Except, typical M&A deals typically provide indemnity protection to allow the acquiring entity to protect their investment within said company. I am sure that Microsoft would be more than happy to throw money into the defense of the former Novell executives to ensure that their patent portfolio is secured.
At which point, all will be right with the world as those wonderful, upstanding members of society that put themselves through law school to protect and serve the under trodden multinational corporations will finally be able to provide for their families.
I take it that you did not read the question. It was regarding quantity to transfer immediately, not performing one-off copies.
With the drive that the poster already has, it will take 112h30m of continuous time in front of his computer to simply swap the discs. By comparison, the faster drive mentioned would result in a completion time of 37h30m.
You're telling me that our consumer driven, planned obsolescence culture has extended into space and that now those tree-huggers are trying to extend their reach too? What is this world coming to?
Here I was thinking that Windows RT was an OS that was similar with the x86 counterparts, would be limited to Metro (or whatever new name they have now) apps, and only those that developers choose to make an ARM version for. My mistake... you've proven that it really does stand out from the crowd in terms of tablets. Thank you for correcting us and showing us that Windows RT is in fact a fully-baked and mature product that can in no way be described as a toy.
Well, considering that they have already released coins of poorly dressed older men in dire need of a shave (hobos?) and rabbits, seems to make sense that a hobbit had to be coming sooner or later.
Well, studies have shown that a significant number of Americans can't even pick out their own country on a map, so why assume that they would understand that someone doing something stupid within the legal system could reside outside the US?
Citation: Huffigton Post poll finds that 37% of Americans unable to locate America on map.
"And by the way, it's not about making [a space shuttle], it's about taking [a space shuttle]. Destroying the status quo because the status is not quo. The world is a mess and I just... need to rule it." ~ Dr. Horrible
Do you have any idea how many millennia it would take to send these "above and below the galactic disk"?
Let alone the strength of a transmitter that would be necessary to facilitate data transmissions of the imagery collected from such a location?
Or the ability to operate when sufficiently removed from a star to facilitate energy collection?
Not to say that it wouldn't be a particularly cool idea, but wildly impractical with our current state of technology.
Doesn't this point more to a possibility that a black hole is a solid physical body which manifests it's own physical rotation rather than some of the former mysticism explanations that have persisted to date?
Basically a continual increase in material density from neutron star densities to the point where gravitational forces are capable of attracting photons and other larger classifications of matter, either resulting in the fusion of matter to ever increasing densities of conventional matter or recombination of subatomic components in such a fashion of maximum compression density.
Rather, those litigious monsters at Apple are hiring away guys that Google had previously terminated the employment of for one reason or another.
Which leaves us to wonder... Does Apple really think that hiring Google's left-overs that they weren't happy enough to keep on in the first place is going to improve their service?
Typically, contractors are exempt from such agreements as it would violate their ability to seek gainful employment upon completion of their agreement with the original company.
Non-Compete Agreements are intended to protect trade secrets from being shared with a third party while the content of them would be reasonably considered still valid.
If Apple were attempting to attract current, full-time employees than the Non-Compete argument still applies as long as it's content reasonably enables them to continue to seek gainful employment to which they are qualified.
From the article and it's referenced information, namely Secretary of State Scott Gessler's guidelines on the matter, ballots were to include limited identifying marks to ensure that the same ballot would not be counted twice when votes were tabulated, but that individuals would not have their ball it's unique identifier linked to their voter registration.
What is changing here is that rather than a human-readable number, a barcode-only solution will be used for verification purposes to increase the difficulty of an individual vote being traced to a person.
The fact that Gessler's also identified multiple illegal immigrants who had voted in the former Colorado election through voter registration searches is irrelevant to the situation at hand.
Amazing how Apple can risk upsetting 65% of the world's population when they've only sold products that could be effected by this change to *up to* 4.6% of said world population, with the likely number falling well below that due to repeat sales to the same individuals.
Let's do the math:
World Population: 7 Billion
Number of iOS Devices Sold: 400,000,000
iPhone 2G Units Sold: 6.1 Million
iPhone 3G Units Sold: 20.25 Million
iPod Touch 1st - 3rd Generations Units Sold: 32 Million
iPad 1St Generation Units Sold: 19.48 Million
Total iOS Units that will not get the "New Maps": 77.83 Million
Total Effected iOS Devices: 32,617,000
Does it suck that their offering is less mature than Google's, of course, however Google has also announced that they will be providing an updated version of their Maps app via Apple's App Store, so if you aren't happy with what the mighty Apple provides, than give it a couple weeks and let someone else fill the void.
It is just amazing to think that people really think that companies like Apple really have the power to impact the lives of 65% of the world population through changing a back-end web service on a small subset of their devices.
The intent here is to replace so much of the specialized cabling for lighting controls, audio, video, camera control systems, etc. with a single, multi-purpose system that can handle uncompressed data, thereby supporting existing models of data acquisition. Each level of re-compression and transcoding results in a loss of quality.
This is "useless" with regards to bulk manufacturing procedures as proposed today...
Step 1 is always to figure out whether something is even possible.
What this shows us is that we do have the ability to "dial up" matter characteristics on-demand. Sure, it is highly impractical today, but that is in no way to say that significant research won't now be undertaken to take what now is a cool proof-of-concept and create a practical, workable model to exploit the findings of what we have discovered.
Decades ago, it was also believed that photo lithography was highly impractical, however it now is the dominant method of designing integrated circuits.
Until someone actually creates this new mythical language that is proposed by Bret, than this is all conjecture that a hyper-efficient, overly intuitive programming language that can provide immediate feedback would be hyper-efficient, overly intuitive, and provide immediate feedback.
Basically, the video referenced by the article is no different than "wouldn't it be nice if we were no longer dependent on foreign oil... that would make so many things so much easier!"
Sure didn't happen to find it's way onto my LG Optimus 2X, or my HTC Thunderbolt...
Both of which require downloading Google Voice from the Android Marketplace and setting them up, let alone going into Settings to have it use "Google Voice" by default... Let alone the simple fact that it is *yet another number* that I need to give out to people.
If someone sends a text to my *phone* number, than it *does not* utilize Google Voice, and ends up on my phone bill.
My point is that Apple has at least gotten the vast majority of their user base to use iMessage... I do not believe that you could make the same claim with regards to Google Voice.
There is also the simple fact that Apple not only loaded it on a hundred million iPhone users through an OS Update, but they enabled said service automatically using your phone number as your "contact name", thereby immediately sidestepping the carriers, even on existing devices.
Someone needs to make a conscious decision to use Skype on their devices and to share their Skype contact information with you... The same can not be said about iMessage.
It's more that CERN claimed to find one result that was *too good to be true*, said result was found to be *too good to be true*, and now just days later are making the exact same *too good to be true* claim.
There is one of those children's stories about a kid, a wolf, and some towns folk that seems to apply.
Except, typical M&A deals typically provide indemnity protection to allow the acquiring entity to protect their investment within said company. I am sure that Microsoft would be more than happy to throw money into the defense of the former Novell executives to ensure that their patent portfolio is secured.
At which point, all will be right with the world as those wonderful, upstanding members of society that put themselves through law school to protect and serve the under trodden multinational corporations will finally be able to provide for their families.
"Things to do: Stop milk, pay papers, invade Czechoslovakia!"
2) just buy a boat like all other rich tech guys to sail away from the corruption
Considering all his time as an executive within the software industry, he is probably fearful of piracy.
I take it that you did not read the question. It was regarding quantity to transfer immediately, not performing one-off copies.
With the drive that the poster already has, it will take 112h30m of continuous time in front of his computer to simply swap the discs. By comparison, the faster drive mentioned would result in a completion time of 37h30m.
You're telling me that our consumer driven, planned obsolescence culture has extended into space and that now those tree-huggers are trying to extend their reach too? What is this world coming to?
Here I was thinking that Windows RT was an OS that was similar with the x86 counterparts, would be limited to Metro (or whatever new name they have now) apps, and only those that developers choose to make an ARM version for. My mistake... you've proven that it really does stand out from the crowd in terms of tablets. Thank you for correcting us and showing us that Windows RT is in fact a fully-baked and mature product that can in no way be described as a toy.
Well, considering that they have already released coins of poorly dressed older men in dire need of a shave (hobos?) and rabbits, seems to make sense that a hobbit had to be coming sooner or later.
Well, studies have shown that a significant number of Americans can't even pick out their own country on a map, so why assume that they would understand that someone doing something stupid within the legal system could reside outside the US?
Citation: Huffigton Post poll finds that 37% of Americans unable to locate America on map.
"And by the way, it's not about making [a space shuttle], it's about taking [a space shuttle]. Destroying the status quo because the status is not quo. The world is a mess and I just... need to rule it." ~ Dr. Horrible
Do you have any idea how many millennia it would take to send these "above and below the galactic disk"?
Let alone the strength of a transmitter that would be necessary to facilitate data transmissions of the imagery collected from such a location?
Or the ability to operate when sufficiently removed from a star to facilitate energy collection?
Not to say that it wouldn't be a particularly cool idea, but wildly impractical with our current state of technology.
Doesn't this point more to a possibility that a black hole is a solid physical body which manifests it's own physical rotation rather than some of the former mysticism explanations that have persisted to date?
Basically a continual increase in material density from neutron star densities to the point where gravitational forces are capable of attracting photons and other larger classifications of matter, either resulting in the fusion of matter to ever increasing densities of conventional matter or recombination of subatomic components in such a fashion of maximum compression density.
Apple Reportedly Luring Ex-Google Mappers With Jobs
Maybe they too have seen Weekend at Bernie's.
Rather, those litigious monsters at Apple are hiring away guys that Google had previously terminated the employment of for one reason or another.
Which leaves us to wonder... Does Apple really think that hiring Google's left-overs that they weren't happy enough to keep on in the first place is going to improve their service?
Typically, contractors are exempt from such agreements as it would violate their ability to seek gainful employment upon completion of their agreement with the original company.
Non-Compete Agreements are intended to protect trade secrets from being shared with a third party while the content of them would be reasonably considered still valid.
If Apple were attempting to attract current, full-time employees than the Non-Compete argument still applies as long as it's content reasonably enables them to continue to seek gainful employment to which they are qualified.
From the article and it's referenced information, namely Secretary of State Scott Gessler's guidelines on the matter, ballots were to include limited identifying marks to ensure that the same ballot would not be counted twice when votes were tabulated, but that individuals would not have their ball it's unique identifier linked to their voter registration.
What is changing here is that rather than a human-readable number, a barcode-only solution will be used for verification purposes to increase the difficulty of an individual vote being traced to a person.
The fact that Gessler's also identified multiple illegal immigrants who had voted in the former Colorado election through voter registration searches is irrelevant to the situation at hand.
Amazing how Apple can risk upsetting 65% of the world's population when they've only sold products that could be effected by this change to *up to* 4.6% of said world population, with the likely number falling well below that due to repeat sales to the same individuals.
Let's do the math:
World Population: 7 Billion
Number of iOS Devices Sold: 400,000,000
iPhone 2G Units Sold: 6.1 Million
iPhone 3G Units Sold: 20.25 Million
iPod Touch 1st - 3rd Generations Units Sold: 32 Million
iPad 1St Generation Units Sold: 19.48 Million
Total iOS Units that will not get the "New Maps": 77.83 Million
Total Effected iOS Devices: 32,617,000
Does it suck that their offering is less mature than Google's, of course, however Google has also announced that they will be providing an updated version of their Maps app via Apple's App Store, so if you aren't happy with what the mighty Apple provides, than give it a couple weeks and let someone else fill the void.
It is just amazing to think that people really think that companies like Apple really have the power to impact the lives of 65% of the world population through changing a back-end web service on a small subset of their devices.
The intent here is to replace so much of the specialized cabling for lighting controls, audio, video, camera control systems, etc. with a single, multi-purpose system that can handle uncompressed data, thereby supporting existing models of data acquisition. Each level of re-compression and transcoding results in a loss of quality.
The lander will begin it's descent at 08:23:00 PM Pacific tonight.
Team America: World Police
Who would have thought that with a little bit of time it would no longer be a satire?
This is "useless" with regards to bulk manufacturing procedures as proposed today...
Step 1 is always to figure out whether something is even possible.
What this shows us is that we do have the ability to "dial up" matter characteristics on-demand. Sure, it is highly impractical today, but that is in no way to say that significant research won't now be undertaken to take what now is a cool proof-of-concept and create a practical, workable model to exploit the findings of what we have discovered.
Decades ago, it was also believed that photo lithography was highly impractical, however it now is the dominant method of designing integrated circuits.
Until someone actually creates this new mythical language that is proposed by Bret, than this is all conjecture that a hyper-efficient, overly intuitive programming language that can provide immediate feedback would be hyper-efficient, overly intuitive, and provide immediate feedback.
Basically, the video referenced by the article is no different than "wouldn't it be nice if we were no longer dependent on foreign oil... that would make so many things so much easier!"
Sure didn't happen to find it's way onto my LG Optimus 2X, or my HTC Thunderbolt...
Both of which require downloading Google Voice from the Android Marketplace and setting them up, let alone going into Settings to have it use "Google Voice" by default... Let alone the simple fact that it is *yet another number* that I need to give out to people.
If someone sends a text to my *phone* number, than it *does not* utilize Google Voice, and ends up on my phone bill. My point is that Apple has at least gotten the vast majority of their user base to use iMessage... I do not believe that you could make the same claim with regards to Google Voice.
There is also the simple fact that Apple not only loaded it on a hundred million iPhone users through an OS Update, but they enabled said service automatically using your phone number as your "contact name", thereby immediately sidestepping the carriers, even on existing devices.
Someone needs to make a conscious decision to use Skype on their devices and to share their Skype contact information with you... The same can not be said about iMessage.
It's more that CERN claimed to find one result that was *too good to be true*, said result was found to be *too good to be true*, and now just days later are making the exact same *too good to be true* claim.
There is one of those children's stories about a kid, a wolf, and some towns folk that seems to apply.
According to the legal definition, a single general term is not copyrightable, however a non-generic term is.
Copyright Registration Number: TXu000111775 - EMAIL