Comment Re:Poor Promotability too (Score 1) 176
Get rid of up or out and then actively recruit people who will put up with tedium in return for pretty solid job security.
Get rid of up or out and then actively recruit people who will put up with tedium in return for pretty solid job security.
The lids on the silo aren't that thick and disabling the lanchers is probably just a matter of throwing a few pounds of explosives at them. You can throw more it if makes you feel safer. Then you have a mildly radioactive mess but that can be delt with.
Eh quite a bit of industry where even small impovements in weather forecasting are extremely valuable.
Heathrow is owned by Heathrow Airport Holdings. Private sector. The tax disc website is by Government Digital Services. Public sector. The savings they have made by moving government functions online are in the billions.
Probably unrelated. In this case recent means after 1923 (yes there are a bunch of exceptions but they are all either very narrow or involve music you haven't heard of). If they were going for copyright expired stuff you would hear the likes of Ragtime, early jazz and blues.
"mp3". The six copyright purist nerds in existance who might take such an instruction to mean you should do it while respecting copyright would have insisted on ogg vorbis or FLAC.
Part of that is budget. A lot of museums don't have the money to digitalise their content or maintain anything but the most straightforward of websites.
I don't think photography policy is linked to dissemination approach. Historically they have been pretty random. A condition of a loan somewhere. some long gone director getting paranoid about theft. A curator who just didn't like photographers. A lot of the team people aren't even sure who is allowed to change the policy and there was little pressure to do so. Then came camera phones.
Counterpoint. The number of people who visit the British museum to see the Rosetta stone
There was a largest collider competition towards the end of the cold war. Hard to say if CERN was part of it but the LHC did get some parts cheap due to the other projects being cancelled.
Cleaning out old lab stores is always interesting. Open the wrong thing you end up up breathing hydrogen chloride. Mind you the worst I've ever found is sodium cyanide. Others have found human heads.
Nukes are unlikely. However I'd bet there are a few physics labs with poorly documented collections of radioactives.
Pretty typical for dead tree sources. Thats actualy slightly lower than the requirements the British library put in place when I wanted to look at a load of Amiga Action stuff. Also don't try and read a years worth of Amiga Action in one sitting.
Pilot salaries are fairly low these days. Still if you can get rid of them you gain room for more seats.
I don't think Airbus can build a plane that big.
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