Unfortunately, much of Federal law, at least in the US, is functionally exempt from the statute of limitations. For example, taxes. For most issues, the statute only kicks in once the Government is aware of the crime. If they are not aware a crime was committed, the clock doesn't start. So they sit on your hate-speech post for 12 years, then get around to looking at it. Then whatever statute of limitations timing starts - AFTER they are aware of it (just like taxes; cheat on your taxes, they find the issue 9 years later, then the statute of limitations begins).
Problem is step 3... Governments will NOT give you a waiver on an "illegal" action (like hate speech) just because they did not answer in time. So put those posts back up at your own risk, and hope they decide to NOT toss you in prison...
Android isn't an electronic device, it's an operating system that electronic devices use. When you are looking at which PC manufacturers sold the most computers, you don't lump all the ones that run Windows into one category and say Windows PCs win. Why would you do the same with Android?
Good point! So it was Apple with 223 million phones over multiple versions, and Samsung with 320 million phones over multiple versions.
If you don't have a clue, just shut up.
They don't sell shares that other people already have, there is no cashing out. They create new shares from thin air and sell those. Why do you feel the need to post your idiocy on every topic you clearly know nothing about?
Craigslist is about an equal complexity as Twitter, and it runs with 50 people. The biggest issue for both Twitter and Craigslist is database management. Front-end/UI/account management really isn't that big of a deal, not one that requires thousands of people. And for the record, I work right across the street from the Twitter building, but for a company that actually makes hundreds of millions of dollars in operating income, annually.
You can never run out of the company. You can just dilute the existing investors.
Only if the existing investors - who inevitably hold voting shares - allow you to do so. In that case, they're letting you dilute so they can sell off some of their stake to another sucker, so they can get cash out. But if the board (loaded with investors) and the voting base (significant ownership typically with early investors) say no - no dilution.
Ahh, so because each country counts rape differently, we cannot pull lists. Can we do the same for infant mortality, since each country counts them differently? How about being able to read and write? Murder?
Kids with your fancy hexadecimal counting system. In my day, we had only zero and one, because that's all a machine understood! And even then, we only had the ones when Mr. Westinghouse decided we could have a share of his electrons...
Right-click the Windows Start button. Select settings. Select personalization. Select lock screen. Everything is accessible from there. Seems logical to me - settings -> personalization -> lock screen.
Would you use a blockchain system when you needed to speed up transaction times? That's one of the claims of the article, and from everything I see, blockchain - BY DESIGN - gets slower and slower as more transactions are put into the chain.
So if TFS gets a basic fact wrong, how can we trust it's conclusion that IBM is going "all in"? Again, this reads more like a cheerleader article rather than anything remotely factual...
Yeah, California sucks for a lot of reasons, but riding year-round in Southern California is a nice benefit! Just got back from a 3 hour jaunt through the Santa Monica mountains, perfect day for it. Low 70s, partly sunny, beautiful vistas...
That's some hate! I guess you never venture to California, or anywhere overseas! You must have a damn-near aneurysm at every light, seeing all those scooters and motorcycles filter forward and split away...
Got a little over 1.3 million miles in the saddle, filtered and split on 6 Continents, never had a problem yet... Seems that about 95% of all riders in the world (being in Europe and Asia) have little to no problem with lane splitting and filtering - given that it's legal pretty much everywhere except 49 of the 50 States and Canada. But hey, let's all stay cooped up in cars, taking even more space, burning even more fuel, and damaging roads even further, rather than doing the responsible thing like getting a vehicle just big enough to serve you - and living in with it.
A 12 passenger van weighs about 5500-6000 pounds, so about 50% more than a typical car. Given that damage to the road goes as the fourth power, that typical 12 passenger van will do 5 times the damage to the road as a typical car. Now, sure - it can carry three times the people (12 versus 4), but that's still the losing end of the stick.
A motorcycle, weighing in around 400 pounds, does about 0.002% damage to the road as compared to the van. Factoring in for the ratio of 12:1 in passengers, you'll do about 0.024% as much damage to a road, per passenger mile, with a motorcycle as compared to a van.
Filtering and splitting is legal all throughout Europe, too - and quite handy. In fact, it's really just banned in the 49 other US States (being legal in California) and Canada. Pretty much everywhere else on the face of the Earth, filtering and lane splitting are the norm.
Likewise - lifelong (well, since I was 10) rider here! I put about 25K miles a year on my bikes... And I love the freedom and ability to lane split here in California. No traffic jams for me, really... I wish the rest of the US would get with the rest of the world and California and allow lane splitting. Maybe more people will realize that motorcycles are a viable means of transport (like most of the rest of the world understands) and we'd see a lot less traffic on the roads.
Really? From the article we read "The market for blockchain-related products and services [were] $242 million last year". IBM's revenues last year were around $80 BILLION. The entire block-chain market for products and services was about 0.3% of all of IBM's revenues. That's a VERY interesting definition of "all in" and clearly just an attempt to justify the unstable blockchain market however it can. In this case, by finding a way to hitch itself to a 100+ year old name...
Which is why more people should simply ride motorcycles. High density, independence, high fuel efficiency, and much, MUCH less damage to the roads as compared to buses/mass transit.
Unfortunately, much of Federal law, at least in the US, is functionally exempt from the statute of limitations. For example, taxes. For most issues, the statute only kicks in once the Government is aware of the crime. If they are not aware a crime was committed, the clock doesn't start. So they sit on your hate-speech post for 12 years, then get around to looking at it. Then whatever statute of limitations timing starts - AFTER they are aware of it (just like taxes; cheat on your taxes, they find the issue 9 years later, then the statute of limitations begins).
Problem is step 3... Governments will NOT give you a waiver on an "illegal" action (like hate speech) just because they did not answer in time. So put those posts back up at your own risk, and hope they decide to NOT toss you in prison...
Android isn't an electronic device, it's an operating system that electronic devices use. When you are looking at which PC manufacturers sold the most computers, you don't lump all the ones that run Windows into one category and say Windows PCs win. Why would you do the same with Android?
Good point! So it was Apple with 223 million phones over multiple versions, and Samsung with 320 million phones over multiple versions.
Operating income is basically EBITDA, and yes - companies make that.
If you don't have a clue, just shut up. They don't sell shares that other people already have, there is no cashing out. They create new shares from thin air and sell those. Why do you feel the need to post your idiocy on every topic you clearly know nothing about?
Two big Uber investors SELL SHARES to Softbank. Yes, if you don't have a clue, you should just shut up.
Craigslist is about an equal complexity as Twitter, and it runs with 50 people. The biggest issue for both Twitter and Craigslist is database management. Front-end/UI/account management really isn't that big of a deal, not one that requires thousands of people. And for the record, I work right across the street from the Twitter building, but for a company that actually makes hundreds of millions of dollars in operating income, annually.
You can never run out of the company. You can just dilute the existing investors.
Only if the existing investors - who inevitably hold voting shares - allow you to do so. In that case, they're letting you dilute so they can sell off some of their stake to another sucker, so they can get cash out. But if the board (loaded with investors) and the voting base (significant ownership typically with early investors) say no - no dilution.
Ahh, so because each country counts rape differently, we cannot pull lists. Can we do the same for infant mortality, since each country counts them differently? How about being able to read and write? Murder?
Only a matter of time before they folded. After all, open containers are prohibited in most States...
Sweden seems to lead the list for any non-African country. Same results in a 2016 article. Seems that Sweden is, in fact, the rape capital of Europe.
Kids with your fancy hexadecimal counting system. In my day, we had only zero and one, because that's all a machine understood! And even then, we only had the ones when Mr. Westinghouse decided we could have a share of his electrons...
Right-click the Windows Start button. Select settings. Select personalization. Select lock screen. Everything is accessible from there. Seems logical to me - settings -> personalization -> lock screen.
Would you use a blockchain system when you needed to speed up transaction times? That's one of the claims of the article, and from everything I see, blockchain - BY DESIGN - gets slower and slower as more transactions are put into the chain.
So if TFS gets a basic fact wrong, how can we trust it's conclusion that IBM is going "all in"? Again, this reads more like a cheerleader article rather than anything remotely factual...
Yeah, California sucks for a lot of reasons, but riding year-round in Southern California is a nice benefit! Just got back from a 3 hour jaunt through the Santa Monica mountains, perfect day for it. Low 70s, partly sunny, beautiful vistas...
That's some hate! I guess you never venture to California, or anywhere overseas! You must have a damn-near aneurysm at every light, seeing all those scooters and motorcycles filter forward and split away...
Got a little over 1.3 million miles in the saddle, filtered and split on 6 Continents, never had a problem yet... Seems that about 95% of all riders in the world (being in Europe and Asia) have little to no problem with lane splitting and filtering - given that it's legal pretty much everywhere except 49 of the 50 States and Canada. But hey, let's all stay cooped up in cars, taking even more space, burning even more fuel, and damaging roads even further, rather than doing the responsible thing like getting a vehicle just big enough to serve you - and living in with it.
A 12 passenger van weighs about 5500-6000 pounds, so about 50% more than a typical car. Given that damage to the road goes as the fourth power, that typical 12 passenger van will do 5 times the damage to the road as a typical car. Now, sure - it can carry three times the people (12 versus 4), but that's still the losing end of the stick.
A motorcycle, weighing in around 400 pounds, does about 0.002% damage to the road as compared to the van. Factoring in for the ratio of 12:1 in passengers, you'll do about 0.024% as much damage to a road, per passenger mile, with a motorcycle as compared to a van.
Filtering and splitting is legal all throughout Europe, too - and quite handy. In fact, it's really just banned in the 49 other US States (being legal in California) and Canada. Pretty much everywhere else on the face of the Earth, filtering and lane splitting are the norm.
I think I see a solution here... Strap seahorses to the hooves of the regular horse, and it's an Amphibian Assault Horse!
Likewise - lifelong (well, since I was 10) rider here! I put about 25K miles a year on my bikes... And I love the freedom and ability to lane split here in California. No traffic jams for me, really... I wish the rest of the US would get with the rest of the world and California and allow lane splitting. Maybe more people will realize that motorcycles are a viable means of transport (like most of the rest of the world understands) and we'd see a lot less traffic on the roads.
IBM is going all in
Really? From the article we read "The market for blockchain-related products and services [were] $242 million last year". IBM's revenues last year were around $80 BILLION. The entire block-chain market for products and services was about 0.3% of all of IBM's revenues. That's a VERY interesting definition of "all in" and clearly just an attempt to justify the unstable blockchain market however it can. In this case, by finding a way to hitch itself to a 100+ year old name...
So - fewer people on the road, which also reduces congestion. Win-win!
So then - what source would AC recommend that is reliable and not a shill?
Which is why more people should simply ride motorcycles. High density, independence, high fuel efficiency, and much, MUCH less damage to the roads as compared to buses/mass transit.