No comment on the teeth, but even many hundreds of thousands of years ago, if you made it to about 20, you had a pretty good chance of making it to 50 or more.
However, your chances of making it to 5 years old was grim. The classic "30 year life expectancy" is usually misunderstood.
If by perfectly, you mean works like garbage. Shrinking to the size of the favicons is much more preferable than having to scroll back and forth.
That that isn't something they'd copy from chrome, I believe that's how it used to behave, and I've been using extensions to return to that behavior since before chrome existed.
I found that working from an office can be just as bad since you are not likely to work together as a team -- since the effort of getting up and setting up an impromptu meeting for help when you are working on items - is also a very poor situation which limits mentoring and learning.
That is complete horseshit. I work in a place where everyone has their own office, and we have no problems working together as a team.
Cars aren't necessarily the largest polluters. CO2 production and production of other nasty substances aren't always related. Running a two-stroke leaf-blower for a half hour can easily exceed several days worth of NOx and CO emissions from a passenger car. If a lot of the motorbikes are two-stroke, replacing those may be the best bang for the buck.
I don't know about your city, but in many cities I would use "sharing" for the "bike sharing" systems. Most of them are operated as 501c3 nonprofits, and the fees for usage are super low. In Minnesota for example, their bike ride system is 60/year for unlimited rides, which is just a little bit below the cost of a new tire for one of my bikes.
Loser pays. Would remove most crap lawsuits. Tort law reform reducing damages to something close to reasonable would do the rest.
Would also prevent anyone with a legitimate claims from suing large corporations because they can't handle the risk of losing. It would also doubly fuck over people who have a reasonable claim but are unsuccessful in litigating it.
I hope you didn't use any more of that 140k on down payment than was absolutely necessary. With mortgage rates being under 4% you would be much better of with the majority of that in a higher-yield investment strategy. If not, you yourself need a crash course and should no be looking down on others.
As an engineer, it doesn't take a genius to look at the shape of a dog's nose verses other animals to notice the huge mass and evolutionary investment in their noses. We aren't using humans to hunt for truffles
No, we use pigs to hunt for truffles. Additionally pigs are considered to have superior olfactory sense and yet their noses aren't all that specially shaped.
I wonder if they'll update the key-bindings and keyboard controls to match StarCraft 2. After playing SC2 for awhile, controlling units in SC is maddeningly primitive.
I have noticed this behavior myself, and I used the same phrase, that my brain essentially shuts off when the computerized directions are being given.
What's weird though, is that the same thing doesn't seem to happen if I have an actual person giving me directions. If I listen to the computer, I can't remember shit. If a passenger looks at the map and does essentially the same function, I can remember everything fine and well. I wonder what the difference is between the two that results in such a different neurological outcome.
It's usefulness as a propulsion device remains to be seen.
First, it may ultimately be determined to be the result of experimental errors or failure to account for various effects. Good science, but boring outcome.
Or it may be found to work, and be proven to be exploiting some currently unknown or poorly understood area of physics. Understanding then how it works and how it produces its force will lead to potential useful applications. If it's understood how it works its possible one could be designed to have better thrust than what we've seen. For all we know it may be possible some way to somehow produce 1 newton/watt.
There was an article on slashdot many months ago about a paper that hypothesized how the devices work, and made a variety of predictions on how changing the design of the device should result in difference performance characteristics. Studying effects like that will be important in the science of this device.
You should probably read about science since 1905 before commenting then because there are many situations where newtons laws don't hold up. Relativity is one example. So no, they're hardly settled.
That's not why the EM drive is neat. The force provided by emitted radiation is a fairly well understood and predictable phenomenon. The EM drive has a sealed microwave cavity, so it doesn't emit many photons, and those that it does through thermal radiation are measured and accounted for. Despite that, the EM drive appears to produce an additional force, that is what makes it neat.
When will see the gypsy cab companies' leadership go to prison for breaking the law, including 18 U.S. Code 597:
Whoever makes or offers to make an expenditure to any person, either to vote or withhold his vote, or to vote for or against any candidate; and
Whoever solicits, accepts, or receives any such expenditure in consideration of his vote or the withholding of his vote—
Shall be fined under this title or imprisoned not more than one year, or both; and if the violation was willful, shall be fined under this title or imprisoned not more than two years, or both.
I'm pretty sure this activity is a blatant violation of this law, but it's not like we'll ever see it enforced because APPS.
You don't need to be a program officer to know that, they staff of the 7-X say that themselves, there is no expectation it will be used for power generation. The 7-X is a machine for science.
No comment on the teeth, but even many hundreds of thousands of years ago, if you made it to about 20, you had a pretty good chance of making it to 50 or more.
However, your chances of making it to 5 years old was grim. The classic "30 year life expectancy" is usually misunderstood.
If by perfectly, you mean works like garbage. Shrinking to the size of the favicons is much more preferable than having to scroll back and forth.
That that isn't something they'd copy from chrome, I believe that's how it used to behave, and I've been using extensions to return to that behavior since before chrome existed.
That is complete horseshit. I work in a place where everyone has their own office, and we have no problems working together as a team.
Cars aren't necessarily the largest polluters. CO2 production and production of other nasty substances aren't always related. Running a two-stroke leaf-blower for a half hour can easily exceed several days worth of NOx and CO emissions from a passenger car. If a lot of the motorbikes are two-stroke, replacing those may be the best bang for the buck.
I don't know about your city, but in many cities I would use "sharing" for the "bike sharing" systems. Most of them are operated as 501c3 nonprofits, and the fees for usage are super low. In Minnesota for example, their bike ride system is 60/year for unlimited rides, which is just a little bit below the cost of a new tire for one of my bikes.
Would also prevent anyone with a legitimate claims from suing large corporations because they can't handle the risk of losing. It would also doubly fuck over people who have a reasonable claim but are unsuccessful in litigating it.
I hope you didn't use any more of that 140k on down payment than was absolutely necessary. With mortgage rates being under 4% you would be much better of with the majority of that in a higher-yield investment strategy. If not, you yourself need a crash course and should no be looking down on others.
No, we use pigs to hunt for truffles. Additionally pigs are considered to have superior olfactory sense and yet their noses aren't all that specially shaped.
I wonder if they'll update the key-bindings and keyboard controls to match StarCraft 2. After playing SC2 for awhile, controlling units in SC is maddeningly primitive.
I have noticed this behavior myself, and I used the same phrase, that my brain essentially shuts off when the computerized directions are being given.
What's weird though, is that the same thing doesn't seem to happen if I have an actual person giving me directions. If I listen to the computer, I can't remember shit. If a passenger looks at the map and does essentially the same function, I can remember everything fine and well. I wonder what the difference is between the two that results in such a different neurological outcome.
In addition to the copyright stuff, Hansmeier also had a penchant for suing businesses for ADA violations.
http://kstp.com/news/ada-lawsu...
Science moves one step at a time.
May 2010. It took me about 15 seconds to look it up, why didn't you bother to?
It sounds like you hold an office job. Why can't you just have your stuff shipped there? That's what I, and all my coworkers, do.
It's not entrapment. It's fraud.
Hansmeier is a serious douche, who also has a penchant for suing companies for supposed lack of ADA compliance.
http://www.citypages.com/news/...
It's pretty sad that attorneys are able to do this shit for so long and for so much damage before the hammer gets dropped on them.
It's usefulness as a propulsion device remains to be seen.
First, it may ultimately be determined to be the result of experimental errors or failure to account for various effects. Good science, but boring outcome.
Or it may be found to work, and be proven to be exploiting some currently unknown or poorly understood area of physics. Understanding then how it works and how it produces its force will lead to potential useful applications. If it's understood how it works its possible one could be designed to have better thrust than what we've seen. For all we know it may be possible some way to somehow produce 1 newton/watt.
There was an article on slashdot many months ago about a paper that hypothesized how the devices work, and made a variety of predictions on how changing the design of the device should result in difference performance characteristics. Studying effects like that will be important in the science of this device.
You should probably read about science since 1905 before commenting then because there are many situations where newtons laws don't hold up. Relativity is one example. So no, they're hardly settled.
That's not why the EM drive is neat. The force provided by emitted radiation is a fairly well understood and predictable phenomenon. The EM drive has a sealed microwave cavity, so it doesn't emit many photons, and those that it does through thermal radiation are measured and accounted for. Despite that, the EM drive appears to produce an additional force, that is what makes it neat.
You can't just "use the name" of any government agency unless you are properly affiliated, or the man will drop the hammer on you hard.
When will see the gypsy cab companies' leadership go to prison for breaking the law, including 18 U.S. Code 597:
I'm pretty sure this activity is a blatant violation of this law, but it's not like we'll ever see it enforced because APPS.
You don't need to be a program officer to know that, they staff of the 7-X say that themselves, there is no expectation it will be used for power generation. The 7-X is a machine for science.
Why would two software companies be interested in a building wiring issue in the first place?
So once again, justice should only be reserved for those with thousands in extra cash laying around.
Confiscating forbidden fruits and vegetables isn't the TSAs job, that is for Customs and Border Patrol.