> Well done. Really, what would it take to get you to re-phrase your comment into something like: > "Forgive me for asking because I don't understand how these situations came to pass in the first place?" To be honest,…
That's why you don't drive 100 mph, mm away from a line of stopped/stopped cars or next to a crowded street corner. Your examples are ones of exactly the type of behavior insurance companies are trying to…
Negative earnings, maybe? Usually P/E ratios for those companies are reported as N/A, though.
Huh. I haven't ever run into that, and I've been using uber twice a week for more than a year. Maybe it just comes down to which city you're in?
> Are U&L still ignoring rules designed to provide access to those with disabilities? In my city one of the options (besides SUV, black car, etc) is for persons with disabilities. The app seems to have some options to…
Sounds like it does most of what ride-share services do. Does Flywheel allow you to rate individual drivers/cars (and prevent being matched to creepy drivers or dirty cars on future rides)? I think that's actually one…
Depends on the airport. Some airports are vicious about enforcing Uber bans (and the drivers quickly figure this out), so drivers will call to confirm your location if the pin is near the airport. On the other hand,…
I think you're being more than a little unfair. Part of the problem is that there simply isn't as much money to be made in digital as there was in analog. A digital camera doesn't need film, but film (and film…
> [...] compared to the exorbitant rates [...] $8-10 shipping and handling for standard shipping [...] So here's the thing: It actually does cost $8-10 to ship most of the types of things you can buy on Amazon. I don't…
Because it costs $85 every 5 years? Where does that money go? I don't know, but I bet whomever gets it is politically connected.
> I think it gets encoded into your boarding pass. It does. Three beeps from the little scanner thingy at the ID check means you have Pre. One beep means you don't.
Managed inclusion v2 was ended in September. That's when managed inclusion v3 began[1]. [1] http://www.flyertalk.com/forum/checkpoints-borders-policy-de...
You were part of "managed inclusion" in TSA Pre(check).
Unless you're "randomly" selected by the little light on the secure side of the magnetometer.
Ok, that's fine. It's still within the range I mentioned above. But, I'll just note for the record that you rounded $587k down to $500k, and $840k down to $800k. > But these studies are all flawed because they are based…
The page I cited actually breaks down lifetime earnings by age (a.k.a. "annual income"). It's true that non-college graduates get an earlier start on savings, but the overall trend is that their annual income starts to…
Wait, really? The incremental lifetime earning from a Bachelor's degree is something like 0.5 to 1.5 million dollars[1]. The cost of attending college could double at least once before the ROI goes negative. [1]…
> You can't book an appointment with most of these directly, and not all of them can write prescriptions legally. So I think that varies from state to state. [Anecdote warning] When I was in grad school, at least, I was…
> I think we need multiple grades of doctor. Don't we have that already? Doctor / Physician Physician Assistant Nurse Practitioner Registered Nurse Nursing Aid / Nurse Assistant
> Does the government pay airlines to fly to podunk towns that wouldn't otherwise get service, or something? In some cases, yes. It's called "Essential Air Service." But that's not the usual reason for B->C having…
Maybe, but that's a different argument than this thread, which is about copyright.
Lossless upsampling the 44.1 kHz recording to, say 192 kHz is trivial for the reproduction equipment. That the LPF on the reproduction end wants the DAC to run at greater than 44.1 kHz has no bearing on the sampling…
What about all the consumer routers than run on MIPS cores?
The two pictures don't have the same vertical scaling, and it's clear that the probe is ahead of the LPF in the signal chain.
Except that you can clearly hear the autopilot disengage before the car swerves to the left. And the swerve doesn't start until it is physically impossible for a collision to happen. And the slope of the road isn't…
> Well done. Really, what would it take to get you to re-phrase your comment into something like: > "Forgive me for asking because I don't understand how these situations came to pass in the first place?" To be honest,…
That's why you don't drive 100 mph, mm away from a line of stopped/stopped cars or next to a crowded street corner. Your examples are ones of exactly the type of behavior insurance companies are trying to…
Negative earnings, maybe? Usually P/E ratios for those companies are reported as N/A, though.
Huh. I haven't ever run into that, and I've been using uber twice a week for more than a year. Maybe it just comes down to which city you're in?
> Are U&L still ignoring rules designed to provide access to those with disabilities? In my city one of the options (besides SUV, black car, etc) is for persons with disabilities. The app seems to have some options to…
Sounds like it does most of what ride-share services do. Does Flywheel allow you to rate individual drivers/cars (and prevent being matched to creepy drivers or dirty cars on future rides)? I think that's actually one…
Depends on the airport. Some airports are vicious about enforcing Uber bans (and the drivers quickly figure this out), so drivers will call to confirm your location if the pin is near the airport. On the other hand,…
I think you're being more than a little unfair. Part of the problem is that there simply isn't as much money to be made in digital as there was in analog. A digital camera doesn't need film, but film (and film…
> [...] compared to the exorbitant rates [...] $8-10 shipping and handling for standard shipping [...] So here's the thing: It actually does cost $8-10 to ship most of the types of things you can buy on Amazon. I don't…
Because it costs $85 every 5 years? Where does that money go? I don't know, but I bet whomever gets it is politically connected.
> I think it gets encoded into your boarding pass. It does. Three beeps from the little scanner thingy at the ID check means you have Pre. One beep means you don't.
Managed inclusion v2 was ended in September. That's when managed inclusion v3 began[1]. [1] http://www.flyertalk.com/forum/checkpoints-borders-policy-de...
You were part of "managed inclusion" in TSA Pre(check).
Unless you're "randomly" selected by the little light on the secure side of the magnetometer.
Ok, that's fine. It's still within the range I mentioned above. But, I'll just note for the record that you rounded $587k down to $500k, and $840k down to $800k. > But these studies are all flawed because they are based…
The page I cited actually breaks down lifetime earnings by age (a.k.a. "annual income"). It's true that non-college graduates get an earlier start on savings, but the overall trend is that their annual income starts to…
Wait, really? The incremental lifetime earning from a Bachelor's degree is something like 0.5 to 1.5 million dollars[1]. The cost of attending college could double at least once before the ROI goes negative. [1]…
> You can't book an appointment with most of these directly, and not all of them can write prescriptions legally. So I think that varies from state to state. [Anecdote warning] When I was in grad school, at least, I was…
> I think we need multiple grades of doctor. Don't we have that already? Doctor / Physician Physician Assistant Nurse Practitioner Registered Nurse Nursing Aid / Nurse Assistant
> Does the government pay airlines to fly to podunk towns that wouldn't otherwise get service, or something? In some cases, yes. It's called "Essential Air Service." But that's not the usual reason for B->C having…
Maybe, but that's a different argument than this thread, which is about copyright.
Lossless upsampling the 44.1 kHz recording to, say 192 kHz is trivial for the reproduction equipment. That the LPF on the reproduction end wants the DAC to run at greater than 44.1 kHz has no bearing on the sampling…
What about all the consumer routers than run on MIPS cores?
The two pictures don't have the same vertical scaling, and it's clear that the probe is ahead of the LPF in the signal chain.
Except that you can clearly hear the autopilot disengage before the car swerves to the left. And the swerve doesn't start until it is physically impossible for a collision to happen. And the slope of the road isn't…