That depends on the jurisdiction. In some places, bicycles are considered vehicles. So the right of way of a bicycle follows the right of way of any other vehicle.
So yes, cars do have the right of way over bicycles sometimes, in fact, in the same situations as if you were driving a car.
Let me reiterate once for good measure: bicycles are not pedestrians on wheels. And if you ride like that, then you will get hit. It's not a matter of "if", it's a matter of "when".
It isn't without precedence. Andrew Jackson reportedly said regarding a Supreme Court decision he didn't like (and subsequently didn't follow), "John Marshall has made his decision, now let him enforce it!"
And then people have the galls to call him a strong president. A lawbreaker is more like it.
You're surprised. They've been keeping tabs on everybody who's anybody since the organization's inception. Hoover, anybody? The guy with enough power to assassinate a president and then have congress cover it up for him?
Emigration out is already highly discouraged. Did you know you have to pay capital gains taxes on all of your U.S. property after you give up your citizenship (as of 2008)?
It used to be consultants transitioning into a full time position, and it still is in many places. It benefits both sides really. It lets the person get their foot into the door of a desirable company, and it lets the company evaluate the person's work ethic and personality (things that may not so readily come out in an interview) before committing.
The third party temp agency is just a middleman that ought to be cut out. The problem is, that temp agency is the company's acting HR department, and it's cheaper to pay the temp agency than run a full-time HR group.
Which shouldn't be embarassed or threatened because they're extremely helpful to the NSA and FBI in their endeavours.
That's the problem with allowing corporations to cooperate with the government. It ultimately descends into corporatist facism where one is helping to cover the other's ass and vice versa. In the end, it's the people who lose.
How much you wanna bet the NSA and FBI have their fingers all over this site and its logs? This place is a hotbed of independent thinkers (relatively speaking, if 1 in 100 was the norm, it'd be 1 in 10 here), and we all know that independent thoughts are dangerous and must be monitored closely.
We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.
Everyone has these unalienable rights, not just the citizens of the U.S. (and green card holders). The U.S. government has no obligation to protect the rights of non-citizens, but by the Declaration, Governments also must recognize that they exist for all. That means to be constitutionally sound, the U.S. government has to acknowledge that even non-citizens have the same inalienable rights.
And yes, the Declaration of Independence is not the Constitution. The Constitution limits the powers of the government. The Declaration embodies the spirit of the country and its people.
I see it this way: if American geeks don't do the work, they'll just offshore it. And then there'll be nobody to blow the whistle.
Or, to put it another way, there has been a lot of whistleblowing over the past 13 years by these very same geeks (because there's been a lot of wrongdoing). Do you think there'd be anywhere near as much information on our government's wrongdoings if it had been Indian or Chinese or even Russian contractors doing the work? I think not.
Microsoft has gone crazy. They've gone batshit insane. They're completely cannibalizing their stable (in terms of market), core OS product for a whisper of a dream that is the mobile walled garden.
Year of Linux on the desktop might not be so far fetched after all.
Yeah, because Google so needs another excuse for the U.S. government to come knocking on their doors again, this time for distributing child porn.
At least if it was encrypted, they could say they weren't aware of the contents. I know the telecos are protected because they're considered common carriers, but I don't think Motorola qualifies.
I think people are just taking the idea of dupes too far. Dupes happen within a short period of time and are a result of sloppy editing.
This is NOT A DUPE.
This would be a great link to add to for every discussion on Snowden as a response to people who say that what the NSA is doing is OK because it's only "metadata." Then tell them that's the data they have on them as well, and ask them if they've been to a strip club recently.
What TFS doesn't mention was that he died of esophageal cancer. And he got it after nine months of being at the power plant after the accident.
TEPCO claims the cancer is not related to the accident. Of course they would.
Which is why airplanes still have multiple, independently-developed systems installed despite all of the prior checks and controls.
It's not a practical solution for rockets though.
Steve forgot to turn off his reality distortion field before he left the building.
Yeah, you don't, actually.
That depends on the jurisdiction. In some places, bicycles are considered vehicles. So the right of way of a bicycle follows the right of way of any other vehicle.
So yes, cars do have the right of way over bicycles sometimes, in fact, in the same situations as if you were driving a car.
Let me reiterate once for good measure: bicycles are not pedestrians on wheels. And if you ride like that, then you will get hit. It's not a matter of "if", it's a matter of "when".
You can also make binary blobs human readable. Just have an official spec on how to translate binary into English.
It isn't without precedence. Andrew Jackson reportedly said regarding a Supreme Court decision he didn't like (and subsequently didn't follow), "John Marshall has made his decision, now let him enforce it!"
And then people have the galls to call him a strong president. A lawbreaker is more like it.
Hardly. Academia has always belonged to Macs.
What will make more people go to Macs (and Linux) is when enterprises get off Windows. And Windows 8 seems to be headed in that direction.
You're surprised. They've been keeping tabs on everybody who's anybody since the organization's inception. Hoover, anybody? The guy with enough power to assassinate a president and then have congress cover it up for him?
Emigration out is already highly discouraged. Did you know you have to pay capital gains taxes on all of your U.S. property after you give up your citizenship (as of 2008)?
It used to be consultants transitioning into a full time position, and it still is in many places. It benefits both sides really. It lets the person get their foot into the door of a desirable company, and it lets the company evaluate the person's work ethic and personality (things that may not so readily come out in an interview) before committing.
The third party temp agency is just a middleman that ought to be cut out. The problem is, that temp agency is the company's acting HR department, and it's cheaper to pay the temp agency than run a full-time HR group.
Which shouldn't be embarassed or threatened because they're extremely helpful to the NSA and FBI in their endeavours.
That's the problem with allowing corporations to cooperate with the government. It ultimately descends into corporatist facism where one is helping to cover the other's ass and vice versa. In the end, it's the people who lose.
How much you wanna bet the NSA and FBI have their fingers all over this site and its logs? This place is a hotbed of independent thinkers (relatively speaking, if 1 in 100 was the norm, it'd be 1 in 10 here), and we all know that independent thoughts are dangerous and must be monitored closely.
We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.
Everyone has these unalienable rights, not just the citizens of the U.S. (and green card holders). The U.S. government has no obligation to protect the rights of non-citizens, but by the Declaration, Governments also must recognize that they exist for all. That means to be constitutionally sound, the U.S. government has to acknowledge that even non-citizens have the same inalienable rights.
And yes, the Declaration of Independence is not the Constitution. The Constitution limits the powers of the government. The Declaration embodies the spirit of the country and its people.
I see it this way: if American geeks don't do the work, they'll just offshore it. And then there'll be nobody to blow the whistle.
Or, to put it another way, there has been a lot of whistleblowing over the past 13 years by these very same geeks (because there's been a lot of wrongdoing). Do you think there'd be anywhere near as much information on our government's wrongdoings if it had been Indian or Chinese or even Russian contractors doing the work? I think not.
There are no longer competent people working in the government anymore, even in their PR department.
Microsoft has gone crazy. They've gone batshit insane. They're completely cannibalizing their stable (in terms of market), core OS product for a whisper of a dream that is the mobile walled garden.
Year of Linux on the desktop might not be so far fetched after all.
It's Newspeak, the latest and most popular trend in American English.
AdBlock Plus was compromised a while ago by its own developer. AdBlock Edge is the fork without the "acceptable ads."
NoScript and AdBlock will make old versions of FF perform better than new ones without either extension.
Yeah, because Google so needs another excuse for the U.S. government to come knocking on their doors again, this time for distributing child porn.
At least if it was encrypted, they could say they weren't aware of the contents. I know the telecos are protected because they're considered common carriers, but I don't think Motorola qualifies.
I think people are just taking the idea of dupes too far. Dupes happen within a short period of time and are a result of sloppy editing.
This is NOT A DUPE.
This would be a great link to add to for every discussion on Snowden as a response to people who say that what the NSA is doing is OK because it's only "metadata." Then tell them that's the data they have on them as well, and ask them if they've been to a strip club recently.
Book? You're so 1980's.
It's now a PDF.
1) To solicit new names that may or may not be any good.
2) To whittle the list of contenders down to a few from which they can then ultimately pick.
back then they did do something interesting things
That's probably because all the real innovators they swiped from DEC for NT are no longer around or heavily involved in any new projects.
scapedick
That sounds painful.
You don't need to pay for negativity. It's the Second Rule of public relations (the First Rule being: There's no such thing as bad publicity).