"Right now, they are only offering it to a few megachains, but it seems clear to me that it would be totally possible to comply with right to repair."
Up until a couple product releases from now, when "repair" becomes an obsolete concept. Seems like Apple would do its best to keep moving towards making its phones less openable in the interest of making them more waterproof.
If most of the coal-related emissions are coming from a couple countries, multiple countries should be able to gang up and apply sanctions against them until they fix the (now geographically localized) sources of the problems.
They could start with slot machines and modify those. Getting the information/percentages/security correct on those is of huge importance to manufacturers, regulators and casino operators considering it's directly tied to revenue and a high-value hacking target.
Music labels sue slow ISPs, which force people to pirate individual tracks and get together to exchange them in person, which decreases the labels' revenues from streaming services.
LOL! -- The first result lists Deepak Chopra as a researcher! I bet his fans would quote this research anyway. All your points are valid, but being on the fringe, being weird, not disclosing exactly how the journals are included are the kinds of things that ask more questions that hopefully lead down the path of the scientific method, rather than into the network of social media forwards and retweets.
Even if it's dicey research, it's hopefully research someone can reproduce, point to similar studies, or point out methodological flaws, hopefully educating others who are listening along for the ride as to the scientific method's purpose/function/error-handling. It's not so that scientists can push their ideas to make the big bucks, except, ironically, in Wakefield's case.
Pliable, not so much -- the problem with growing new neurons at that age is that they're kind of stringy, so the thinking you get out of them is old and crotchety and has kind of a gamey feel to it.
I'd read the Foundation Trilogy first, or at least the first book, before reading the robot novels. The robot novels are mysteries, but the Foundation Series is a must-read about the cyclic rise and fall of civilization
Too bad these sites don't provide preferential recommendations/promotions to accounts and posts that contain links to PubMed articles. If they're going to use these algorithms, they could certainly promote accounts that link to the original publication even if those accounts promote a conspiracy theory, that the research was real and is being suppressed, etc.
That would at least get actual scientific research reports out front. If you can find anti-vax peer-reviewed research on PubMed, you go right ahead and link/share it. If you can't find it there because it's "being suppressed", find (and let the sites promote) any other sites that publish experimental research in any kind of refereed journal. It would hopefully get this information more in the open and at least cursorily examined for reputability and accuracy by people on the fence.
It's about freedom though... so maybe a warden would be more appropriate? You get to wear handcuffs while they install the appropriate drivers on your PC?
If they could prevent local cable companies from interfering with cities/towns setting up their own municipal Wi-Fi or networking, that could bootstrap the whole process. Looking at it as a whole-country fiber everywhere project sounds really expensive, with a lot of setup overhead. Plus, don't a lot of people in poorer areas (not sitting at a desk all day) access the internet primarily from their phones anyway?
Nope -- if Congress gets ahold of this and points to the ] 'optional airplane safety features in software' smoking gun, how long do you think it will be before they start adding regulations requiring software audits in the future? It will only affect the responsible people who haven't yet retired from the software industry, but could start affecting everyone in the field from that point on.
By 2040, electric vehicles could displace much as 6.4 million barrels a day of demand, while fuel efficiency improvements will erase another 7.5 million barrels a day, according to BloombergNEF's May 2018 long-term EV outlook.
So what influence will this have at that point and into the future on the value of the US dollar, or that portion of the USD's value as the exchange currency for oil?
Ok, I'd like a couple examples of these kinds of fights. The latter seems kind of counterproductive, unless you have a shortage of sewage. Plus, wouldn't you fight fire by clearing out flammable objects and planting fire-resistant foliage?
"Right now, they are only offering it to a few megachains, but it seems clear to me that it would be totally possible to comply with right to repair."
Up until a couple product releases from now, when "repair" becomes an obsolete concept. Seems like Apple would do its best to keep moving towards making its phones less openable in the interest of making them more waterproof.
If most of the coal-related emissions are coming from a couple countries, multiple countries should be able to gang up and apply sanctions against them until they fix the (now geographically localized) sources of the problems.
They could start with slot machines and modify those. Getting the information/percentages/security correct on those is of huge importance to manufacturers, regulators and casino operators considering it's directly tied to revenue and a high-value hacking target.
My goal is to spend less time in my email client, not more.
Seems like their goal with this is to have you spend less time (per-message) clicking around the browser altogether?
Music labels sue slow ISPs, which force people to pirate individual tracks and get together to exchange them in person, which decreases the labels' revenues from streaming services.
Based on all the ads I've seen, I bet Grammarly would have caught that expression and suggested something else.
Could you imagine digging out a basement with only hand shovels?
Tell Bender it's a grave and you could break records.
LOL! -- The first result lists Deepak Chopra as a researcher! I bet his fans would quote this research anyway. All your points are valid, but being on the fringe, being weird, not disclosing exactly how the journals are included are the kinds of things that ask more questions that hopefully lead down the path of the scientific method, rather than into the network of social media forwards and retweets.
Even if it's dicey research, it's hopefully research someone can reproduce, point to similar studies, or point out methodological flaws, hopefully educating others who are listening along for the ride as to the scientific method's purpose/function/error-handling. It's not so that scientists can push their ideas to make the big bucks, except, ironically, in Wakefield's case.
Pliable, not so much -- the problem with growing new neurons at that age is that they're kind of stringy, so the thinking you get out of them is old and crotchety and has kind of a gamey feel to it.
Mmm, sounds good. I'll have that with relish, and can I get some of that extra-melange Dijon mustard on as well?
It takes four to five years to train a meritorious dog such as Huahuangma, and costs hundreds of thousands of yuan,
But if you start by cloning a meritorious dog to get good initial stock, you're seeding your meritocracy from the get-go. It only makes sense, right?
I'd read the Foundation Trilogy first, or at least the first book, before reading the robot novels. The robot novels are mysteries, but the Foundation Series is a must-read about the cyclic rise and fall of civilization
We can't define it, but we could start by crowdsourcing it.
Too bad these sites don't provide preferential recommendations/promotions to accounts and posts that contain links to PubMed articles. If they're going to use these algorithms, they could certainly promote accounts that link to the original publication even if those accounts promote a conspiracy theory, that the research was real and is being suppressed, etc.
That would at least get actual scientific research reports out front. If you can find anti-vax peer-reviewed research on PubMed, you go right ahead and link/share it. If you can't find it there because it's "being suppressed", find (and let the sites promote) any other sites that publish experimental research in any kind of refereed journal. It would hopefully get this information more in the open and at least cursorily examined for reputability and accuracy by people on the fence.
Sure ... but do you have examples of people you consider to be like him? Just trying to get a more specific idea of the people you're talking about.
It's about freedom though ... so maybe a warden would be more appropriate? You get to wear handcuffs while they install the appropriate drivers on your PC?
If they could prevent local cable companies from interfering with cities/towns setting up their own municipal Wi-Fi or networking, that could bootstrap the whole process. Looking at it as a whole-country fiber everywhere project sounds really expensive, with a lot of setup overhead. Plus, don't a lot of people in poorer areas (not sitting at a desk all day) access the internet primarily from their phones anyway?
Nope -- if Congress gets ahold of this and points to the ] 'optional airplane safety features in software' smoking gun, how long do you think it will be before they start adding regulations requiring software audits in the future? It will only affect the responsible people who haven't yet retired from the software industry, but could start affecting everyone in the field from that point on.
Funny you used them as an example -- all the NCTA needs to do is lose any associations with 'Comcast' and their reputation would improve immediately.
Still, you gotta admit that its logic is undeniable. Cue also Wargames, Skynet, ...
By 2040, electric vehicles could displace much as 6.4 million barrels a day of demand, while fuel efficiency improvements will erase another 7.5 million barrels a day, according to BloombergNEF's May 2018 long-term EV outlook.
So what influence will this have at that point and into the future on the value of the US dollar, or that portion of the USD's value as the exchange currency for oil?
Wouldn't that depend on whether it was freshwater or saltwater quid? That would make a big difference.
Google, Microsoft Work Together
I'm surprised enough that I almost spit tea all over my monitor.
Fight fire with fire; sewage with sewage.
Ok, I'd like a couple examples of these kinds of fights. The latter seems kind of counterproductive, unless you have a shortage of sewage. Plus, wouldn't you fight fire by clearing out flammable objects and planting fire-resistant foliage?
At that point, would they even care if they couldn't visually tell the difference?