Oh, and as a follow up, all these states have State Constitutions which guarantee various things, and most of us literally own the "telegraph wires" (which includes fiber optics cable routes).
There are probably other states, but to my knowledge California, Oregon, Washington, and New York have all filed suit against this reversal of Net Neutrality.
Seriously, can't you see them when they pop up, they're not even that good at creating profiles and they don't even understand how humans link to each other in the real world. Fake posts liked by other fake profiles and commented on, but they repeat the exact same posts in a specific cycle, and the same comments.
If you can't detect that, get out of security, because you've failed.
And you're off by a factor of 1000, by the way. There are more.
Look, your old fossil fuel energy is.. just plain overpriced and inefficient.
It's hard to transport without explosions.
It requires capital investments that only last a few years and then get thrown away.
Meanwhile, renewables like solar wind and biofuels tend to last 20-100 years in operation, can be easily moved, don't explode, kill far fewer animals and birds than all fossil fuels do, and don't endanger expensive urban areas with giant explosions that kill thousands and destroy billions of dollars of investments.
It's a lot simpler to plant pine and willow spinnies and reuse the same tree trunk to grow 100 percent useable biofuels every two years for 20 years than it is to dig into inaccessible and remote mountain areas for dinosaur and tree remains from the last global warming event.
Adapt. Renewables are cheaper and they work better. They power most of the Internet you use.
Correct. They are very environmentally friendly if made in China, S Korea, and tons of places with cheap solar and wind energy. They are very environmentally friendly almost anywhere in the West or Texas or the NE.
Now, if you made them in the South, they're not quite as good. Which is why nobody does that. But if you build a Dark Factory that operates 24/7/365 in the dark with full automation, even with coal as an input, they are much more environmentally friendly. Which is most of the new factories in the South.
Look, I have news for you, there are about 20 decent battery technologies that are cutting edge right now. We had a battery technology research conference here this past summer at the UW. There are many flavors of battery types, and I'll be honest with you, they all work fairly well.
A shortage of a specific type of battery materials in a specific country does NOT mean that you have shortages worldwide, nor does it mean that you can't use any of the other very good battery tech instead.
Stop panicking. We need the batteries for our new fusion reactor balancing systems. That's why you're seeing shortages. It will be over soon, once the new fusion submarines and naval retrofits are complete. And, no, you won't see those commercially for another 25 years.
1. It now defaults to polling every hour on the hour and if it doesn't reply at that time it gets confused. I had to manually reset every thing to checking once a week (for weekly podcasts) or every day (for anything else).
2. It tries to Sync everything. The overhead on this is a nightmare. It's like "are you sure you have the rights to view that... how about now, did they expire... oops it says you don't have this (thing you listened to already) let me download it again".
3. You have to both Subscribe and get Notifications. It forgets these whenever it patches itself. It assumes if you haven't listened to the podcast in a couple of days that you don't every want to listen to that podcast... when instead it's like a music podcast and it will still be music in a week or a month.
Somebody trying to impose IP rights really really messed up. They should be fired and sent to a Greenland Ice Research station with only tropical shirts and shorts.
Similar lawsuits under way in the EU, UK, Canada, and Australia.
Seriously, how much of a third world nation is the USA if you can't even keep up with Canada?
It's in the Seattle Times. A real print newspaper. Not some fake source your friends in Russia posted.
CompuServe, my friend.
Dude, unlike you guys, we win in court. Look it up. We're 6 for 6 so far in WA.
Oh, and as a follow up, all these states have State Constitutions which guarantee various things, and most of us literally own the "telegraph wires" (which includes fiber optics cable routes).
Mess with the best ... 404 in the West
This is fake news. We Scots used tankards and wine skins, not these baby wine glasses you refer to.
Hold still while I pour it into your gullet.
There are probably other states, but to my knowledge California, Oregon, Washington, and New York have all filed suit against this reversal of Net Neutrality.
Not China. About four-fifths of all Chinese research is hidden from Western researchers eyes, and can only be viewed within China.
Some of that could be that it's not published in English (most papers are in English or possibly French).
Depends. Sometimes a paper in our lab can have co-authors from Brazil, Germany, Russia, and France.
So it depends on what paid for each co-authors research. It might be a combination of public and private funding.
Most medical research is published in PubMed, and you can always read it.
Seriously, can't you see them when they pop up, they're not even that good at creating profiles and they don't even understand how humans link to each other in the real world. Fake posts liked by other fake profiles and commented on, but they repeat the exact same posts in a specific cycle, and the same comments.
If you can't detect that, get out of security, because you've failed.
And you're off by a factor of 1000, by the way. There are more.
You'll find out on Thursday.
Or Saturday if you wait for the distracting tweets.
Hence, the love is pure, and uncorrupted by modern things.
Also why they use old style rooming houses with baths, instead of modern ones.
Actually, I do have that problem. Sigh.
"But if you tell them it's a bubble and worth nothing, we'll go broke!"
Plain and simple.
It's all been about the capital to switch to more efficient, cheaper renewables.
That problem has been solved, and as a bonus, every dollar spent on renewables cuts Russia and Saudi fossil fuel revenue by four dollars.
Commence the industry-paid whining about how the world is changing and we must protect buggy whips and whale oil and baleen corsets.
Climate Change is here, and we ran out of time for discussions.
Implementation in 3 2 1
Look, your old fossil fuel energy is .. just plain overpriced and inefficient.
It's hard to transport without explosions.
It requires capital investments that only last a few years and then get thrown away.
Meanwhile, renewables like solar wind and biofuels tend to last 20-100 years in operation, can be easily moved, don't explode, kill far fewer animals and birds than all fossil fuels do, and don't endanger expensive urban areas with giant explosions that kill thousands and destroy billions of dollars of investments.
It's a lot simpler to plant pine and willow spinnies and reuse the same tree trunk to grow 100 percent useable biofuels every two years for 20 years than it is to dig into inaccessible and remote mountain areas for dinosaur and tree remains from the last global warming event.
Adapt. Renewables are cheaper and they work better. They power most of the Internet you use.
Using my new South Seas Flowercoin algorithms, I have cornered the world market in Tulips, and it will never stop going up up up!
Correct. They are very environmentally friendly if made in China, S Korea, and tons of places with cheap solar and wind energy. They are very environmentally friendly almost anywhere in the West or Texas or the NE.
Now, if you made them in the South, they're not quite as good. Which is why nobody does that. But if you build a Dark Factory that operates 24/7/365 in the dark with full automation, even with coal as an input, they are much more environmentally friendly. Which is most of the new factories in the South.
They use giant sailboats to transport them from Japan to Seattle WA, and then they are carried by barrens of mules down to Fremont, CA
You mean high speed trains of mules. They go at least 20 mph.
Look, I have news for you, there are about 20 decent battery technologies that are cutting edge right now. We had a battery technology research conference here this past summer at the UW. There are many flavors of battery types, and I'll be honest with you, they all work fairly well.
A shortage of a specific type of battery materials in a specific country does NOT mean that you have shortages worldwide, nor does it mean that you can't use any of the other very good battery tech instead.
Stop panicking. We need the batteries for our new fusion reactor balancing systems. That's why you're seeing shortages. It will be over soon, once the new fusion submarines and naval retrofits are complete. And, no, you won't see those commercially for another 25 years.
1. It now defaults to polling every hour on the hour and if it doesn't reply at that time it gets confused. I had to manually reset every thing to checking once a week (for weekly podcasts) or every day (for anything else).
2. It tries to Sync everything. The overhead on this is a nightmare. It's like "are you sure you have the rights to view that ... how about now, did they expire ... oops it says you don't have this (thing you listened to already) let me download it again".
3. You have to both Subscribe and get Notifications. It forgets these whenever it patches itself. It assumes if you haven't listened to the podcast in a couple of days that you don't every want to listen to that podcast ... when instead it's like a music podcast and it will still be music in a week or a month.
Somebody trying to impose IP rights really really messed up. They should be fired and sent to a Greenland Ice Research station with only tropical shirts and shorts.