The subscription bundled with your computer has expired. You just need to pay up the subscription, download an update and all new virus will be detected and removed.
Register the car under an LLC, rent the car's time at $0.1/hour, and knock off the other, then hire a computerized lawyer to file for bankruptcy of the LLC. And then form another LLC
The stuff were handed out but not fulfilled. You need to eat 1 pound of wheat a day to feel full and not hungry, the government gave you 1 oz for next to free and nothing else. That was exactly what happened in China before opening. See the distinction?
Millions won't agree with you calling iPhone "crap". For the smuggling, the reason is that these products are made primarily from imported components; China makes the least valuable parts and does the assembling of the final products. The values added by Chinese companies are very low, like 10%. The imported components are not taxed because the products are for export. (This is also why China insists the trade deficit with the US is not that high since it is really the trade deficit between US and the rest of Asian countries. A point we have rarely heard in the US.) When the final products are sold within China, tariff have to be paid back for the imported values. So there are large incentive for smuggling.
In a world where artificial scarcity is created, one where you "must work in order to earn a living", there will be a huge unemployed and poor minority, or even majority.
That's because you haven't lived in a world where essential necessities and everything else were handed out (i.e. re-distributed). China used to be such a place; and they learned it wouldn't work. In such a society, very soon, nobody would want to work. Human beings are either too greedy to too lazy, unfortunately.
The timing is seen as intended to influence China's politics at this very sensitive time and push people to call for reform. If China had NOT blocked it, THAT would have been a story.
Probably true for the influence intend. Though Wen is considered a reformist and has pitched for political reform on many public occasions. Maybe his enemy tries to frame him? According to Hong Kong's Mingpao News, Wen's family is threatening legal actions against NYT. For sure, interesting dirty things in politics are happening that we regular mortals will never know the real truths for long time to come.
And the question nobody ask here: why shouldn't China be allowed to enforce environmental regulation? Don't believe they care or be forced to care about the environment? Think again.
Actually, the Chinese government does acknowledge their own past mistakes -- examples, they officially decried Great Leap Forward and Cultural Revolution. All victims of the Mao era were "rehabilitated". They even put the top responsible ones -- like the Gang of Four -- in prison. Those happened when a new generation of leaders need to get supports from the people.
While we are allowed to discuss this country's past mistakes more openly, have anything else real being done? Anyone responsible been put in jail? Are the American Indians really compensated in their lost life and land? all they got is a "sorry".
The broken patent system is just one symptom of a far larger disease, and that is the continued concentration of wealth and power in corporations.
Agree but the continued concentration of wealth and power in corporations is just one symptom of a far larger disease, and that is the human greeds.
Agree? But human greed is just one symptom of a far larger disease, and that is the built-in competitiveness of biological beings.
You would likely agree with that too, but the built-in competitiveness of biological beings is just a symptom of a far larger disease, and that is shortage of resources.
Now go fix those!
Now, back to the broken patent system, consider the flip side. If you are a little inventor, you are most likely wishing some giant corps violate your patent because then armies of commission-based lawyer will help you sue the rich guys for free and you will more likely become another rich guy from suing the large corps than productizing your patent with probably little real market value. I'm not saying that's good, but that's another side of the story.
At the mean time, internet users from Guangdong province, Fujian Province, and big city like Shanghai and Beijing are able to access YouTube by using HTTP secure method. Any type of video contents can be successfully search and comments can be read, but most of the videos are unable to play.
So try the HTTP secure method maybe. I can't verify myself here outside of China.
It does not have to be a conspiracy. First, everywhere in the world, a subsidiary company is simply a regular company owned partially or wholly by another; a subsidiary has all the legal rights as any company and the owning company is just a shareholder, probably a majority one. It is no different than you go out to buy 100 shares of AAPL and then sign a contract to sell iPad brand to somebody for $100; that wouldn't work since Apple Inc has not agreed to such a deal and you are not a majority owner to force them to do so. So in this case, maybe some lawyers fuck up and forget to do enough diligence check -- China has trademark registry and plenty of lawyers for hire -- and getting the "legal person" of the Chinese company to sign the contract but only having the parent company signed it. I also read the Chinese company was bankrupted and owned by "creditors", so maybe the parent was misrepresenting and didn't/couldn't do what they signed up to and should be held liable. It is basically a loophole in technicality. And ethically, this is no better than filing lawsuits based on bad patents. The bottom line: business is dirty no matter where it is, because humanity is greedy by nature -- blame God or evolution.
Anything happening in China is considered bias by us nowaday, while at the same time we blame them for ignoring IP. But imagine if Proview has a US subsidiary that owns the trademark and the Apple lawyers forgot to work out the agreement with the US subsidiary, don't you think the US subsidiary would sue and win too? It is $1.6 billion; everyone would try to look for loophole with such huge amount, regardless if it is based in China, Taiwan, US, or fantasyland.
Most of their factories are owned by former military generals.
[Huawei? Maybe. "Most"? Citation needed]
Most of their factories, especially the ones exporting, are owned by Taiwanese, Japanese, Korean and Hong Konger. And they are the ones
build factories where people are given 15-minute breaks twice a day to urinate and defecate, and four hours to sleep.
No matter what conditions the workers are in, most of them are free to leave and find another job, just like if you don't like your boss you can leave and find another job, ever since the economic reform. The problem is that they can't find other good jobs. The labor situation, like most other problems in China, is simply a problem of supply-and-demand. There are 1 billion people looking for works. I'm not sure why that's hard to understand. And the Chinese government is working to solve this ultimate problem to your flavor, in a way you don't like -- forced family planning.
Want something new, maybe somebody who actually know Chinese can read some of the toparticles in today'sSina Blog and the thousands of comments on these articles and tell us what they have read.
Searching names of activists and returning no result. Is that news either? Maybe someone can try theseotherqueries to see what results are.
The contaminated water, meanwhile, flows into a recovery system, where it's re-circulated, over and over, through the recycling system.
The masks? No mention. So I don't know why. But probably the process does not make too much dusk? Or maybe the workers just don't like to wear one. (I don't like to wear a mask for more than 10 minutes.) Masks are cheap in China and one can get reusable ones.
The subscription bundled with your computer has expired. You just need to pay up the subscription, download an update and all new virus will be detected and removed.
- Customer Support
Do you want to fix or erase him?
Register the car under an LLC, rent the car's time at $0.1/hour, and knock off the other, then hire a computerized lawyer to file for bankruptcy of the LLC. And then form another LLC
The stuff were handed out but not fulfilled. You need to eat 1 pound of wheat a day to feel full and not hungry, the government gave you 1 oz for next to free and nothing else. That was exactly what happened in China before opening. See the distinction?
Nobody said the necessities were ever fulfilled in China. Where did you learn your reading skill?
Millions won't agree with you calling iPhone "crap". For the smuggling, the reason is that these products are made primarily from imported components; China makes the least valuable parts and does the assembling of the final products. The values added by Chinese companies are very low, like 10%. The imported components are not taxed because the products are for export. (This is also why China insists the trade deficit with the US is not that high since it is really the trade deficit between US and the rest of Asian countries. A point we have rarely heard in the US.) When the final products are sold within China, tariff have to be paid back for the imported values. So there are large incentive for smuggling.
In a world where artificial scarcity is created, one where you "must work in order to earn a living", there will be a huge unemployed and poor minority, or even majority.
That's because you haven't lived in a world where essential necessities and everything else were handed out (i.e. re-distributed). China used to be such a place; and they learned it wouldn't work. In such a society, very soon, nobody would want to work. Human beings are either too greedy to too lazy, unfortunately.
Thousands of cats ran away during Hurricane Sandy
The timing is seen as intended to influence China's politics at this very sensitive time and push people to call for reform. If China had NOT blocked it, THAT would have been a story.
Probably true for the influence intend. Though Wen is considered a reformist and has pitched for political reform on many public occasions. Maybe his enemy tries to frame him? According to Hong Kong's Mingpao News, Wen's family is threatening legal actions against NYT. For sure, interesting dirty things in politics are happening that we regular mortals will never know the real truths for long time to come.
No, it must be China's fault for making such shit products.
For us, it depends on the company's current beer budget. Forward the question to the CFO, please.
which political part wins the election and what kind of companies contribute to that party. Got it?
I guess it just shows how little people learn from history.
I would say a lot -- i.e. learning doing the same trick to leapfrog somebody else.
And the question nobody ask here: why shouldn't China be allowed to enforce environmental regulation? Don't believe they care or be forced to care about the environment? Think again.
Bias at its utmost level
And yes, the lead author's name really is Geiger.
It is part of the conspiracy by thi guy to help mice out-compete cats and infest our world.
Three UK economists got access to national data on bank robberies... Average take is about $19k per person per robbery.
... getting paid off with a degree in Economy
Actually, the Chinese government does acknowledge their own past mistakes -- examples, they officially decried Great Leap Forward and Cultural Revolution. All victims of the Mao era were "rehabilitated". They even put the top responsible ones -- like the Gang of Four -- in prison. Those happened when a new generation of leaders need to get supports from the people.
While we are allowed to discuss this country's past mistakes more openly, have anything else real being done? Anyone responsible been put in jail? Are the American Indians really compensated in their lost life and land? all they got is a "sorry".
The broken patent system is just one symptom of a far larger disease, and that is the continued concentration of wealth and power in corporations.
Agree but the continued concentration of wealth and power in corporations is just one symptom of a far larger disease, and that is the human greeds.
Agree? But human greed is just one symptom of a far larger disease, and that is the built-in competitiveness of biological beings.
You would likely agree with that too, but the built-in competitiveness of biological beings is just a symptom of a far larger disease, and that is shortage of resources.
Now go fix those!
Now, back to the broken patent system, consider the flip side. If you are a little inventor, you are most likely wishing some giant corps violate your patent because then armies of commission-based lawyer will help you sue the rich guys for free and you will more likely become another rich guy from suing the large corps than productizing your patent with probably little real market value. I'm not saying that's good, but that's another side of the story.
I use Blurb which lets you print photos into book forms with a range of cover and paper options.
Read the TFA
At the mean time, internet users from Guangdong province, Fujian Province, and big city like Shanghai and Beijing are able to access YouTube by using HTTP secure method. Any type of video contents can be successfully search and comments can be read, but most of the videos are unable to play.
So try the HTTP secure method maybe. I can't verify myself here outside of China.
It does not have to be a conspiracy. First, everywhere in the world, a subsidiary company is simply a regular company owned partially or wholly by another; a subsidiary has all the legal rights as any company and the owning company is just a shareholder, probably a majority one. It is no different than you go out to buy 100 shares of AAPL and then sign a contract to sell iPad brand to somebody for $100; that wouldn't work since Apple Inc has not agreed to such a deal and you are not a majority owner to force them to do so. So in this case, maybe some lawyers fuck up and forget to do enough diligence check -- China has trademark registry and plenty of lawyers for hire -- and getting the "legal person" of the Chinese company to sign the contract but only having the parent company signed it. I also read the Chinese company was bankrupted and owned by "creditors", so maybe the parent was misrepresenting and didn't/couldn't do what they signed up to and should be held liable. It is basically a loophole in technicality. And ethically, this is no better than filing lawsuits based on bad patents. The bottom line: business is dirty no matter where it is, because humanity is greedy by nature -- blame God or evolution.
Anything happening in China is considered bias by us nowaday, while at the same time we blame them for ignoring IP. But imagine if Proview has a US subsidiary that owns the trademark and the Apple lawyers forgot to work out the agreement with the US subsidiary, don't you think the US subsidiary would sue and win too? It is $1.6 billion; everyone would try to look for loophole with such huge amount, regardless if it is based in China, Taiwan, US, or fantasyland.
Most of their factories are owned by former military generals.
[Huawei? Maybe. "Most"? Citation needed]
Most of their factories, especially the ones exporting, are owned by Taiwanese, Japanese, Korean and Hong Konger. And they are the ones
build factories where people are given 15-minute breaks twice a day to urinate and defecate, and four hours to sleep.
No matter what conditions the workers are in, most of them are free to leave and find another job, just like if you don't like your boss you can leave and find another job, ever since the economic reform. The problem is that they can't find other good jobs. The labor situation, like most other problems in China, is simply a problem of supply-and-demand. There are 1 billion people looking for works. I'm not sure why that's hard to understand. And the Chinese government is working to solve this ultimate problem to your flavor, in a way you don't like -- forced family planning.
Why is this news to our we-know-it-all readers?
Want something new, maybe somebody who actually know Chinese can read some of the top articles in today's Sina Blog and the thousands of comments on these articles and tell us what they have read.
Searching names of activists and returning no result. Is that news either? Maybe someone can try these other queries to see what results are.
Read the TFA
The contaminated water, meanwhile, flows into a recovery system, where it's re-circulated, over and over, through the recycling system.
The masks? No mention. So I don't know why. But probably the process does not make too much dusk? Or maybe the workers just don't like to wear one. (I don't like to wear a mask for more than 10 minutes.) Masks are cheap in China and one can get reusable ones.