I would be wary of those numbers. There is a heavy selection bias, as we don't see the videos where the AT weapons fails, where the operator gets shot, etc. We'll have better information once the fog of war lifts.
A guy hiding in a bush was able to defeat tanks since the invention of HEAT in WW2. Before that, they were other ways as well.
I do not know for tanks, but for artillery, it tends to be much higher (few thousands) It is quite variable depending on if you re firing full charges, firing when the tube is hot, etc.
There is an issue with that, being efficient in conter insurgency warfare doesn't necessarily translate into High Intensity warfare. Infantry support for armor is one, but things like maneuvers, operating under…
The issue is not overthrowing them, but finding a good replacement. Overthrowing one just to get another similar one is kinda pointless.
The overall population is still way better now than it has been historically. I don't understand why both cannot be done in parallel anyway. It's not like we are investing everything in the space race, plenty goes on…
Not just bones. Muscle mass and the rest doesn't just disappear. In the sport i do (rugby), it's been evaluated to be a danger to players (increased risk of injury), and i would wager most contact sports are similar.
There is plenty of brackets so all can play at their respectives levels, separation in different leagues for collective sports, different levels in individual sports, etc. You can have fun in your local amateur…
Or you simply don't believe in it. Which is a perfectly valid reason. Not everyone is just either ignorant or risk averse for crypto.
Why put something else than meat though? I never understood this.
In WW1, the rape of Belgium might have been used by propaganda and some parts fabricated, but was still pretty real. And it was not an isolated incident, but a policy.
How come a double brick home would be worse for tornadoes and hurricanes? At a pinch i would say the first weaknesses would be windows and roof, not the walls.
Lectores is still a masculine. And it doesn't work for "Lectores!".
There is such a push in French, works fine with some words, much less with others. A much more ridiculous one is to change the word endings to reflect gender neutrality. You're supposed to write both endings separated…
Two wrongs don't make a right. The issue is when you reduce people to nothing but their "color".
How low are you talking about? And hidden fees such as the spread do matter. Last i checked, which was a while ago, paypal wasn't that flash compared to alternatives.
Usually, when i do international transfers, i expect a fixed known rate. Transferring to bitcoin or whatever and then having to carry the risks in wild swings in value is not really my cup of tea.
While violence is not always a tool, it is an evolutionary strategy. Before the advent of the state, it was already a tool, or could be at least. It, and other adaptive behaviors still hold some sway on us, and our…
> People do not fight for the protection of reproductive resources. The peaceful way birth rates fell around the world these days is proof of that. People have fought for a number of reasons, material resources AND…
>Evolutionary biases are also essentially irrelevant in how societies are structured. The structures of societies are very intentional and based on material reality, not mere biases. Evolutionary biases are…
Polygyny was not restricted to Islamic societies though, and was a common occurence accross many societies. It was always restricted to a limited amount of men of course, as only the most successful/powerful/whatever…
Vae victis. Losers of conflicts against non-western expansionists were no better as a general rule. NZ itself was hardly a haven of peace in pre-european times, and Maoris didn't have too many qualms exterminating…
I've written a DB2 FDW that is used in production. Not as good as direct access of course, but very practical still.
From experience, i have seen cobol code stashing entire copybooks into char/varchars, along with some binary switches to select the appropriate copybook. Unless you have the copybook or a translated version, it's pretty…
We did it to replace a Cobol core-banking system. The hard part is not so much the code as all the interfaces (DB, queues, printing, etc).
I would be wary of those numbers. There is a heavy selection bias, as we don't see the videos where the AT weapons fails, where the operator gets shot, etc. We'll have better information once the fog of war lifts.
A guy hiding in a bush was able to defeat tanks since the invention of HEAT in WW2. Before that, they were other ways as well.
I do not know for tanks, but for artillery, it tends to be much higher (few thousands) It is quite variable depending on if you re firing full charges, firing when the tube is hot, etc.
There is an issue with that, being efficient in conter insurgency warfare doesn't necessarily translate into High Intensity warfare. Infantry support for armor is one, but things like maneuvers, operating under…
The issue is not overthrowing them, but finding a good replacement. Overthrowing one just to get another similar one is kinda pointless.
The overall population is still way better now than it has been historically. I don't understand why both cannot be done in parallel anyway. It's not like we are investing everything in the space race, plenty goes on…
Not just bones. Muscle mass and the rest doesn't just disappear. In the sport i do (rugby), it's been evaluated to be a danger to players (increased risk of injury), and i would wager most contact sports are similar.
There is plenty of brackets so all can play at their respectives levels, separation in different leagues for collective sports, different levels in individual sports, etc. You can have fun in your local amateur…
Or you simply don't believe in it. Which is a perfectly valid reason. Not everyone is just either ignorant or risk averse for crypto.
Why put something else than meat though? I never understood this.
In WW1, the rape of Belgium might have been used by propaganda and some parts fabricated, but was still pretty real. And it was not an isolated incident, but a policy.
How come a double brick home would be worse for tornadoes and hurricanes? At a pinch i would say the first weaknesses would be windows and roof, not the walls.
Lectores is still a masculine. And it doesn't work for "Lectores!".
There is such a push in French, works fine with some words, much less with others. A much more ridiculous one is to change the word endings to reflect gender neutrality. You're supposed to write both endings separated…
Two wrongs don't make a right. The issue is when you reduce people to nothing but their "color".
How low are you talking about? And hidden fees such as the spread do matter. Last i checked, which was a while ago, paypal wasn't that flash compared to alternatives.
Usually, when i do international transfers, i expect a fixed known rate. Transferring to bitcoin or whatever and then having to carry the risks in wild swings in value is not really my cup of tea.
While violence is not always a tool, it is an evolutionary strategy. Before the advent of the state, it was already a tool, or could be at least. It, and other adaptive behaviors still hold some sway on us, and our…
> People do not fight for the protection of reproductive resources. The peaceful way birth rates fell around the world these days is proof of that. People have fought for a number of reasons, material resources AND…
>Evolutionary biases are also essentially irrelevant in how societies are structured. The structures of societies are very intentional and based on material reality, not mere biases. Evolutionary biases are…
Polygyny was not restricted to Islamic societies though, and was a common occurence accross many societies. It was always restricted to a limited amount of men of course, as only the most successful/powerful/whatever…
Vae victis. Losers of conflicts against non-western expansionists were no better as a general rule. NZ itself was hardly a haven of peace in pre-european times, and Maoris didn't have too many qualms exterminating…
I've written a DB2 FDW that is used in production. Not as good as direct access of course, but very practical still.
From experience, i have seen cobol code stashing entire copybooks into char/varchars, along with some binary switches to select the appropriate copybook. Unless you have the copybook or a translated version, it's pretty…
We did it to replace a Cobol core-banking system. The hard part is not so much the code as all the interfaces (DB, queues, printing, etc).