing available on a click. But it is muc more save with actual people involved.
But in the summary they assume that mammoths and others were readily available prey.
I really don't get that point. Humans have always been opportunistic eaters. There are no constantly available easy sources of food, starvation was a constant part of our past. So the idea that it wasn't worth it to kill humans because there are easier for sources available just makes no sense.
Sounds to me like the time in the 2000s, when it became a fashion to put things "in the cloud". Fuzzy term for doing it online, which made everyone forget the risks again that are associated with that.
Nothing will prevent the EU from erecting barrriers to this though, once UK is outside of the EU.
I also don't think that the banks will flee London in a rush, since that would already be more visible. I think they will rather expand their activities inside the EU over time, and not develop London much further.
This becomes an issue actually if it is not planned for, if the used data type does not support negative values. I have seen quite expensive devices that just set the values zero, which messes up the average of values.
Would be my first thought when I see negative energy readings. If a sensor produces a signal when no radiation hits it, then the average level of this signal is substracted. Since such a signal normally has a noise it will result in some negative values. Then it would not be an error.
I don't see any details on what kind of sensor this is though, or what kind of energy it measures. So I can't tell if it is that.
Or have a smartphone that you pull out in case and use the camera of that instead? It would require pretty much the same software as the glasses, and seems more practical to me.
3d printing can have other advantages too, for example it can create very lightweight parts with a mesh structure, or other structures that are impossible to make out of one part conventionally. It can also be worthwhile for very complex parts, which would have to be made out of many parts otherwise.
It's much cheaper to build simple weapons with conventional tools than to 3d print them. The 3d printed version must have some special properties to be worthwile.
Only if it really was the metallic hydrogen that it was suspected to be. I guess more measurements would have made certain what it really is.
They shouldn't have a problem to get funding for a lot more diamonds now though.
A view Russian probes got lost while flying over HAARP, I think Phobos Grunt was the most recent one. The theory is that their electronics was grilled by these high-power transmitters. This one actually makes sense though.
Some unit would be nice. Here in Europe we use per mille for this, which is a tenth of a percent. 0.21 would be nothing then.
Some googling show me that the legal limit in Indiana is 0.8 percent, so I guess she had a blood alcohol level of 0.21 percent or 2.1 per mille.
I don't understand your point. The landline network also needs electricity, to run the switches and all the connected phones.
Or are cellphone towers in your country not connected to the electricity net?
From my experience the windows phones have longer battery life than android devices, they are just more efficient. I would keep my old windows phone just for that. What sucks though is the browser. For example it regularly messes up displaying Facebook, showing it shifted to the side, so you can't see things. And it does not display CNN at all. Well, I guess websites also just don't get tested on this browser.
... they just don't collect all the sensitive information in one place. Maybe they work more effective in the US, with eveyrthing available on a click. But it is muc more save with actual people involved.
When I heard this story on the radio this morning, the most surprising bit was that Syria is responsible for the rise of ISIS.
Lol,who let that one go off?
But in the summary they assume that mammoths and others were readily available prey.
I really don't get that point. Humans have always been opportunistic eaters. There are no constantly available easy sources of food, starvation was a constant part of our past. So the idea that it wasn't worth it to kill humans because there are easier for sources available just makes no sense.
Sounds to me like the time in the 2000s, when it became a fashion to put things "in the cloud". Fuzzy term for doing it online, which made everyone forget the risks again that are associated with that.
Why would anything of this require an internet connection? You can do all of that over a local network.
Nothing will prevent the EU from erecting barrriers to this though, once UK is outside of the EU.
I also don't think that the banks will flee London in a rush, since that would already be more visible. I think they will rather expand their activities inside the EU over time, and not develop London much further.
This becomes an issue actually if it is not planned for, if the used data type does not support negative values. I have seen quite expensive devices that just set the values zero, which messes up the average of values.
Would be my first thought when I see negative energy readings. If a sensor produces a signal when no radiation hits it, then the average level of this signal is substracted. Since such a signal normally has a noise it will result in some negative values. Then it would not be an error.
I don't see any details on what kind of sensor this is though, or what kind of energy it measures. So I can't tell if it is that.
So it is just the same as waves on water? Very interesting story then.
At least try a more promising way to make Pluto a planet again. Why would anyone want to have 200 planets?
Better taking off your underwear at security? Or only travelling without underwear. And with kilt, to make sure.
And we all know what rules must have followed on this incident.
Or have a smartphone that you pull out in case and use the camera of that instead? It would require pretty much the same software as the glasses, and seems more practical to me.
Maybe, but in this case it sounds like a job for a tablet or smartphone. It doesn't sound like it is needed constantly, and it requires a hand anyway.
Oh. It works fine on my Moto X Play in UK
There is a lite messenger on Google play though. No need to use this shady link.
3d printing can have other advantages too, for example it can create very lightweight parts with a mesh structure, or other structures that are impossible to make out of one part conventionally. It can also be worthwhile for very complex parts, which would have to be made out of many parts otherwise.
Yeah, 3d printing is perfect for rapid prototyping. So why worry about it if it is just for that? Conventional mass production is faster and cheaper.
It's much cheaper to build simple weapons with conventional tools than to 3d print them. The 3d printed version must have some special properties to be worthwile.
Only if it really was the metallic hydrogen that it was suspected to be. I guess more measurements would have made certain what it really is.
They shouldn't have a problem to get funding for a lot more diamonds now though.
A view Russian probes got lost while flying over HAARP, I think Phobos Grunt was the most recent one. The theory is that their electronics was grilled by these high-power transmitters. This one actually makes sense though.
Oops that was a typo sorry
Some unit would be nice. Here in Europe we use per mille for this, which is a tenth of a percent. 0.21 would be nothing then.
Some googling show me that the legal limit in Indiana is 0.8 percent, so I guess she had a blood alcohol level of 0.21 percent or 2.1 per mille.