Traffic accidents kill more people than natural disasters by orders of magnitude, and "lifestyle" diseases such as cancer and heart disease dwarf all else.
Logically, the safest place to life is somewhere you are happy and able to stay physically active and don't have to drive much. If it happens to be earthquakey or spidery don't waste your time worrying because it'll be lost in the statistical noise.
Honest question, I keep hearing this advice but have never personally used it. I've been stopped by law enforcement many times over the years, things like taking photographs, exploring abandoned buildings, launching model rockets, setting off illegal fireworks, etc. Each time I am respectful and fairly honest with the officers, with the goal of going about my business in the minimum amount of time and expense. I've never once been detained, and am rarely cited.
I suspect that if I don't talk to them at all they will take me downtown, bring me my precious lawyer, and after spending the night in jail be let go without charges or an apology. I don't know for sure that this is the case, but my personal experience has been that talking to police lets me go about my business.
If I were ever in a situation where things dragged on more than about 5 or 10 minutes I'd probably reconsider my approach, but I honestly question if this advice is sound.
Wow, I took it the same year. Where I went to school the AP class was the only way I could find to get an account on their PDP-11 and be given access to the computer lab. Few people had PCs at home, I worked for a year to save up enough for a C64.
The class doesn't really offer much for students these days I suspect. Most students don't want to do extra work on evenings and weekends in high school, it is easy to get access to computers and training, and you'll get at best a couple units of credit.
Look at homebrewing beer and wine, there is a very active network of people exchanging and selling homebrew, legally and non, despite the gov't wanting tax revenue. Pot will be the same. Tobacco is different because it is hard to do right. I tried growing tobacco and processing the leaves was tricky. I ended up with some foul tasting stuff that took many hours to produce. Tobacco smokers don't like to change brands, let alone try some moldy crud.
There are different ways to measure big buildings, but pretty much none of them are banks. You can measure volume, footprint, floor space, etc. Some of the largest buildings are airplane factories, retail warehouses, airports, and an apparently impressive flower auction house in Holland. I guess those bulbs had a lasting effect after all!
You don't have to brick it. Other countries use a blacklist of IMEI numbers. Phone theft has decreased because stolen phones won't be able to connect to any mobile networks. Yeah, there are various workarounds and hacks but it's not intended to stop smart people.
That's your wrong one. Superbugs are resistant to antibiotics, not the pointless stuff they put in soap these days. There's no way for a bacteria to become resistant to penicillin by being exposed Triclosan. That's just silly.
Your casual dismissal of this possibility seems logical but is incorrect. There are numerous studies of cross resistance between triclosan and antibiotics, Here is one showing several bacteria that evolve resistance to antibiotics after being exposed to sublethal doses of triclosan. This implies that dosing our wastewater with low levels of triclosan is reckless and had better have strong evidence that it does some good. It is definitely doing some bad!
The people I've discussed it with tend to not think of it as a religion, more like ceremonial rituals done out of respect for their ancestry. Perfect example is a bar mitzvah where the reading is done phonetically, without really learning the words. Morality is seen as having murky roots in Jewish faith, but open for analysis and largely based on logic. I find a lot of common ground with these types of people, I acknowledge that my personal ethical sense is entwined with the cultural and religious environment I was raised in but I don't believe any of the religious particulars.
A lot of reform Jews treat it as a cultural heritage, think of it as being Polish or British or something. Some people are more into it than others, and a lot of Jews have fond memories and lots of relatives with these shared cultural experiences so it is important for them to share with their children but it isn't a fierce religious calling.
You shouldn't let it bother you. Lots of people don't particularly care about their ancestors' rituals, even if they think it is fun to play along sometimes.
The button is for thrifty people who want to get their moneys worth out of their tires. When you're about to get a new set of tires you do burnouts in the tire store parking lot until metal is showing, rotate the tires and repeat. Then proudly pull in to the service bay with absolutely no tread left on any of your tires.
I do wear glasses. I'm a cheap bastard so I generally buy from a place that sells an eye exam, regular glasses, and sunglasses for $99 if you can live with the frames they offer. If you pick nicer frames the price goes up, I usually get out of there for $150. I bought a pair of prescription polarized sunglasses years ago for $200 and I still use them, I treat them tenderly always keeping them in a hard case when I'm not wearing them. When I'm staring into bright water or road having an out of date prescription isn't very noticeable.
For swimming, I buy "off the shelf" prescription goggles for $20. They don't match my eyes perfectly, but at least I can walk around without banging into anything and I don't crash into stuff in the water. My eyes require different strength lenses, so I buy 2 pair and cannibalize them to make 2 custom pair that sorta fit my eyes.
If you have a current prescription you can shop online, there are some good deals out there.
If bright glare bothers you, do yourself a favor and invest in the polarized lenses. I've got pretty sensitive eyes and it's been totally worth it for me.
Back in the 50s tons of people took amphetamines for extra pep or to lose a few pounds. Many millions of people took them moderately. The addiction potential was there, but you didn't see the horrible social effects until the legal source dried up and bikers started selling crank.
I don't think a restaurant has to care about their website to have good food. Some of my favorite restaurants don't have a website. They don't need one. Many others have a rudimentary one their nephew made in the 90s and it has never been updated.
Sure, there are many restaurants that care way more about marketing than anything else, and they should have a truly world class website.
I understand hating the built in viewers, but to me they are a blessing. There are so many things that are PDFs for no reason. I really appreciate a quick and dirty way to see PDFs, and with my usage it is good enough 90% of the time. For the interactive ones etc. I tend to recognize which ones aren't going to work so I just download the file. On unfamiliar systems I always grit my teeth when clicking a link causes a 20 second delay while Adobe Viewer lurches from the shadows and demands to be updated.
Unhealthy people do have an effect on others. I'm surprised rich self reliant types haven't figured this out yet.
If you have a pool of unvaccinated measles carriers, that affects even healthy vaccinated people. Same with a bunch of antibiotic resistant TB carriers. It's in everyone's interest to avoid having seas of badly treated disease carriers mingling with the elite.
Ironically, right now the biggest factors on rates are circumstantial. Credit scores, age, gender, marital status. These are all difficult to change and somewhat dictated by chance.
It makes sense to me. Lets say that on average people get in one accident during their life. You can't predict when it will be, maybe the first day you drive or when you're old and have assets. Insurance covers the bills no matter when your accident happens.
Lets say that bad drivers get in twice as many accidents, same deal. You don't know when they'll happen so you spread the risk. Bad drivers should pay twice as much, makes sense.
If you're a bad enough driver nobody will insure you unless you pay through the nose. Ask anyone with numerous accidents or a couple of DUIs.
Incidentally smokers and fat people should probably pay less for health care, they don't live as long.
That's great if you don't have any assets. If you have a house or significant investments, those are at risk. One accident, it doesn't have to be 100% your fault, and the lawyers are gonna come sniffing around. If you're in an accident and have assets, expect somebody or other to come after them.
Insurance companies also take care of all the legal BS with real lawyers so you don't have to waste a lot of time navigating courts or hiring lawyers.
Sadly, those who have the money to self insure are the ones who need insurance.
There are times when running old equipment makes sense. I've seen manufacturing equipment controllers with specialized interfaces that are 20 years old. You'd have to spend a lot of money to buy new equipment and software, and porting the control logic is dicey. Sometimes it's easier to just grit your teeth, buy a used micro channel motherboard and buy yourself another few years.
Traffic accidents kill more people than natural disasters by orders of magnitude, and "lifestyle" diseases such as cancer and heart disease dwarf all else.
Logically, the safest place to life is somewhere you are happy and able to stay physically active and don't have to drive much. If it happens to be earthquakey or spidery don't waste your time worrying because it'll be lost in the statistical noise.
Honest question, I keep hearing this advice but have never personally used it. I've been stopped by law enforcement many times over the years, things like taking photographs, exploring abandoned buildings, launching model rockets, setting off illegal fireworks, etc. Each time I am respectful and fairly honest with the officers, with the goal of going about my business in the minimum amount of time and expense. I've never once been detained, and am rarely cited.
I suspect that if I don't talk to them at all they will take me downtown, bring me my precious lawyer, and after spending the night in jail be let go without charges or an apology. I don't know for sure that this is the case, but my personal experience has been that talking to police lets me go about my business.
If I were ever in a situation where things dragged on more than about 5 or 10 minutes I'd probably reconsider my approach, but I honestly question if this advice is sound.
OK, I'll play. I pirate a movie. They lost $1 that I would have given redbox, of which they get maybe $.50
Why are damages for this infraction set at many thousands of dollars?
Wow, I took it the same year. Where I went to school the AP class was the only way I could find to get an account on their PDP-11 and be given access to the computer lab. Few people had PCs at home, I worked for a year to save up enough for a C64.
The class doesn't really offer much for students these days I suspect. Most students don't want to do extra work on evenings and weekends in high school, it is easy to get access to computers and training, and you'll get at best a couple units of credit.
Look at homebrewing beer and wine, there is a very active network of people exchanging and selling homebrew, legally and non, despite the gov't wanting tax revenue. Pot will be the same. Tobacco is different because it is hard to do right. I tried growing tobacco and processing the leaves was tricky. I ended up with some foul tasting stuff that took many hours to produce. Tobacco smokers don't like to change brands, let alone try some moldy crud.
A corner cube would really give it to those headlights, but the driver wouldn't notice it.
There are different ways to measure big buildings, but pretty much none of them are banks. You can measure volume, footprint, floor space, etc. Some of the largest buildings are airplane factories, retail warehouses, airports, and an apparently impressive flower auction house in Holland. I guess those bulbs had a lasting effect after all!
You don't have to brick it. Other countries use a blacklist of IMEI numbers. Phone theft has decreased because stolen phones won't be able to connect to any mobile networks. Yeah, there are various workarounds and hacks but it's not intended to stop smart people.
That's your wrong one. Superbugs are resistant to antibiotics, not the pointless stuff they put in soap these days. There's no way for a bacteria to become resistant to penicillin by being exposed Triclosan. That's just silly.
Your casual dismissal of this possibility seems logical but is incorrect. There are numerous studies of cross resistance between triclosan and antibiotics, Here is one showing several bacteria that evolve resistance to antibiotics after being exposed to sublethal doses of triclosan. This implies that dosing our wastewater with low levels of triclosan is reckless and had better have strong evidence that it does some good. It is definitely doing some bad!
Can't jump off the bridge once they put up the net
The people I've discussed it with tend to not think of it as a religion, more like ceremonial rituals done out of respect for their ancestry. Perfect example is a bar mitzvah where the reading is done phonetically, without really learning the words. Morality is seen as having murky roots in Jewish faith, but open for analysis and largely based on logic. I find a lot of common ground with these types of people, I acknowledge that my personal ethical sense is entwined with the cultural and religious environment I was raised in but I don't believe any of the religious particulars.
A lot of reform Jews treat it as a cultural heritage, think of it as being Polish or British or something. Some people are more into it than others, and a lot of Jews have fond memories and lots of relatives with these shared cultural experiences so it is important for them to share with their children but it isn't a fierce religious calling.
You shouldn't let it bother you. Lots of people don't particularly care about their ancestors' rituals, even if they think it is fun to play along sometimes.
The button is for thrifty people who want to get their moneys worth out of their tires. When you're about to get a new set of tires you do burnouts in the tire store parking lot until metal is showing, rotate the tires and repeat. Then proudly pull in to the service bay with absolutely no tread left on any of your tires.
I do wear glasses. I'm a cheap bastard so I generally buy from a place that sells an eye exam, regular glasses, and sunglasses for $99 if you can live with the frames they offer. If you pick nicer frames the price goes up, I usually get out of there for $150. I bought a pair of prescription polarized sunglasses years ago for $200 and I still use them, I treat them tenderly always keeping them in a hard case when I'm not wearing them. When I'm staring into bright water or road having an out of date prescription isn't very noticeable.
For swimming, I buy "off the shelf" prescription goggles for $20. They don't match my eyes perfectly, but at least I can walk around without banging into anything and I don't crash into stuff in the water. My eyes require different strength lenses, so I buy 2 pair and cannibalize them to make 2 custom pair that sorta fit my eyes.
If you have a current prescription you can shop online, there are some good deals out there.
If bright glare bothers you, do yourself a favor and invest in the polarized lenses. I've got pretty sensitive eyes and it's been totally worth it for me.
Pay the PR company to spiff up your competition's page(s) and they get punished.
top 1% earn >$394k. That's 5 and a half Tesla Model S per year.
Anyone making that kind of money could afford a Tesla if that was their priority.
The US Fire Administration collects detailed statistics. You can check out the latest report Here
There are 7% categorized as intentional, with an additional 10% as under investigation, which may have some convincing arsons.
Back in the 50s tons of people took amphetamines for extra pep or to lose a few pounds. Many millions of people took them moderately. The addiction potential was there, but you didn't see the horrible social effects until the legal source dried up and bikers started selling crank.
I don't think a restaurant has to care about their website to have good food. Some of my favorite restaurants don't have a website. They don't need one. Many others have a rudimentary one their nephew made in the 90s and it has never been updated.
Sure, there are many restaurants that care way more about marketing than anything else, and they should have a truly world class website.
I understand hating the built in viewers, but to me they are a blessing. There are so many things that are PDFs for no reason. I really appreciate a quick and dirty way to see PDFs, and with my usage it is good enough 90% of the time. For the interactive ones etc. I tend to recognize which ones aren't going to work so I just download the file. On unfamiliar systems I always grit my teeth when clicking a link causes a 20 second delay while Adobe Viewer lurches from the shadows and demands to be updated.
Unhealthy people do have an effect on others. I'm surprised rich self reliant types haven't figured this out yet.
If you have a pool of unvaccinated measles carriers, that affects even healthy vaccinated people. Same with a bunch of antibiotic resistant TB carriers. It's in everyone's interest to avoid having seas of badly treated disease carriers mingling with the elite.
Ironically, right now the biggest factors on rates are circumstantial. Credit scores, age, gender, marital status. These are all difficult to change and somewhat dictated by chance.
It makes sense to me. Lets say that on average people get in one accident during their life. You can't predict when it will be, maybe the first day you drive or when you're old and have assets. Insurance covers the bills no matter when your accident happens.
Lets say that bad drivers get in twice as many accidents, same deal. You don't know when they'll happen so you spread the risk. Bad drivers should pay twice as much, makes sense.
If you're a bad enough driver nobody will insure you unless you pay through the nose. Ask anyone with numerous accidents or a couple of DUIs.
Incidentally smokers and fat people should probably pay less for health care, they don't live as long.
That's great if you don't have any assets. If you have a house or significant investments, those are at risk. One accident, it doesn't have to be 100% your fault, and the lawyers are gonna come sniffing around. If you're in an accident and have assets, expect somebody or other to come after them.
Insurance companies also take care of all the legal BS with real lawyers so you don't have to waste a lot of time navigating courts or hiring lawyers.
Sadly, those who have the money to self insure are the ones who need insurance.
There are times when running old equipment makes sense. I've seen manufacturing equipment controllers with specialized interfaces that are 20 years old. You'd have to spend a lot of money to buy new equipment and software, and porting the control logic is dicey. Sometimes it's easier to just grit your teeth, buy a used micro channel motherboard and buy yourself another few years.