So, every person who buys a ticket to ride the train should snap a few random pictures with their cell phone. Then rinse and repeat each day. Eventually, the cops would become conditioned to this and view it as normal. Much the way their gradual assault on our rights and freedoms is becoming normal to us.
I have an iPhone 4 and do NOT experience any signal drop when holding it. I've held it in my hand covering every single joint between the three antennas and no change. I am unable to duplicate the issue.
Have you asked to have the fees covered?
When my company began asking me to handle areas of the business that I wasn't prepared for I requested a graduate degree so I could gain the skill set. They agreed to pay for tuition. I would pay for books and attend class in the evening. I could study whenever so long as I got my duties done. I would not sever employment or get fired for negligence for 2 years after receiving a reimbursement check or I would pay back 100% from 0 - 1 years or 50% from 1 - 2 years. Also, reimbursement was based on performance; 100% for an A, 80% for a B, and 50% for a C.
My company was concerned I would take my new skill set and shop around for new employment so the agreement give them some protection and a chance to recoup their investment.
Or.
1. Buy company outright.
2. Complete development of technology.
3. Lock technology away in archive.
4. Pump and sell more oil.
There is no benefit for the oil companies to develop and market an alternative technology until all the oil is gone. If an alternative technology becomes commercially viable the remaining oil reserves become nearly worthless. They must protect this value by blocking alternatives technologies so they can post record profits.
Self fusing rubber compounds are nothing new. Arlon's Silicone Technologies Division http://www.arlon-std.com/ has been extruding self fusing (healing if you prefer) tapes http://www.arlon-std.com/Products/tape.htm made from silicone rubber for a long time. Other companies do as well. The tapes are primarily used for electrical insulation applications. They are fully crosslinked but when brought into contact they fuse (or heal) into a homogeneous mass. EPDM varieties are available as well.
These researches have taken a different approach. Perhaps good, perhaps not. By removing the chemical crosslinks and opting for only hydrogen bonding the material is going to be inferior in many ways; tensile strength, elongation, durometer, abrasion resistance, creep resistance, etc.
Yes, TFA refers to 25 and 100 nm structures as nano and the 850 nm structure as micro.
"...nanofibers approximately 25 nanometers in diameter..."
"...nanofibers approximately 100 nanometers in diameter..."
"...microfiber was approximately 850 nanometers in diameter..."
I was following these guys [http://www.energyinnovations.com/] for awhile and their goal was 1 $/watt installed cost. They are going with the concentrator approach which I'm a fan of since it reduces the need for the most expensive part of the equation, the PV's. Hit an array with 20, 40, 80, 100 times the sun and your array can be fairly small and consequently cheap.
The joke would only be about China if Japan had already done its part.
America innovates
Germany engineers
Japan miniaturizes and improves efficiency
China copies for lower cost (which includes the use of lead paint because its cheap).
It makes sense to me that if a population grows rapidly so will the diversity of its gene pool. Technological advances in the form of agriculture and medicine obviously contribute to the population growth by allowing more people to survive for longer periods of time. I'm forced to wonder if this is for better or worse? Evolution has always progressed by survival of the fittest but we've enabled survival of all through technological advances. Is this good, bad, or indifferent for the human race?
Dichloroacetate, methyl ester: Sigma-Aldrich 35840 Emergency Overview: Corrosive, causes burns, irritating to the eyes and respiratory system. Lachrymator. (Lachrymator, n, a gas that makes the eyes fill with tears but does not damage them.)
Dichloroacetate, potassium salt: Sigma-Aldrich 348082 Emergency Overview: Toxic by inhalation, in contact with skin and if swallowed. Irritating to the skin, eyes and respiratory tract.
Dichloroacetate, sodium salt: Sigma-Aldrich 347795 Emergency Overview: Irritant. Irritating to the skin, eyes and respiratory tract.
Carcinogen, Tumorigenic: causes liver tumors.
Personally, I say if you make it open to one....you must make it open to all.
I don't know much about copyright law but it seems to me that the books are already available to anyone if they travel to the library. Why shouldn't the same availability be made digitally. Google/MS/Yahoo are providing a service by scanning them into a database and storing them on their servers. I'd be happy to pay a nominal fee for the service to obtain the book digitally rather than pay a nominal fee to operate my vehicle and travel to the library.
Do public and University libraries pay a fee for each book they offer? If so, Google/MS/Yahoo should pay the same fee and be entitled to operate a digital library.
So, every person who buys a ticket to ride the train should snap a few random pictures with their cell phone. Then rinse and repeat each day. Eventually, the cops would become conditioned to this and view it as normal. Much the way their gradual assault on our rights and freedoms is becoming normal to us.
I have an iPhone 4 and do NOT experience any signal drop when holding it. I've held it in my hand covering every single joint between the three antennas and no change. I am unable to duplicate the issue.
Have you asked to have the fees covered? When my company began asking me to handle areas of the business that I wasn't prepared for I requested a graduate degree so I could gain the skill set. They agreed to pay for tuition. I would pay for books and attend class in the evening. I could study whenever so long as I got my duties done. I would not sever employment or get fired for negligence for 2 years after receiving a reimbursement check or I would pay back 100% from 0 - 1 years or 50% from 1 - 2 years. Also, reimbursement was based on performance; 100% for an A, 80% for a B, and 50% for a C. My company was concerned I would take my new skill set and shop around for new employment so the agreement give them some protection and a chance to recoup their investment.
Couldn't you just use a silicone fluid like Dow Corning 200 Fluid? It's available in a wide range of viscosities to suit your pumping, flow, and evaporation requirements. We use it as a medium for Dk and Df testing on microwave lamiantes. http://www.dowcorning.com/applications/search/products/?Ntt=200&N=0&Ntx=mode+matchany&WT.svl=3&Nty=1&Ntk=ProductFinder_en
Or. 1. Buy company outright. 2. Complete development of technology. 3. Lock technology away in archive. 4. Pump and sell more oil. There is no benefit for the oil companies to develop and market an alternative technology until all the oil is gone. If an alternative technology becomes commercially viable the remaining oil reserves become nearly worthless. They must protect this value by blocking alternatives technologies so they can post record profits.
Self fusing rubber compounds are nothing new. Arlon's Silicone Technologies Division http://www.arlon-std.com/ has been extruding self fusing (healing if you prefer) tapes http://www.arlon-std.com/Products/tape.htm made from silicone rubber for a long time. Other companies do as well. The tapes are primarily used for electrical insulation applications. They are fully crosslinked but when brought into contact they fuse (or heal) into a homogeneous mass. EPDM varieties are available as well. These researches have taken a different approach. Perhaps good, perhaps not. By removing the chemical crosslinks and opting for only hydrogen bonding the material is going to be inferior in many ways; tensile strength, elongation, durometer, abrasion resistance, creep resistance, etc.
Yes, TFA refers to 25 and 100 nm structures as nano and the 850 nm structure as micro. "...nanofibers approximately 25 nanometers in diameter..." "...nanofibers approximately 100 nanometers in diameter..." "...microfiber was approximately 850 nanometers in diameter..."
Nope, it is done in the US to encourage rain to fall on the best areas. Like fields rather than cities. Texas is doing it and so are other states I'm sure. http://www.license.state.tx.us/weather/weatherfaq.htm
I was following these guys [http://www.energyinnovations.com/] for awhile and their goal was 1 $/watt installed cost. They are going with the concentrator approach which I'm a fan of since it reduces the need for the most expensive part of the equation, the PV's. Hit an array with 20, 40, 80, 100 times the sun and your array can be fairly small and consequently cheap.
The joke would only be about China if Japan had already done its part. America innovates Germany engineers Japan miniaturizes and improves efficiency China copies for lower cost (which includes the use of lead paint because its cheap).
It makes sense to me that if a population grows rapidly so will the diversity of its gene pool. Technological advances in the form of agriculture and medicine obviously contribute to the population growth by allowing more people to survive for longer periods of time. I'm forced to wonder if this is for better or worse? Evolution has always progressed by survival of the fittest but we've enabled survival of all through technological advances. Is this good, bad, or indifferent for the human race?
Dichloroacetate, methyl ester: Sigma-Aldrich 35840 Emergency Overview: Corrosive, causes burns, irritating to the eyes and respiratory system. Lachrymator. (Lachrymator, n, a gas that makes the eyes fill with tears but does not damage them.)
Dichloroacetate, potassium salt: Sigma-Aldrich 348082 Emergency Overview: Toxic by inhalation, in contact with skin and if swallowed. Irritating to the skin, eyes and respiratory tract.
Dichloroacetate, sodium salt: Sigma-Aldrich 347795 Emergency Overview: Irritant. Irritating to the skin, eyes and respiratory tract. Carcinogen, Tumorigenic: causes liver tumors.