Comment Wow! Will we need... (Score 1) 228
Photoshop to cook our food?
We could use the device to preview the finished dish, too.
Of course, he is theoretically correct, but, as we know, theory and practice are different things.
Photoshop to cook our food?
We could use the device to preview the finished dish, too.
Of course, he is theoretically correct, but, as we know, theory and practice are different things.
marine animals are ingesting it with or instead of their food. If so, is it possible some species will evolve to digest plastic and metabolize it? Will that make those creatures toxic to humans?
On further checking, Debian 3 seems to be in the 2.2 kernel series with the right libraries for Corel.
All my posts on this subject were wrong and should be ignored.
I just checked and you're right about the kernel being in the 2-series, 2.2.x. Thanks for that; apparently it wasn't the change to the 2-series kernel that caused the incompatibilites, but to the 2.4- versions from 2.2.
I was right about the libraries, though.
IIRC Debian 3 was released about the same time as RH 7, which makes using anything Corel doubtful.
You've got mix of incompatible requirements here. IIRC Corel's support for L:inux ended with the introduction of libc6 and kernels in the 2.0 series. These linux binaries will not run on Debian-3, which had both. I know, I tried to keep WordPerfect for Linux going on RH-6.2 till about the time Debian-3 was introduced but it became a losing proposition.
Worse still, source code for Linux-kernel series 1.x will not usually compile on later kernels which require an incompatible libc.
YMMV
This could lead to the acceptance of alternative cosmologies that have been bubbling up for years. Try these links:
http://www.dailygalaxy.com/my_...
http://vixra.org/pdf/1404.0123...
http://www.researchgate.net/pu...
|(T)he US is particularly keen on boosting cross-border data flow, which would allow uninhibited exchange of personal and financial data.|
Perhaps the traffic between nodes will give the NSA some useful information about people's transactions to "Keep us safe." Or the US IRS about offshore deposits?
Why the percentages? In real terms life expectancy from adulthood (20+) increased 17-22 years while the infant (0) life expectancy has increased by 37-40 years. According to the chart you referenced.
The reason average life expectancy has more than doubled in a century or two is that infant mortality has been reduced, bringing the average up.
There is not so much difference in survival expectancy once on is an adult.
I agree; that's why I posted. I berated that guy righteously, and some others, too. I called him every name in the book. If I were him (and presumably innocent) I'd want to sue someone. I'm just glad I didn't CC: my remarks to others....
Yeah, me, too. I found one "offer" from linkdin that looked like it was sent by a guy whose craigslist ad for a cheap Mercedes I had responded to; I sent him a flame email calling him out for it.
Now, I look like the a**hole....
Thanks, linkdin. NOT.
This flies in the face of current theory, which says infants flush "excess" synapses and children continue to do so on a lesser scale for years. See
Huttenlocher P. Neural Plasticity: The Effects of the Environment on the Development of the Cerebral Cortex. Harvard University Press; 2002.
Or any decent Google search will support this.
Unless a lchemical ink can be shown in the chemistry resultant from the anaesthesia which might cause the synapses to morph, it will be very hard to "prove" this hypothesis.
Correlation does not prove causation.
OK: Here's both barrels.
It used to take five years or more to develop a new model auto, back in the twenties through 60s. This lag time caused bad decisions like the introduction of 12- and 16-cylinder cars in the middle of the Great Depression and Edsels, planned in 1952-3 and introduced in 1958, after the target market had lost their jobs in a deep recession.
These printers doubtless help reduce the time and make carmakers more nimble.
That's the real story, and it is neither in TFA nor the summary.
Call me a cynic....
When the information so clearlyy calls for it.
At its Dearborn Heights, Mich. facility, 14 different industrial 3D printers turn out 20,000 parts a year.
H'mm
Not much of a story here, just PR.
I am old enough to remember the "horsepower wars" of the '50s and 60s in the US. Inflation was rampant then as now.
So, what's new? It's not as if the governments know what they're doing, or their informational data is correct and unpoliticized....
And it should be the law: If you use the word `paradigm' without knowing what the dictionary says it means, you go to jail. No exceptions. -- David Jones