Comment Re:Starting salaries... (Score 1) 170
Really? The extra time you would spend commuting would be at a rate of roughly $180 an hour if you took the higher paying job. I would gladly commute for that much more money per hour of commute.
Really? The extra time you would spend commuting would be at a rate of roughly $180 an hour if you took the higher paying job. I would gladly commute for that much more money per hour of commute.
The entire argument was based on the idea that they won't move it until something horrible happens... but other than that, yeah, bad shit can happen anywhere. The idea here is risk mitigation. If this stuff sits indefinitely at these small storage locations something bad almost certainly will eventually happen because it will be there forever (practically speaking). The same thing is true at a central location, something bad will eventually happen, the hope is that you can push that off and minimize the risk of the bad thing happening by having only one location that has a lot of resources thrown at it.
Transport is hard, its a big deal and it is a problem for a lot of materials. There isn't much getting around that, but it is also a limited operation and you can take the best precautions possible. The question is what has the biggest risk, moving it or not moving it. The problem is that we, as humans, are very bad at assessing risk. The point of my post wasn't that it was the right thing to do to move it all, but that the decision will be made based on the reaction of a bunch of people to an incident happening and not based on a rational assessment of the options. We make decisions out of fear, rarely out of rational thought. Just look a the people who refuse to vaccinate their kids.
don't worry, eventually something bad will happen, hopefully not to close to where you live, and the political motivation to deal with this shit will suddenly exist and some of the same people opposed to yucca now will be clamoring for a centralized storage solution and wondering why we let this stuff sit all over the country for so long.
do you really think that the banks in the rest of the world wont have the same back doors? Even if they don't, any flaws they do have will be exposed to whomever gets their hands on the source provided to the Chinese (here is a hint, most of those people are probably not going to responsibly report the flaws so this is not a case of many eyes resulting in more secure code, but a few eyes finding ways to compromise code).
I know the article says that these companies can't afford to ignore china, but really, if they all got together and said no, could china really afford that? They could always make their own banking software I suppose. Why don't we let them?
It is up to the refs to measure the balls and fill them if they are low. If the refs failed to do their jobs maybe the league should be taking a closer look at them.
Yeah but it's really about all the words you don't repeat.
It is not likely to be cost effective to keep cities open. Clearing snow at a pace that lets you keep the roads open is very costly and hard on the environment. Keeping public transit running is similarly expensive. The cost is productivity for a day but given that these days many people get work done at home the impact of that is somewhat less than it was in the past. We always used to shut down for the worst storms, sometimes the call was made late and people would get stuck. Now the balance has shifted so it makes more economic sense to shut down services for a day to let the snow pass and clear everything out for the next day.
Where did we get the starting pressure from before game time. Were those numbers ever released? Because without knowing what the pressure was when they were first checked you can't possibly know how much the pressure changed making an analysis using PV=nRT basically meaningless.
I do not believe the NFL has released those numbers. Quite possibly because they don't have them because they balls were never actually measured by the refs at the start of the game (They often are not they are only checked visually and by hand).
We have over a foot on the ground already here and it is coming down quickly. We could easily hit 2 feet. I did see a few models that predicted 30-36" but most were saying 2 feet of snow and I think there is a good chance we get to that. Is it the worse blizzard I have ever seen? No. But it is more than enough to close schools, get people off the roads and clear the snow emergency lanes.
Japan really is kind of insanely safe. Assault in a city is often national news. To say it is safer than the U.S. is probably close to universally true, but not because the U.S. Is unsafe.
Rashomon is a really good movie, apropos nothing in particulal.
That's not how I remember it!
The kids have to learn about Tek War sooner or later
It all depends on what you mean by a small number. Even if it was only a fraction of a percentage of internet users that is still an unbelievable number of people and while they are making a concerted effort to ruin peoples lives there isn't really that much that decent people can do to stop them. I cannot somehow stop a sociopath from finding and publishing some poor persons social security number and I can't stop an asshole from posting a death threat and even a ton of people supporting someone does not make that death threat any less frightening.
It seems like a very difficult battle to win
You might think that, but my experience with outsourcing tells a very different tale.
BMW and Mercedes make cars that are in the same price range as the tesla but they also make a lot of cars that are a lot cheaper, and those are the cars they sell a lot of. They are much much larger companies and they ship a lot more cars than Tesla. It is true that it is hard to come up with a comparison to another car company in terms of market but in terms of volume and cost they do have more in common with Ferrari. The big difference is total cost of ownership. Ferrari are very expensive to repair and I would bet they break down more often than Teslas. They also burn gas like crazy while the tesla recharges from your relatively inexpensive wall power. Also they are far more practical cars for a daily driver in terms of design and cost per mile. These are all reasons that you might know more people with teslas than Ferraris. I can report a similar experience but I do see about as many Ferraris on the road as Teslas around Boston.
Still as a manufacturer they are probably more similar to Ferrari even though their target market and the use of the car is very different.
What is algebra, exactly? Is it one of those three-cornered things? -- J.M. Barrie