It's the responsibility of the following car to maintain the appropriate distance, not the one in front.
Nice of you to highlight that you think traffic jams are worse than accidents as well.
It's the responsibility of the following car to maintain the appropriate distance, not the one in front.
Nice of you to highlight that you think traffic jams are worse than accidents as well.
As mentioned in the article these can be quieter than a retail unit. The large fans move a lot of air and the large filter area means it's easier to pull that air through; both combined mean a lower fan speed is needed for a given throughput.
HEPA filters may not be necessary - it seems that homemade air purifiers with standard filters can outperform them in clean air delivery rate, arguably the most important factor for a purifier. The air may not be as clean with each pass through it, but it'll move much more air.
Are single-sex dorms a thing over there? Ours were always mixed with unisex bathrooms - stalls for everyone.
Assigned seating has been the norm here for decades. Makes things go a little more smoothly, especially when everyone expects it.
I think most places would view such a refusal as grounds for disciplinary action against the lawyer.
New Zealand for example has legislation to address this: https://www.legislation.govt.nz/regulation/public/2008/0214/latest/DLM1437864.html
There can be good causes to refuse a client, conscientious objection is not one of them.
Parents, copyrights, and trademarks are grouped together as Intellectual Property. They're all quite distinct however.
Both graphs are showing the same thing - Russian currency weakening. Your's just shows how many rubles it takes to buy a dollar (not something you want going up if you've got rubles).
As someone who's not used these things, what's wrong with a basic handshake to establish the comms channel?
"Hey, are you listening?"
"Yes, go ahead."
...
Isn't that all this really is?
Seems a weird thing for people to be uptight about.
The signing ensures the integrity of the data, whether using a public block chain or not.
The signed document can be distributed as widely as you'd like - it doesn't need to be attached to a block chain to do this.
Sure, there's always going to be outliers. Most people live and work in the same metropolitan area though - they're not driving 50,000km+ a year. Besides, having a vehicle with 5 times the effective lifetime is going to be a big win regardless of how much you drive it.
Exactly. And while I agree, I also live somewhere that uses a variety of ranked choice voting for some elections.
If someone truly wants to vote their values they should also have some understanding of how their voting system works.
If a vote for the candidate you believe in results in your least preferred candidate getting ahead, shouldn't you consider a compromise vote to get a candidate closer to your values in power?