Comment Re:School inquiry? (Score 4, Insightful) 170
As the saying goes:
- There are Old Electricians
- There are Bold Electricians
- There are no Old Bold Electricians
As the saying goes:
- There are Old Electricians
- There are Bold Electricians
- There are no Old Bold Electricians
H0 : There is no CP on the servers
HA: There is reasonable suspicion that there is CP on the servers
The burden of proof resides on the DoJ to "prove" that there is a reasonable suspicion that there does in fact exist CP on the servers, and that we must therefore reject the Null Hypothesis. until such time as the DoJ makes such a verifiable claim to this effect, we cannot reject the Null Hypothesis.
Short Version: "I Call"
Well, just remember that fertility is hereditary...
If your parents didn't have any kids, you probably won't either
One other thing to note about peanut allergies is that, from a diagnosis/prevention standpoint, they are all treated as "Severe"
My son has a contact allergy to peanuts that causes a rash. it is not an anaphylaxis reaction, so, very much non-life-threatening. This being said, the allergist, and his pediatrician still prescribed epi-pens, and had the school treat it, for the purposes of preventing contact, as if it were a life-threatening anaphylaxis reaction.
my understanding of the reasons for this is 2-fold:
1) Peanut allergies, as a whole, are more likely to be life-threatening than many other food allergies.
2) Peanut allergies tend to increase over time, thus increasing the likelihood that his reaction could evolve into an anaphylaxis reaction after further exposures.
Now, we told the school that his treatment plan is "Diphenhydramine HCL (AKA Benedryl) & Observe, contact us"
The schools tend to treat all peanut allergies as life-threatening so that they can have uniform rules while dealing with hundreds of "Little smiling faces" rather than having to know "Johnny gets X, Bobby gets Y, Jane get Z... ad. nausium.)
I have no sources for either of the above, but those are my understandings
I do IT work... the best replacement to Date: User Replacement.
Non-Network ENIAC, I know everything running on this thing, damnit, I had to reconfigure the tubes and switches
I'm not so much on the taste of creosote... now a Glenlivet 15, straight (maybe 2 drops of water) I could go for any time.
Was talking with one of the LifeFlight of Maine EMTs the other day, with the IFR system that ME, MA and NH have in place, they have just gotten FAA approval for IFR highways.
Picture This, you're in Fort Kent, ME, and need to get to Mass. General *FAST*, they load you on the helicopter, the pilot lifts off, and takes his hands off the stick. Next thing (about 4 hours later) you are 50 feet above the helipad in Boston.
Supposedly this is a First In The Nation thing, but with the IFR post at all of the Maine hospitals, the LifeFlight helicopters can already do final approach to 50 feet above the pad unassisted.
I Trust robotic planes
The Pope is catholic, Water is wet, and stock in Hard Drive manufacturers is climbing
Really, I'm surprised they're not going for 24 or even 48 months. Of course law enforcement wants logs. (much easier to request than active taps/trace/wiretaps) and they can go back in time effectively.
my concern isn't primarily with law enforcement having access to logs that far back, but with 2 things
1) selling them for profit (see recent Supreme court case about dr.'s prescribing habits)
2) use in civil cases.
well yeah ya' smeg'ead, why isn't Red Dwarf first?
perfect example: on my current BT "session" I've uploaded over 60 Gig, every bit of which is completely legal.
I'm seeding Ubuntu and Knoppix ISOs. I seriously hope that they don't "kill" bittorrent, as it is one of the most efficient ways of moving large files around.
My Bad, I misread the table... for airlines, the number is 0.072 fatalities per 100,000,000 miles flown
this changes the final result to roughly 16 times more likely to die when in a car over flying.
Same thing with Automobile vs. Air-travel fatalities
in 2009 :
automotive fatalities per 100,000,000 miles traveled: 1.13 http://www-fars.nhtsa.dot.gov/Main/index.aspx
Airline Fatalities per 1,000,000 miles traveled: 0.0003 http://www3.ntsb.gov/aviation/table5.htm
if we adjust the airline numbers to reflect 100 million miles, we get 0.03 fatalities.
you are 190 times more likely to die when in a car, than if you were flying, but yet we are so worried about air accidents. They make better news because you will typically have higher fatalities *at once*, rather than a handful across the country every day.
people just don't understand statistics.
I'm with you on the nuclear thing.
The average person is dumb and 50% of the people are even dumber
The median person is dumb and 50% of the people are even dumber
Both statements are correct. The latter is simply more accurate
(Median is one accepted form of "average")
Okay, now that that's off my chest, go ahead and mod me off-topic
Apathy Party! Just remember, No Vote is a Vote for us!
An Ada exception is when a routine gets in trouble and says 'Beam me up, Scotty'.