The large diesel engines on modern trucks are turbo-charaged. A turbo-charger is a moving part that gets VERY hot especially when the engine is running under load. They need to keep these engines idling to cool the turbo. Dave
Go on over to http://www.howardforums.com/ for all the information you need. Assuming you have a Cingular branded Moto 551 or similar, or any of the bluetooth Nokias it should be pretty easy to find the info you need.
Looks like a hoax to me. They mention that it will expand as it rises, but the construction "photos" make it look rigid. Also, they state the air is thinner up there so force needed to keep it in position would be less. That's not much of a problem, but how do you generate this force in thin air.
Dave
One problem with the record store and CDs is there has been no innovation in the last 25 years. DVD-Audio is a start, so is Rhapsody, but why don't record comanies embrace some of the technology file sharers use. Imagine a kiosk at a record store networked to a library of esentially entire catalogs of CD quality audio. The customer could then buy by the track or buy whole albums which can't be stocked in stores. The kiosk would then burn a custom CD for a reasonable price. The kiosk could also allow a customer to listen to tracks from its catalog. Dave
The large diesel engines on modern trucks are turbo-charaged. A turbo-charger is a moving part that gets VERY hot especially when the engine is running under load. They need to keep these engines idling to cool the turbo.
Dave
dvorak.org/blog
I get no spam.
Go on over to http://www.howardforums.com/ for all the information you need. Assuming you have a Cingular branded Moto 551 or similar, or any of the bluetooth Nokias it should be pretty easy to find the info you need.
Looks like a hoax to me. They mention that it will expand as it rises, but the construction "photos" make it look rigid. Also, they state the air is thinner up there so force needed to keep it in position would be less. That's not much of a problem, but how do you generate this force in thin air. Dave
One problem with the record store and CDs is there has been no innovation in the last 25 years. DVD-Audio is a start, so is Rhapsody, but why don't record comanies embrace some of the technology file sharers use. Imagine a kiosk at a record store networked to a library of esentially entire catalogs of CD quality audio. The customer could then buy by the track or buy whole albums which can't be stocked in stores. The kiosk would then burn a custom CD for a reasonable price. The kiosk could also allow a customer to listen to tracks from its catalog.
Dave
I would prefer the good people of Canada stop raping Lake Ontario and Niagara Falls.