Comment Re:Shadowrun Anyone (Score 1) 178
December 21st my friend.
December 21st my friend.
And how, exactly, does one get their naval assets out of range of aircraft (the most common delivery system for anti-ship missiles) that can strike any spot on the planet? Are you suggesting that the navy has Star Blazers style ships that can fly through space or something?
Don't forget that most (not all) of those other stats represent single death incidents. 9/11 was a single incident with an unusually large death toll. You can't really compare 9/11 to say Bronchitis and say that terrorism would be equally likely to kill you over a 20 year period.
Catholic schools teach lefties to write correctly using the penguin ruler method.
This goes far beyond what an upstanding company would do, but is not illegal. This is one of those areas where there is no law because you shouldn't have to legislate common sense.
I'm not so sure that this is true. There are a lot of things that a company is not allowed to ask a prospective candidate. Age/sexual preference/marital status/kids/(legal) drug use/etc just for starters. Those are things that could all easily be found in most people's social networking profiles.
From what I see, any company that engages in this kind of activity opens itself up to enormous risk of lawsuits. If they gain access to someone's facebook profile and then choose not to hire them, the prospective employee can point to information in their facebook profile that the employer should not have access to as the basis of a lawsuit. IMHO, the entire thing is a minor issue as it will sort itself out pretty quickly.
You're forgetting that spies don't get "traded', officers get traded back and forth and only the officers with official cover. Officers are spy handlers, the spies are the people who if caught get killed.
Yup! Just like Anna Chapman! Oh, wait...she got on the cover of Maxim magazine after being sent home instead...
Well, no...that would be silly...IBM hasn't made PCs for years.
So some definitions of marriage should never be changed because it is an ANCIENT construct given legitimacy by legal rulings?
The same way that they did before passports had chips in them? Namely by scanning the barcode and/or the magnetic strip.
No, you really don't.
If your goal is to reproduce the contents of the RFID chip, then you want it in the encrypted form. No need to decrypt it.
And considering that the encryption was broken in 2006, even if you do want the contents, you don't really need the MRZ.
As a citizen, you cannot be denied entry into the US.
Denying you the ability to leave is another matter, but even that can only be done under very limited circumstances since the ability to travel has been upheld as a right.
I have a better idea. All drones are to be registered licensed with with the FAA. Before flying a drone outside of a non-approved training facility, a certain quantity of flying hours must be logged under supervision by a licensed professional. Before a craft is purchased, a background check and 7 day hold is required. A statement of intended use shall be recorded, and depending on jurisdiction, a local judge or sheriff shall have final say over the issuance of the permit for any specific craft.
Really? All of that just so my ten year old kid can fly his crappy $20 Air Hogs toy? What? You didn't think this through? Really? It didn't show...
The same Mythbusters where they interviewed an ER doctor that says that it does happen and they called the myth busted anyway? Or did they revisit that one due to being out of fresh ideas too?
You never saw Red Dawn, then?
I'm Why did you wait until you were seventeen to join the military?
Because the average 13 year old is too short to reach the pedals of a tank.
Force needed to accelerate 2.2lbs of cookies = 1 Fig-newton to 1 meter per second