All the applications listed want to absorb and get rid of the sound. Even in a music studio, the recording engineer wants the sound to be picked up by the microphones, he doesn't need or want to hear it directly. I can think of very few practical uses for this.
Theoretically - yes, practically - no. Voting for a third party instead of the one he dislikes least would just mean the party he dislikes most would gain advantage, especially since in a case where one didn't get a majority, it would go to the House/Senate to decide and they're both the two major parties.
"If you like your healthcare plan you can keep it, period".
Why would you bother parsing what he said word by word. He lies, period. What he says means nothing.
Well in that case, there were some things that needed clarification. For one, the people without actual heatlhcare plans - the guys who payed their dealer in monthly installments weren't eligible to keep their plans. But the biggest issues was, the government doesn't actually control private enterprise, so they found a loophole where they could switch people off the plans they had before the cutoff (of the plans they could keep) to a brand new one with the same benefits. Then when the law came into effect the insurance companies said "oh darn, your cheap plan doesn't meet the minimum requirements, and it's too new so you can't keep it - Obama made us cancel it".
If Obama was a dictator, then he could say things about the future, but since corporations don't listen to the president, and Congress certainly isn't going to do exactly what he wants, it means the statements are what he hopes to happen - he doesn't have a crystal ball.
The president especially should be forward thinking in government - and we want him to share those thoughts with us. Since he's actually in charge of running a lot of the government, it might be a good idea to listen to him. Some speeches like this NSA one are full of weasel words, but since he's stating what the policy is going to be (at least officially), it's worth figuring out what he's saying.
The big issue here is of the 12 cases where a leak was large enough to cause an explosion, the majority of them were still present a year later. Lots of leaks are expected, but serious ones should be fixed.
I am sure they will ask for a rate increase to perform the maintenance that they should have been doing all along
They do one better - they charge the customers now for the line-loss as a percentage of what they use. They actually have incentive to have leaky pipes because it means they're selling more gas to the same number of customers.
Broadcast radio was quite dead before streaming. The death of radio even predates napster. It was pretty sick and almost dead before the internet ever was a thing even
Isn't it illegal to secretly infiltrate a computer system and remove legal software from it?
Yes it is.
Fortunately, the software isn't exactly legal (it was illegally installed by a virus that is), and the machine isn't being secretly infiltrated (you get notified about the Malicious Software Removal if you look at the Windows Updates), so that's kind of a moot point.
No one, not even the Tor developers themselves, knew how Microsoft had gone on a silent offensive against such a big opponent and won a decisive battle
It seems pretty obvious - the people who's machine had Tor removed didn't know it was installed and weren't using it to begin with. When MS removed it, they didn't notice or complain.
Eventually - then you can spend the $2 for an LED bulb and never worry about the light dying while you're getting the Christmas lights down from the attic. As a bonus, you'll save money on electricity.
I've had one in my lamp running for about a decade now. It sounds like you might have power fluctuations in your house if they keep dying. Also make sure you don't try to dim them unless they say they're dimmer safe.
Fortunately with LEDs down to a few bucks each - it's an easy choice to make these days.
Well considering the Tea Party considers itself a political group, looking at groups with "Tea Party" in the same seems pretty logical. They also looked at more left-leaning groups with names that included "Progressive" or "Occupy", so the net result wasn't just right wing groups The IRS's job was to investigate all the groups, but they don't have the resources to do it. If the "mostly conservative" groups weren't getting non-profit status because of the investigations, then they were likely breaking the law since a legitimate non-profit would have no trouble.
Except the IRS scandal was low level IRS workers taking shortcuts and trying to get their jobs done, whereas this was people close to the Governor ordering something as a revenge act.
My thermostat also did that and it's a rolled up piece of metal that contracts and expands to complete a circuit. No batteries required! I haven't seen a thermostat that "failed to start the furnace" just because it was cold..
With offline mode, EA can now shut down the servers that were once required while still selling the game. Since SimCity isn't subscription based, the servers are just a drain of money for them at this point since the hype died down and not many are going to pirate it.
Come a few months they'll be announcing that the online portion will be shuttered, but look forward to the next great EA release!
Stick it in a plastic bag and it should have all the same benefits plus being waterproof. I'm sure the manufacturers could come up with a way that lets air through if they wanted that.
Oh and the inevitably make 2 transactions, one in cash for all the "goodies" that you can't buy with food stamps and one for the stapes that they are allowed.
That just shows a lack of education or old technology in use. The system is designed so they can use a SNAP card to pay for the SNAP eligible items, and use cash for the rest - only 1 transaction is necessary.
I had the same problem - turns out clocks are handy. Of course there's still the one on the thermometer, the thermostat, the stove, the microwave, and everything electronic in my pocket - but what am I suppose to do? Turn my head around? Not when I have an electronic picture frame I can stick in my living room with a clock!
All the applications listed want to absorb and get rid of the sound. Even in a music studio, the recording engineer wants the sound to be picked up by the microphones, he doesn't need or want to hear it directly. I can think of very few practical uses for this.
It's not a lack of high school physics that's stopping terrorists from building a nuclear weapon...
Not to mention what they might do once they learn about Classical History and how it relates to modern film
... they'll take that knowledge back to train their gang and will use it against the local civilian population
That would be terrible if they started using integrals and cell osmosis against the locals! We must put an end to this education at once!
I think a key part here was also "10 minutes" since this took many hours
Point is he couldn't get the rights he deserves even if the US wanted to give them to him while he's away.
Well to be fair, he can't get many of those rights if he's in Russia
Theoretically - yes, practically - no. Voting for a third party instead of the one he dislikes least would just mean the party he dislikes most would gain advantage, especially since in a case where one didn't get a majority, it would go to the House/Senate to decide and they're both the two major parties.
Whoa I have to plan my eating HOURS ahead? Who has the time for that?
"If you like your healthcare plan you can keep it, period". Why would you bother parsing what he said word by word. He lies, period. What he says means nothing.
Well in that case, there were some things that needed clarification. For one, the people without actual heatlhcare plans - the guys who payed their dealer in monthly installments weren't eligible to keep their plans. But the biggest issues was, the government doesn't actually control private enterprise, so they found a loophole where they could switch people off the plans they had before the cutoff (of the plans they could keep) to a brand new one with the same benefits. Then when the law came into effect the insurance companies said "oh darn, your cheap plan doesn't meet the minimum requirements, and it's too new so you can't keep it - Obama made us cancel it".
If Obama was a dictator, then he could say things about the future, but since corporations don't listen to the president, and Congress certainly isn't going to do exactly what he wants, it means the statements are what he hopes to happen - he doesn't have a crystal ball.
The president especially should be forward thinking in government - and we want him to share those thoughts with us. Since he's actually in charge of running a lot of the government, it might be a good idea to listen to him. Some speeches like this NSA one are full of weasel words, but since he's stating what the policy is going to be (at least officially), it's worth figuring out what he's saying.
The big issue here is of the 12 cases where a leak was large enough to cause an explosion, the majority of them were still present a year later. Lots of leaks are expected, but serious ones should be fixed.
I am sure they will ask for a rate increase to perform the maintenance that they should have been doing all along
They do one better - they charge the customers now for the line-loss as a percentage of what they use. They actually have incentive to have leaky pipes because it means they're selling more gas to the same number of customers.
Broadcast radio was quite dead before streaming. The death of radio even predates napster. It was pretty sick and almost dead before the internet ever was a thing even
Yes, I believe it was video that killed it
Isn't it illegal to secretly infiltrate a computer system and remove legal software from it?
Yes it is.
Fortunately, the software isn't exactly legal (it was illegally installed by a virus that is), and the machine isn't being secretly infiltrated (you get notified about the Malicious Software Removal if you look at the Windows Updates), so that's kind of a moot point.
No one, not even the Tor developers themselves, knew how Microsoft had gone on a silent offensive against such a big opponent and won a decisive battle
It seems pretty obvious - the people who's machine had Tor removed didn't know it was installed and weren't using it to begin with. When MS removed it, they didn't notice or complain.
Eventually - then you can spend the $2 for an LED bulb and never worry about the light dying while you're getting the Christmas lights down from the attic. As a bonus, you'll save money on electricity.
I've had one in my lamp running for about a decade now. It sounds like you might have power fluctuations in your house if they keep dying. Also make sure you don't try to dim them unless they say they're dimmer safe.
Fortunately with LEDs down to a few bucks each - it's an easy choice to make these days.
Well considering the Tea Party considers itself a political group, looking at groups with "Tea Party" in the same seems pretty logical. They also looked at more left-leaning groups with names that included "Progressive" or "Occupy", so the net result wasn't just right wing groups The IRS's job was to investigate all the groups, but they don't have the resources to do it. If the "mostly conservative" groups weren't getting non-profit status because of the investigations, then they were likely breaking the law since a legitimate non-profit would have no trouble.
Except the IRS scandal was low level IRS workers taking shortcuts and trying to get their jobs done, whereas this was people close to the Governor ordering something as a revenge act.
I'd say someone getting murdered would ruin my movie going experience more than someone texting.
Even with the recent cold snap here when temperatures 'as cold as Mars' our Nest never failed to start the furnace.
My thermostat also did that and it's a rolled up piece of metal that contracts and expands to complete a circuit. No batteries required! I haven't seen a thermostat that "failed to start the furnace" just because it was cold..
With offline mode, EA can now shut down the servers that were once required while still selling the game. Since SimCity isn't subscription based, the servers are just a drain of money for them at this point since the hype died down and not many are going to pirate it.
Come a few months they'll be announcing that the online portion will be shuttered, but look forward to the next great EA release!
Stick it in a plastic bag and it should have all the same benefits plus being waterproof. I'm sure the manufacturers could come up with a way that lets air through if they wanted that.
Oh and the inevitably make 2 transactions, one in cash for all the "goodies" that you can't buy with food stamps and one for the stapes that they are allowed.
That just shows a lack of education or old technology in use. The system is designed so they can use a SNAP card to pay for the SNAP eligible items, and use cash for the rest - only 1 transaction is necessary.
I had the same problem - turns out clocks are handy. Of course there's still the one on the thermometer, the thermostat, the stove, the microwave, and everything electronic in my pocket - but what am I suppose to do? Turn my head around? Not when I have an electronic picture frame I can stick in my living room with a clock!