Definition: Observation - The act of making and recording a measurement
In the case of an electron, it is the means used to measure position or energy that necessarily precludes the ability to know both. If I remember my lay-physics right, it has to do with choosing to measure a wave or a particle. Measure one, and measurements of the other become impossible. (Someone please correct my interpretation.)
"If you had invented FaceWave, you would've invented FaceWave."
Yes. That unfairly got my hopes up that we had legislated the healing liquid from Star Wars into being. I was thinking, "Wow! That's an awesome fix bill to ObamaCare!" only to be crushed by disappointment after checking the spelling.
The reason:
Ask ten different scientists about the environment, population control, genetics, and you'll get ten different answers, but there's one thing every scientist on the planet agrees on. Whether it happens in a hundred years or a thousand years or a million years, eventually our Sun will grow cold and go out. When that happens, it won't just take us. It'll take Marilyn Monroe, and Lao-Tzu, and Einstein, and Morobuto, and Buddy Holly, and Aristophanes, and - all of this - all of this - was for nothing. Unless we go to the stars. -- Commander Jeffrey Sinclair, Babylon 5, Season 1 Episode 4
Have you learned nothing from the story of Odysseus? "To strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield." We do that which is difficult because it is difficult, and in the practice of doing it, improve ourselves.
As leader of the Executive branch, it was Bush's job to tug on the rope and wake Congress up. The problem was, Congress didn't tug back by making appropriate laws to cover handling of terrorists. Congress still hasn't made laws that apply. So now you get this circus of trying terrorists picked up on the battlefield in U.S. criminal courts. Criminal law doesn't adequately handle either the conduct of the military or enemies of the United States. More to the point, criminal law shouldn't handle these things (chain of custody for evidence collected on the battlefield ?!?). There needs to be new law that grants or restricts authority. Military prisons and military tribunals were the closest fit under existing laws and authority.
The Bush administration played its expected role in this tension of powers as defined in the Constitution. The Legislative branch did not. Perhaps we ought to fire them for not doing their jobs.
As for 4th amendment rights, if you make phone calls to known terrorists I damn well hope our government is listening in.
So then, if Sony makes a television, only advertising sold by Sony should appear on the television? Apple is trying to make a locked-down vertical stack out of something that by its nature is an interconnection of many horizontal concerns.
tl;dr... busy with TwitterBook
Want to hear more about spokesboobs, though.
I don't know many proponents of the private sector that believe it is the solution for everything. The private sector is better at job creation, it's better at near-term efficiency for most ordinary endeavors. There are a very few things, however, where it is more economically feasible for government to do a thing, than it is for the private sector. For example, maintenance of a military, or building a highway system that spans a continent; these are things where government successfully drives industry. The space program, in terms of the kinds of energies (literal and figurative) needed to succeed at it, is one of those few things that government can establish better than can the private sector. That's just basic economics.
Besides, I thought liberals liked nuance, or is that out of fashion now?
Because Apple has become about being in a certain mindset.
Basically these are Disney devices.
For work not previously made into movies or TV how about:
For reboots, how about a truer version of Jim Butcher's The Dresden Files.
One of the chief duties of the mathematician in acting as an advisor... is to discourage... from expecting too much from mathematics. -- N. Wiener