The streetview link you posted raises an interesting question: Was she walking in the road, or did the driver jump the curb? With the curb I would feel safe enough walking along the side of the road, against traffic, assuming there were no Parisian drivers about.
I have some experience with alternative health measures and do not believe that ginkgo does much good for memory, either. However, this story does not prove it.
Was this study funded, directly or indirectly, by some organization that has a stake in a poor outcome? Were the study participants provided the supplement (I would assume so since they took "two 120-milligram capsules of ginkgo a day". Most ginkgo biloba products are a 50:1 extract of guaranteed potency, although I suppose you could find capsules of the plain herb at Walmart or the drug store, but why did they conduct a study effectively using 50 times less of the active ingredients than is typically recommended?
Looks to be the same as other "studies" conducted that use tiny amounts of the subject ingredient, such as studies on vitamin C which use 30mg per day and declare that it has no effect on X, and allows doctors to state authoritatively that vitamin C does no good for X.
I believe new fangled TVs nowadays have a special feature that keep the decibals between any certain range you prefer, or some system similar to that to keep the loud bangs down while keeping the quiet dialogue up.
I had a TV like that in years past and loved it. I even liked watching movies and being able to hear the dialogue and dimming the sound of the crashes. Listening through the tv speakers I obviously did not care about sound fidelity anyway. Then I got an HD tv and use only a receiver for sound (since the tv sound is horrible) and this pronounces the loud commercials so much that I either dvr a 20 minute delay to miss the commercials or sit there with a remote on hand to mute them when watching live tv.
However, there are now even cheap receivers that will do the same modulation - google audyssey for one example - so I found what I am getting for christmas.
I would not care who actually did it since if an official spokeperson of an organization claimed responsibility I would know to whom to send the bill (or the lawsuit) to replace it.
My wife and I were asked to write a (handwritten) character reference for someone a couple years ago. My father had provided a letter for reference that he had written, beautifully of course, in cursive. Since my wife also has excellent cursive handwriting I sat down taking my time to write as neatly as possible, and took an hour to write a page of script. I wrote many letters in my youth but had a really hard time getting the flow after 30 plus years - since engineering school over 25 years ago I have written all caps when handwriting so my writing is legible, and I had an amazingly hard time doing joined-up writing again. And had to google how to write a capital Q. And when I was done my wife asked what took my so long. When I showed her my letter she _laughed_. She had printed hers.
Just being curious, what is _your_ fair share? I personally think we could run a constitutional sized government on a 3% sales tax. But I would be interested in finding what percentage you think is fair.
You are not bound to get an internet/email plan just because you have a smartphone, are you? I have a WM phone and appreciate the apps like GPS, book and pdf readers, video players, and wifi capability (at home and free wifi spots,) and just pay for phone (and text) service.
The Soviets probably got around 90% of their technology through corporate theft and spying. It's not like they could have come up with something innovative. There at the end there was so much brain drain, or so little incentive, that some government agency was caught with stolen plans for a US washing machine.
I agree. Although I really liked T-mobile customer service and the price was right, every time I got more than a few miles away from a city or highway I had no service. Now I have a WM6(.1) phone with AT&T - service everywhere I go, 3g (I heard even them crappy iPhones have it now;)), hundreds if not thousands of apps (most of them free), and your choice of ROM. It's a/.er's dream.
Don't worry, it confuses us, too. In the early days of the US, liberal did indeed mean someone who was concerned with liberties. Now we call that a "classic liberal" or using the less arcane term, libertarian.
I find it odd that the IPCC fails to mention that increased underwater volcanic activity under the arctic has been occurring since at least 1999, including a pyroclastic eruption and one that supposedly was as large as Pompei. Would this perhaps lead to increased water temps that could melt some ice, or would it be better to go ahead and destroy (or at least tax to ruin) western civilization as a precautionary measure?
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/06/080625140649.htmhttp://sweetness-light.com/archive/could-volcanoes-be-melting-the-arctic-ice
Non-alternative "conventional" medical treatment is any remedy that is so potentially toxic or otherwise dangerous that it must be prescribed or performed by an MD. To me, it sounds like superstition or just plain ignorance when someone automatically assumes that the most dangerous course of treatment is the best.
> actually, the tfa says nothing like that. It says liberals tolerate ambiguity better
I agree, but for the last thirty years my favorite quote has been "Contradictions do not exist. Whenever you think you are facing a contradiction, check your premises. You will find that one of them is wrong."
"I have so much more time to be productive since I quit the tube." What is this tube of which you speak? Some ancient media player?
but I did not feel like getting a headache like I always do reading webpages with white text on a black background.
The streetview link you posted raises an interesting question: Was she walking in the road, or did the driver jump the curb? With the curb I would feel safe enough walking along the side of the road, against traffic, assuming there were no Parisian drivers about.
I've long said that we'll lose our privacy to business before we lose it to a totalitarian state..
You mean it's been big business installing the cameras on the intersections and streets?
I have some experience with alternative health measures and do not believe that ginkgo does much good for memory, either. However, this story does not prove it. Was this study funded, directly or indirectly, by some organization that has a stake in a poor outcome? Were the study participants provided the supplement (I would assume so since they took "two 120-milligram capsules of ginkgo a day". Most ginkgo biloba products are a 50:1 extract of guaranteed potency, although I suppose you could find capsules of the plain herb at Walmart or the drug store, but why did they conduct a study effectively using 50 times less of the active ingredients than is typically recommended? Looks to be the same as other "studies" conducted that use tiny amounts of the subject ingredient, such as studies on vitamin C which use 30mg per day and declare that it has no effect on X, and allows doctors to state authoritatively that vitamin C does no good for X.
I believe new fangled TVs nowadays have a special feature that keep the decibals between any certain range you prefer, or some system similar to that to keep the loud bangs down while keeping the quiet dialogue up.
I had a TV like that in years past and loved it. I even liked watching movies and being able to hear the dialogue and dimming the sound of the crashes. Listening through the tv speakers I obviously did not care about sound fidelity anyway. Then I got an HD tv and use only a receiver for sound (since the tv sound is horrible) and this pronounces the loud commercials so much that I either dvr a 20 minute delay to miss the commercials or sit there with a remote on hand to mute them when watching live tv. However, there are now even cheap receivers that will do the same modulation - google audyssey for one example - so I found what I am getting for christmas.
I would not care who actually did it since if an official spokeperson of an organization claimed responsibility I would know to whom to send the bill (or the lawsuit) to replace it.
My wife and I were asked to write a (handwritten) character reference for someone a couple years ago. My father had provided a letter for reference that he had written, beautifully of course, in cursive. Since my wife also has excellent cursive handwriting I sat down taking my time to write as neatly as possible, and took an hour to write a page of script. I wrote many letters in my youth but had a really hard time getting the flow after 30 plus years - since engineering school over 25 years ago I have written all caps when handwriting so my writing is legible, and I had an amazingly hard time doing joined-up writing again. And had to google how to write a capital Q. And when I was done my wife asked what took my so long. When I showed her my letter she _laughed_. She had printed hers.
Enter "symantec" in google with google suggestion feature on and the first two results are "symantec antivirus" and "symantec removal tool"
"I don't want to pay my fair share"
Just being curious, what is _your_ fair share? I personally think we could run a constitutional sized government on a 3% sales tax. But I would be interested in finding what percentage you think is fair.
You are not bound to get an internet/email plan just because you have a smartphone, are you? I have a WM phone and appreciate the apps like GPS, book and pdf readers, video players, and wifi capability (at home and free wifi spots,) and just pay for phone (and text) service.
They probably hired the Russians to take out the iridium for the insurance money.
The Soviets probably got around 90% of their technology through corporate theft and spying. It's not like they could have come up with something innovative. There at the end there was so much brain drain, or so little incentive, that some government agency was caught with stolen plans for a US washing machine.
Please don't forget those of us who promote nuclear power in an unsafe and irresponsible way.
I agree. Although I really liked T-mobile customer service and the price was right, every time I got more than a few miles away from a city or highway I had no service. Now I have a WM6(.1) phone with AT&T - service everywhere I go, 3g (I heard even them crappy iPhones have it now ;)), hundreds if not thousands of apps (most of them free), and your choice of ROM. It's a /.er's dream.
Soon, it is only going to be safe and easy to take whatever you can carry in your pockets or shove up your ass.
So you're saying that the watch my dad wore in Vietnam is the only thing safe when I'm traveling?
Don't worry, it confuses us, too. In the early days of the US, liberal did indeed mean someone who was concerned with liberties. Now we call that a "classic liberal" or using the less arcane term, libertarian.
The liberal shoots them with what, more questions?
He was selling them on ebay for $6 each but charging $20 for shipping.
I find it odd that the IPCC fails to mention that increased underwater volcanic activity under the arctic has been occurring since at least 1999, including a pyroclastic eruption and one that supposedly was as large as Pompei. Would this perhaps lead to increased water temps that could melt some ice, or would it be better to go ahead and destroy (or at least tax to ruin) western civilization as a precautionary measure? http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/06/080625140649.htm http://sweetness-light.com/archive/could-volcanoes-be-melting-the-arctic-ice
Non-alternative "conventional" medical treatment is any remedy that is so potentially toxic or otherwise dangerous that it must be prescribed or performed by an MD. To me, it sounds like superstition or just plain ignorance when someone automatically assumes that the most dangerous course of treatment is the best.
I agree, but for the last thirty years my favorite quote has been "Contradictions do not exist. Whenever you think you are facing a contradiction, check your premises. You will find that one of them is wrong."