I believe it's done by using incredibly small holes dotted in a circular pattern embedded in the aluminium, so when the light is switched off, is practically invisible without looking incredibly close to the surface.
Although, the thought of apple inventing transpraluminium is nice.
I don't cite from Wikipedia, however i do use the sources and citations used from Wikipedia without mentioning the wiki article itself.
I know many of my peers that use it religiously, and many of those papers are practically clones. However, if my lecturers started to try and stop the use Wikipedia for material, I'll be the first to point out that little hypocritical rule. My lectures use Wikipedia abundantly in their hand-outs, notes and references to their own work when lecturing!
I think it's definitely reproducible. The most recent example I can think of is Silicon Glen in the central area of Scotland, which had strong links to the universities of Scotland and the rest of the UK.
Most of the occupiers were Via systems, National Semiconductor, Motorola and Chunghwa. However, in or around 2000, many of the companies started to lay off their international staff.
I think you can replicate Silicon Valley, but you'll never get the pulling power and reputation that the valley has established.
Podcasts refer to Mp3 or Mp4 files downloaded via RSS.
The reason podcasts are called podcasts because the "podfather" or creator of the first program that downloaded mp3 files via RSS made it automatically add to iTunes and then sync to an iPod staight after the mp3 was downloaded.
Because he was wearing a very padded jacket during the warmth of July.
He had just been pinned down just beside a train full of passangers, there could have been a suicide belt underneath his jacket. They shot him incase he detonated it.
There have been trials of Mobile recieves in the underground, especially for resuce services.
The transmitters are shut down which is part of the UK government plan which would have been put into place by the police.
Currently rescue services and 999 (911) calls are allowed through the transmitter jam.
The reason nobody can contact each other on mobile phones is because the police have had them jammed and switched off on all coverage in central London incase there are any secondary blasts.
It's thought that the bombs were detonated by mobile devices.
I believe it's still possible to have a 'personal army', at least in Scotland.
At Glasgow University, if you enter the examination hall with a personal army, you automatically get a pass, although don't take horses, otherwise you'll have to supply adequate water outside for them.
When i phoned up my MEP in Scotland, i was told that he was "very in tune with the issue" and that many people have already called about the issue, and that big corporations were also trying to put their point across, but he will be voting against it. That was the large majority of people contacting were asking for.
I just contacted my closest MEP, Ian Hudgeton's office, but he wasn't in, he's actually on his way to Brussels, so they gave me his assistants number, and she's going to pass on my opposition.
Thing was, he is a Scottish national, so i just said that it would hurt independent Scottish programmers and our economy, while huge foreign companys would come out on top.
I've decided I'm going to phone up, and annoy the bloody hell out of the 7 MEPs for Scotland. Although each and everyone of them have about 4 offices each dotted around.
Last Tuesday i was in town and i passed two engineers from the FirstGroup of FirstBus in Aberdeeen which is a huge bus and travel company in the UK. The two of them had a Dell laptop with a USB cable running out the back and uo to a roof of a bus stop which had an electric radio that communicated with buses that displayed the ETA of the next few buses, and what type of bus it is. Well, me being me went to check what operating system they were using.
I thought they might use linux for this soft of thing, but they were running a version of windows 2000 professional, and the thing kept crashing, and the guys were obviously pissed.
Anyway, my bus came on time.
This isn't new. I use my iTrip to broadcast about 3 car lengths during traffic with a bumper sticker on the back that told the driver behind to tune into 107.7. You get quite a few waves. Even funnier when you put on some of Billy Connely's shows on. Gottta have his expletatives.
The reason the UK doesn't send "Real singers" is because the competition is a joke. No high paid celebrity would dare perform on Eurovision because their career would automatically die straight away.
They're too scared their reputation will be destroyed in under the 3 minutes. Also, it's not the quality of the singers or songs anyway, it's the politics and relationships rather than the quality.
Afgahnistan? Iraq, anyone?
Anyway, i'm sure it was a rule that artists could not be submited that were already stars, atleast thats what i thought until Russia sent TaTu last year.
As for Israel being in the competition. Well, i don't know. But they did win about 4 years ago with a transgender singer. Could be something to do with being part of the Med or broadcast scope?
Extraditions can be cancelled by the Home Secretary.
I believe it's done by using incredibly small holes dotted in a circular pattern embedded in the aluminium, so when the light is switched off, is practically invisible without looking incredibly close to the surface.
Although, the thought of apple inventing transpraluminium is nice.
I don't cite from Wikipedia, however i do use the sources and citations used from Wikipedia without mentioning the wiki article itself.
I know many of my peers that use it religiously, and many of those papers are practically clones. However, if my lecturers started to try and stop the use Wikipedia for material, I'll be the first to point out that little hypocritical rule. My lectures use Wikipedia abundantly in their hand-outs, notes and references to their own work when lecturing!
Heh.
See it zh.wikipedia.org/
I think it's definitely reproducible. The most recent example I can think of is Silicon Glen in the central area of Scotland, which had strong links to the universities of Scotland and the rest of the UK.
Most of the occupiers were Via systems, National Semiconductor, Motorola and Chunghwa. However, in or around 2000, many of the companies started to lay off their international staff.
I think you can replicate Silicon Valley, but you'll never get the pulling power and reputation that the valley has established.
Also, Ryan the temp uses an iBook at his desk, rather than a PC.
He's Senior vice-president.
Wallace was born in the later period of the 1200's, Rome fell around 700-800 AD.
So, thats a no.
But FSMism isn't satire. It's real.
Podcasts refer to Mp3 or Mp4 files downloaded via RSS.
The reason podcasts are called podcasts because the "podfather" or creator of the first program that downloaded mp3 files via RSS made it automatically add to iTunes and then sync to an iPod staight after the mp3 was downloaded.
Because he was wearing a very padded jacket during the warmth of July.
He had just been pinned down just beside a train full of passangers, there could have been a suicide belt underneath his jacket. They shot him incase he detonated it.
There have been trials of Mobile recieves in the underground, especially for resuce services. The transmitters are shut down which is part of the UK government plan which would have been put into place by the police. Currently rescue services and 999 (911) calls are allowed through the transmitter jam.
The reason nobody can contact each other on mobile phones is because the police have had them jammed and switched off on all coverage in central London incase there are any secondary blasts.
It's thought that the bombs were detonated by mobile devices.
I believe it's still possible to have a 'personal army', at least in Scotland.
At Glasgow University, if you enter the examination hall with a personal army, you automatically get a pass, although don't take horses, otherwise you'll have to supply adequate water outside for them.
Ian Hudghton MEP.
When i phoned up my MEP in Scotland, i was told that he was "very in tune with the issue" and that many people have already called about the issue, and that big corporations were also trying to put their point across, but he will be voting against it. That was the large majority of people contacting were asking for.
I just contacted my closest MEP, Ian Hudgeton's office, but he wasn't in, he's actually on his way to Brussels, so they gave me his assistants number, and she's going to pass on my opposition. Thing was, he is a Scottish national, so i just said that it would hurt independent Scottish programmers and our economy, while huge foreign companys would come out on top.
I've decided I'm going to phone up, and annoy the bloody hell out of the 7 MEPs for Scotland. Although each and everyone of them have about 4 offices each dotted around.
Grr.
Looks like the spelling was derailed.
It would never be Sir Jobs.
Rather Sir Steven, or Sir Steven Jobs. But since he's not a member of the commonwealth, it would only ever be Steven Jobs KBE.
Last Tuesday i was in town and i passed two engineers from the FirstGroup of FirstBus in Aberdeeen which is a huge bus and travel company in the UK. The two of them had a Dell laptop with a USB cable running out the back and uo to a roof of a bus stop which had an electric radio that communicated with buses that displayed the ETA of the next few buses, and what type of bus it is. Well, me being me went to check what operating system they were using. I thought they might use linux for this soft of thing, but they were running a version of windows 2000 professional, and the thing kept crashing, and the guys were obviously pissed. Anyway, my bus came on time.
This isn't new. I use my iTrip to broadcast about 3 car lengths during traffic with a bumper sticker on the back that told the driver behind to tune into 107.7. You get quite a few waves. Even funnier when you put on some of Billy Connely's shows on. Gottta have his expletatives.
I agree. If anyone has a link to a study of the Swiss and Israeli singers, please give.
The reason the UK doesn't send "Real singers" is because the competition is a joke. No high paid celebrity would dare perform on Eurovision because their career would automatically die straight away.
They're too scared their reputation will be destroyed in under the 3 minutes. Also, it's not the quality of the singers or songs anyway, it's the politics and relationships rather than the quality.
Afgahnistan? Iraq, anyone?
Anyway, i'm sure it was a rule that artists could not be submited that were already stars, atleast thats what i thought until Russia sent TaTu last year.
As for Israel being in the competition. Well, i don't know. But they did win about 4 years ago with a transgender singer. Could be something to do with being part of the Med or broadcast scope?
I prefer the Doppler http://www.dopplerradio.net/ clinet over iPodder or anything else.
It's a smart little thing. Having space savers, bittorrent, and many other features which is ideal for any podcast client.
My favourite feature about Doppler is that it can resume files, which is extreamly lacking in all other clients.