This is claimed, superficially, and by popular misconception, to be about election influence. But it is not. At best, it is about conspiracy to promulgate false, misleading, or inflammatory information with the intention to confuse voters or mislead them.
That is what political campaigns do so much of always. In this instance, however, it is a charge leveled against foreign nationals, Russian citizens apparently. While we have laws prohibiting foreign influence in campaigns, these are often flaunted. This time we have a Trojan horse investigation that will use this to prolong their remit, and to sow their own version of obfuscation.
But consider this:
Former President Obama was briefed on the 'Russian dossier' on January 5, 2018. Then President-elect Trump was briefed on this by Comey, privately, after a formal intelligence briefing. Does anyone claim that these men, Obama and Trump, received the same briefings? Really, is anyone that naive?
This is key, for how could the FBI admit it was investigating the incoming President TO HIS FACE? And do not be deceived by claims that his campaign underlings were the only targets. No, the target was always, ALWAYS the candidate.
Trump may be assumed to feel betrayed by the former administration, their Justice and FBI officials and leadership, and the intelligence community, and should be feeling so even today. And if you think he's either too dumb or stayed by reluctance to do anything about it, you do not know one important thing about the man. He remembers. He will resolve this.
And that is why Mueller, the FBI leadership and investigators associated with all of these investigations, the courts, all of them are desperate to silence him by indictment, trial, and conviction. For they all are guilty of treason, and much worse than what these 13 indictments accuse Russians of.
Truly the only real question is if Trump can find enough honest men and women to do what needs to be done.
One of the more difficult issues with immunotherapy is being able to administer the low doses of allergens in the absence of the environmental exposure to the allergens, which raise the response and fail the therapy. You know that dust mites are nearly impossible to eradicate, and mattress covers are not enough - you need to sterilize the bedding, including pillows, carpeting (which needs to be gone), bedclothes, actually the whole house. This is what causes much therapy to fail.
In Maine you do not eradicate pine pollen in season. It is ubiquitous. Too prevalent. You can reduce the exposure, but therapies are difficult in that environment.
Ragweed is a minor allergen for me, and again, ubiquitous in season, so treatments can only be efficacious out of season. That's limiting. But I did not have access to effective immunotherapy, so as an adult I managed to get through the sedating antihistamine era and on to steroidal treatments.
PS - it's not the mites themselves, mostly, but you should know that...
You're close, I bet. Proprietary (old) imaging and scanning hardware will not have drivers. Old apps will require these devices.
This isn't unusual for any large organization that standardized on apps. The planning and budgeting is a military problem only when there was a disconnect. Someone should have known this a year ago.
Not for me baby. Tried and failed. Even the military tried prick tests (damn, they called that a terrible name) and got me hospitalized. Moving to Arizona gave me almost exactly 7 years' respite, but I finally caught on to the new pollens.
Good for you. Which particular pollens were you most affected by?
I just got over having to pay for a certificate just like I got over having top pay for a domain name.
The Internet isn't free. Information doesn't 'know' anything, much less if it's 'free'. Given a choice people will not pay for anything unless the free is not useful.
I see. So my neighbors who cycle or walk would not actually use the sidewalks or roadways otherwise.
Good to know. Roads are important only for cars, so sidewalks and bicycle lanes can be dispensed with, unless we tax pedestrians and cyclists separately. Sure.
I appreciate your sentiment, but I work where the work is, and live where I want to. And I've not yet found suitable employment closer to my home, so I commute 40 miles each way 4 days a week. A bus trip would be 4 routes and 4.5 hours.
Working at home is very attractive until I realize that our team is very interactive, constantly exchanging info and working on issues with each other, with a secondary team in the same aisle, and with other teams on the same floor. The available collaborative tools we have (Skype, email, WebEx, etc) are just inadequate. And yet I expect to be forced to a work at home model in the next year due to real estate and relocation projects that will force the choice.
It's all fun and games until someone loses their job.
Lastly, free public transport isn't 'free'. Due diligence in determining the cost benefit should be mandatory, transparent, and swift, but good luck with that. Once government gets it in their collective head that this should be done, it's pretty much up to the people to either sit still and accept, or reject. If their government is responsive at all...
Everybody you know is a problem. Neither of my Windows 10 machines have had update troubles for a year or more. One has never blue screened in over two years. The other, after installing an unusual compiler for an ARM project, it hated me for a day. My Surface Pro 3 fingerprint bug turned out to be a bad type cover.
Fix the people you know, buddy. You need better clients.
Interesting. My allergic rhinitis is rooted in receptors that, in my case, accept Eastern White Pine and English Plantain pollen, causing a histamine response. There is no resistive or immunotherapy to diminish that. The best solution is to circumvent the response mechanism, using steroids for example to suppress the response. Exposing me to the allergens does not train my immune system to do anything differently. Peanut allergies are a different mechanism, apparently, and combination therapies seem to be effective.
No, you weren't really going there, but free allergies are actually treatable by exposure. That is similar to a technique used in homeopathy, which is fairly well discredited now.
You don't build up an immunity to what we call an allergy. Exposure tends to make it worse. You don't really want those antibodies to become active and generate the histamine response usually associated with allergies. Instead you suppress the inflammatory response if you can.
Not the same problem as the immune response associated with influenza, which we are willing to tolerate, even develop through immunization, to prevent off minimize an infection. Allergies aren't the same thing at all, as they are responses to otherwise innocuous substances, and the response is truly unwanted and unnecessary.
And preventing thefts improves delivery -- those sweet, sweet new whatever are hot commodities when they are fresh on the market, and getting insurance payouts aren't the same thing as actually selling them to consumers.
Despite the bias against Verizon, this makes sense, is not obviously going to inconvenience users, and is a reasonably predictable response. If you want to blame someone for the thefts, try the shippers...
Just like car tires, whatever the endurance, someone will try to run them longer. It soon becomes extra extra strong. there is no limit to the desire for longevity of parts, and in most printers (not those in TFA which are worth getting preventative maintenance to avoid $$$$$ downtime) they are run till they break - then the complaints begin.
Well, it's proteins, whatever the source :/
Something is wrong here.
This is claimed, superficially, and by popular misconception, to be about election influence. But it is not. At best, it is about conspiracy to promulgate false, misleading, or inflammatory information with the intention to confuse voters or mislead them.
That is what political campaigns do so much of always. In this instance, however, it is a charge leveled against foreign nationals, Russian citizens apparently. While we have laws prohibiting foreign influence in campaigns, these are often flaunted. This time we have a Trojan horse investigation that will use this to prolong their remit, and to sow their own version of obfuscation.
But consider this:
Former President Obama was briefed on the 'Russian dossier' on January 5, 2018. Then President-elect Trump was briefed on this by Comey, privately, after a formal intelligence briefing. Does anyone claim that these men, Obama and Trump, received the same briefings? Really, is anyone that naive?
This is key, for how could the FBI admit it was investigating the incoming President TO HIS FACE? And do not be deceived by claims that his campaign underlings were the only targets. No, the target was always, ALWAYS the candidate.
Trump may be assumed to feel betrayed by the former administration, their Justice and FBI officials and leadership, and the intelligence community, and should be feeling so even today. And if you think he's either too dumb or stayed by reluctance to do anything about it, you do not know one important thing about the man. He remembers. He will resolve this.
And that is why Mueller, the FBI leadership and investigators associated with all of these investigations, the courts, all of them are desperate to silence him by indictment, trial, and conviction. For they all are guilty of treason, and much worse than what these 13 indictments accuse Russians of.
Truly the only real question is if Trump can find enough honest men and women to do what needs to be done.
The copy I found is signed by Mueller...
You want to keep on? Stay a cowardly AC, it suits you.
"everybody I know" being such a more credible sample. Yeah. I quantified my sample.
One of the more difficult issues with immunotherapy is being able to administer the low doses of allergens in the absence of the environmental exposure to the allergens, which raise the response and fail the therapy. You know that dust mites are nearly impossible to eradicate, and mattress covers are not enough - you need to sterilize the bedding, including pillows, carpeting (which needs to be gone), bedclothes, actually the whole house. This is what causes much therapy to fail.
In Maine you do not eradicate pine pollen in season. It is ubiquitous. Too prevalent. You can reduce the exposure, but therapies are difficult in that environment.
Ragweed is a minor allergen for me, and again, ubiquitous in season, so treatments can only be efficacious out of season. That's limiting. But I did not have access to effective immunotherapy, so as an adult I managed to get through the sedating antihistamine era and on to steroidal treatments.
PS - it's not the mites themselves, mostly, but you should know that...
You're close, I bet. Proprietary (old) imaging and scanning hardware will not have drivers. Old apps will require these devices.
This isn't unusual for any large organization that standardized on apps. The planning and budgeting is a military problem only when there was a disconnect. Someone should have known this a year ago.
Not for me baby. Tried and failed. Even the military tried prick tests (damn, they called that a terrible name) and got me hospitalized. Moving to Arizona gave me almost exactly 7 years' respite, but I finally caught on to the new pollens.
Good for you. Which particular pollens were you most affected by?
I just got over having to pay for a certificate just like I got over having top pay for a domain name.
The Internet isn't free. Information doesn't 'know' anything, much less if it's 'free'. Given a choice people will not pay for anything unless the free is not useful.
And so governments' difficulty in solving real problems is exposed.
And your comment is very, very close to correct. Closer than you intended.
But it's never free. And people will waste that which they do not believe they are paying for.
And so they will take the handout not realizing it diminishes them and their prospects.
A two mile walk should take about 30 minutes for a fit individual, 45 minutes for an average effort.
Seems like a wash. If she can walk to work substantially faster, it's just a choice, right? Weather being the real detractor.
I see. So my neighbors who cycle or walk would not actually use the sidewalks or roadways otherwise.
Good to know. Roads are important only for cars, so sidewalks and bicycle lanes can be dispensed with, unless we tax pedestrians and cyclists separately. Sure.
Your world is fascinating.
I appreciate your sentiment, but I work where the work is, and live where I want to. And I've not yet found suitable employment closer to my home, so I commute 40 miles each way 4 days a week. A bus trip would be 4 routes and 4.5 hours.
Working at home is very attractive until I realize that our team is very interactive, constantly exchanging info and working on issues with each other, with a secondary team in the same aisle, and with other teams on the same floor. The available collaborative tools we have (Skype, email, WebEx, etc) are just inadequate. And yet I expect to be forced to a work at home model in the next year due to real estate and relocation projects that will force the choice.
It's all fun and games until someone loses their job.
Lastly, free public transport isn't 'free'. Due diligence in determining the cost benefit should be mandatory, transparent, and swift, but good luck with that. Once government gets it in their collective head that this should be done, it's pretty much up to the people to either sit still and accept, or reject. If their government is responsive at all...
when do we get an RFC for a spooky action network protocol? Way overdue.
Everybody you know is a problem. Neither of my Windows 10 machines have had update troubles for a year or more. One has never blue screened in over two years. The other, after installing an unusual compiler for an ARM project, it hated me for a day. My Surface Pro 3 fingerprint bug turned out to be a bad type cover.
Fix the people you know, buddy. You need better clients.
Interesting. My allergic rhinitis is rooted in receptors that, in my case, accept Eastern White Pine and English Plantain pollen, causing a histamine response. There is no resistive or immunotherapy to diminish that. The best solution is to circumvent the response mechanism, using steroids for example to suppress the response. Exposing me to the allergens does not train my immune system to do anything differently. Peanut allergies are a different mechanism, apparently, and combination therapies seem to be effective.
No, you weren't really going there, but free allergies are actually treatable by exposure. That is similar to a technique used in homeopathy, which is fairly well discredited now.
You don't build up an immunity to what we call an allergy. Exposure tends to make it worse. You don't really want those antibodies to become active and generate the histamine response usually associated with allergies. Instead you suppress the inflammatory response if you can.
Not the same problem as the immune response associated with influenza, which we are willing to tolerate, even develop through immunization, to prevent off minimize an infection. Allergies aren't the same thing at all, as they are responses to otherwise innocuous substances, and the response is truly unwanted and unnecessary.
And the reason Walmart is welling it so cheap is they expect to derive revenue from the service...
Remember the i-Opener?
And preventing thefts improves delivery -- those sweet, sweet new whatever are hot commodities when they are fresh on the market, and getting insurance payouts aren't the same thing as actually selling them to consumers.
Despite the bias against Verizon, this makes sense, is not obviously going to inconvenience users, and is a reasonably predictable response. If you want to blame someone for the thefts, try the shippers...
That's exactly what TFA and summary stated. That the thefts were occurring during shipment is your clue.
Nothing hidden here, I think.
Make the notch dimensions a declared variable. Leave the value to the manufacturer.
This is hard, right?
As if you're confused about where to load paper.
Hint - not in the output tray, nimrod.
Just like car tires, whatever the endurance, someone will try to run them longer. It soon becomes extra extra strong. there is no limit to the desire for longevity of parts, and in most printers (not those in TFA which are worth getting preventative maintenance to avoid $$$$$ downtime) they are run till they break - then the complaints begin.
"exposed to handling by clueless users"
That's how they are designed, baby.