Simple really, in a combat environment, you might need to use a vehicle whose keys you wouldn't have.
Thus, military vehicles are push button start, no key needed.
Combat vehicles I've seen are designed so all doors can be locked from the inside, (prevents the bad guys from sneaking up and pitching in a grenade). While one can be padlocked from the outside to secure the vehicle while in the motor pool.
Non-combat vehicles like trucks don't even have locking doors. In the motor pool, they a secured with a chain padlocked onto the steering wheel. You could get in and start it, but it'd be hard to drive it away.
Technically that's not true. At least for the Army, perhaps other branches have different rules, but the drinking age on an Army post is the same as the state it is in.
But as others have pointed out, it's a rule that is often not enforced.
There wouldn't be a tax income anyway. Just look at the competitions communities get into trying to entice a corporation to build a new facility. When's the last time you heard of a company building a new facility someplace without getting various tax breaks?
Actually,
People have been working on this for quite some time. See here:
http://www.marssociety.org.au/marsskin.shtml/
Skinsuits, aka Mechanical Counter Pressure Suits, were originally built and tested by Paul Webb and Others in 1968.
From the number of email's I get from ebay's security department telling me that they're having some sort of a problem and I ned to log on to confirm my account info...
I'd have to guess the security is pretty poor.
Particularly since once I do what the ask, somebody uses my account to buy 100 copies of goatse.
I'd agree that once a year isn't enough.
However, the mandate is that EACH credit service give you a free report once year.
There's no requirement that you get them all at the same time. So you can spread out the requests to each service throughout the year.
Re:give us cheap Linux-based PPC machines
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Simple really, in a combat environment, you might need to use a vehicle whose keys you wouldn't have. Thus, military vehicles are push button start, no key needed. Combat vehicles I've seen are designed so all doors can be locked from the inside, (prevents the bad guys from sneaking up and pitching in a grenade). While one can be padlocked from the outside to secure the vehicle while in the motor pool. Non-combat vehicles like trucks don't even have locking doors. In the motor pool, they a secured with a chain padlocked onto the steering wheel. You could get in and start it, but it'd be hard to drive it away.
Technically that's not true. At least for the Army, perhaps other branches have different rules, but the drinking age on an Army post is the same as the state it is in. But as others have pointed out, it's a rule that is often not enforced.
There wouldn't be a tax income anyway. Just look at the competitions communities get into trying to entice a corporation to build a new facility. When's the last time you heard of a company building a new facility someplace without getting various tax breaks?
Actually, People have been working on this for quite some time. See here: http://www.marssociety.org.au/marsskin.shtml/ Skinsuits, aka Mechanical Counter Pressure Suits, were originally built and tested by Paul Webb and Others in 1968.
As I understand it, the term "honeypot" was coined during the cold war.
Basically involved using sex to gain confidential information or to compromise an agent of the other side.
From the number of email's I get from ebay's security department telling me that they're having some sort of a problem and I ned to log on to confirm my account info...
I'd have to guess the security is pretty poor.
Particularly since once I do what the ask, somebody uses my account to buy 100 copies of goatse.
and another: Pocket Book of Technical Writing by Dr. Leo Finkelstein, Jr.
I had Dr. Finkelstein as an instructor for a CS/CEG required technical writing course.
His book has come in handy since then.
You gotta watch out for that lead based paint!
I'd agree that once a year isn't enough. However, the mandate is that EACH credit service give you a free report once year. There's no requirement that you get them all at the same time. So you can spread out the requests to each service throughout the year.
Well, Don't think I'd personally call these cheap. But, they are reletivly cheaper than the alternatives. http://www-1.ibm.com/servers/eserver/openpower/har dware/720.html
A business might call them cheap. The price/performance is there in any event.