- #4,061
Ibix
Science Advisor
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An innovative combination of transporter and replicater technology, to be sure.WWGD said:Just beam us up with a Martini, either shaken, stirred or both?
Martini, Earl Grey, Hot.
An innovative combination of transporter and replicater technology, to be sure.WWGD said:Just beam us up with a Martini, either shaken, stirred or both?
Computer! I need three catch phrases and a blender!Ibix said:Martini, Earl Grey, Hot.
My API will not handle that. Need special protocol for Tea and Martini (Mar(Tea)ni)?Ibix said:An innovative combination of transporter and replicater technology, to be sure.
Martini, Earl Grey, Hot.
Sounds like a marketing niche for a bottled drink. LiptonIce Marteani?WWGD said:My API will not handle that. Need special protocol for Tea and Martini (Mar(Tea)ni)?
Sounds at least as it was made for the European market. Not sure whether hidden alcohol is allowed in the states, I've been told you can't get Mon Chéri there.Ibix said:Sounds like a marketing niche for a bottled drink. LiptonIce Marteani?
Maybe one needs a liquor license, which I heard is expensive. Do you need them in Europe too?fresh_42 said:Sounds at least as it was made for the European market. Not sure whether hidden alcohol is allowed in the states, I've been told you can't get Mon Chéri there.
They've hidden the alcohol in their commercial beers. I certainly never noticed any.fresh_42 said:Not sure whether hidden alcohol is allowed in the states
Not that I knew of. I can buy Lagavullin in the same store I buy coke, beer or water.WWGD said:Maybe one needs a liquor license, which I heard is expensive. Do you need them in Europe too?
I bought Roller Blades, Rat Poison and a Spare Bicycle Tire in one of the big new chain stores ( I think it was CVS ).fresh_42 said:Not that I knew of. I can buy Lagavullin in the same store I buy coke, beer or water.
I guess that comes with the corresponding 15-17 year-olds standing outside and asking you to buy some for them?fresh_42 said:At least you can have liquors in basically any supermarket. They aren't allowed to sell it to people younger than 18, but that's all.
Anyone think this will happen?WASHINGTON — President Trump escalated his trade war with China on Wednesday, ordering his administration to consider more than doubling proposed tariffs on $200 billion worth of Chinese goods to 25 percent from 10 percent, as talks between Washington and Beijing remain at a standstill.
Mr. Trump instructed the United States trade representative to look into increasing tariffs on Chinese imports like fish, petroleum, chemicals, handbags and other goods to 25 percent, a significant step in a dispute that is beginning to take a toll on industries and consumers in both countries. A final decision on the size and scope of the tariffs is not expected before September.
The effort to further punish China is being led by hard-line advisers to Mr. Trump, who believe inflicting painful measures on Beijing is the best way to force it back to the negotiating table on trade. But that approach is once again creating fissures within Mr. Trump’s own team, with his Treasury secretary, Steven Mnuchin, adamantly opposed to ratcheting up the tariffs and Peter Navarro, a key trade adviser, advocating the higher duties, people with knowledge of the discussions said. Stephen K. Bannon, who left the White House last August, has also been counseling the president to pursue tougher tariffs, according to people familiar with his thinking.
The potential for a 25 percent tax is being fueled by deep frustration within the Trump administration over its unsuccessful attempts to press China to change its trade practices, as well as by a sharp decline in the value of China’s currency. Administration officials have also been concerned that China may be manipulating prices of commodities like soybeans to harm American farmers, and hurting American companies through regulatory practices — for example, detaining shipments of agricultural products in customs until they rot.
kyphysics said:https://www.nytimes.com/2018/08/01/business/china-tariffs-trump.html
Chinese Goods May Face 25% Tariffs, Not 10%, as Trump’s Anger GrowsAnyone think this will happen?
I was listening to a debate between Robert Reich and Trump's economic adviser Stephen Moore last week (can be found on YouTube - pretty cool chat/debate). Moore said something interesting in it. He said Trump's train of thought on a trade war with the likes of a China is that the U.S.' position is the strongest and the other countries need us more than we need them. In other words, their economies require more of our goods and services than we do of theirs to function and grow. He felt that the first person to blink would be other nations.
In any case, even if that is true (not saying it is), certain industries might take a pounding in the short-run.
Yeah, maybe on the "top end" services, there aren't any alternative suppliers (at least none that come close to U.S. expertise), though. I'm not sure.WWGD said:There is also the fact that other countries may try to find suppliers who may choose to negotiate rather than start a trade war. Exports are only around 20% of Chinese GNP AFAIK, so , while it may hurt, the pain is likely bearable.
fresh_42 said:No politics, please. This is a door which can hardly be closed again. Not to mention locked.
Yeah. Almost like we are looking for an exit strategy.skyshrimp said:It's strange how we go to such great lengths to find life on other planets by looking for bodies of water, yet destroy our own ocean ecosystems by ruthlessly bottom trawling and dumping plastic waste into it.
Mark44 said:Yes, very remarkable. The chorus makes me think of the oldie, "Counting Flowers on the Wall," by the Statler Brothers, from back in 1966.
The little girl seems to really get into her playing, dancing around, with a lot of flourishes. Great tune!
dlgoff said:This little girl is remarkable
Thanks. I've been trying to figure her name to see if she has other music vids.OCR said:Her name is Karolina Protsenko...
Yes it is. Looks like it's been edited to zoom in more, but the same performance.OCR said:I'm pretty sure this is the one you posted...
Same tune, different performance. I've only listened/viewed this one where she makes here violin "talk": .OCR said:This is the one Karolina posted three days ago...
Good idea.skyshrimp said:It's hot here in London. Not that hot, but 31c. I like to put a thick wedge of watermelon in the freezer for an hour. It gives it a nice sorbet consistency with a thin, icy shell. So refreshing.
Because the real price for water in Morocco is calculated as zero.It's the giant Moroccan watermelon that gets imported at this time of year. Super sweet. I have no idea how all the local shops can sell it for only 79p a kilo and make a profit.
Quick story. My grandfather hauled ice to customers iceboxes from the age of 14 till he hung up his ice hooks at age 65. This was in Arkansas USA where it's hot and humid in the summers. The ice plant he worked for sold ice cold watermelon and he would always have one on ice in his outside cooler. The variety he brought home was the Black Diamond. Very sweet.skyshrimp said:It's the giant Moroccan watermelon that gets imported at this time of year. Super sweet.
How quickly things change fascinates me. I think of electric fridges as things that all homes have, but your grandfather delivered ice. I think of indoor plumbing as standard, but there are rows and rows of houses near me that have indoor toilets only as a refit.dlgoff said:My grandfather hauled ice to customers iceboxes from the age of 14 till he hung up his ice hooks at age 65
And there is the flip side of older "Where can I buy an internet, one of the latest model? " (An exaggeration, but not by much) . Or the one catching a taxi :"Take me to the Internet, quick".Ibix said:How quickly things change fascinates me. I think of electric fridges as things that all homes have, but your grandfather delivered ice. I think of indoor plumbing as standard, but there are rows and rows of houses near me that have indoor toilets only as a refit.
I was watching a video on YouTube with my son, and he asked me if I watched videos on YouTube with my daddy when I was little. I don't think he could quite grasp the notion that computers couldn't do that back in the day...
I remember a headline from the 90's: "Housewife in Massachusetts Downloaded the Internet!"WWGD said:And there is the flip side of older "Where can I buy an internet, one of the latest model? " (An exaggeration, but not by much) . Or the one catching a taxi :"Take me to the Internet, quick".
I sometimes have to think: "What would have Grandma said, if I had told her what I'm doing here", especially whom I talk to as if it was my neighbor.Ibix said:I don't think he could quite grasp the notion that computers couldn't do that back in the day...
Oddly, I think "chatting about maths/physics/whatever" is perfectly understandable. It's the "here" that's problematic, because we aren't anywhere in particular.fresh_42 said:I sometimes have to think: "What would have Grandma said, if I had told her what I'm doing here", especially whom I talk to as if it was my neighbor.
Yes, that's what she probably couldn't have believed.Ibix said:It's the "here" that's problematic, because we aren't anywhere in particular.
Fortunately I was able to introduced my dad to my first PC; with the 80286 processor. He was amazed as much as me. If he were alive today, I don't think he could handle technology. And he even worked for DuPont.fresh_42 said:I even note it with my parents.
...what?fresh_42 said:Just in case anybody asks himself whether the red sofa still travels: Just heard on the radio that it has be seen on a highway here.
Lay off the exotic mushrooms, Fresh. :).fresh_42 said:Just in case anybody asks himself whether the red sofa still travels: Just heard on the radio that it has be seen on a highway here.
Ibix said:...what?
https://www.goodreads.com/quotes/950420-i-have-detected-he-said-disturbances-in-the-wash"There!" said Ford, shooting out his arm; "there, behind that sofa!"
Arthur looked. Much to his surprise, there was a velvet paisley-covered Chesterfield sofa in the field in front of them. He boggled intelligently at it. Shrewd questions sprang into his mind.
"Why," he said, "is there a sofa in that field?"
"I told you!" shouted Ford, leaping to his feet. "Eddies in the space-time continuum!"
"And this is his sofa, is it?"
http://hitchhikers.wikia.com/wiki/Life,_the_Universe_and_EverythingAfter 4 years of being stranded on prehistoric Earth , Arthur Dent is met by his old friend Ford Prefect, who drags him into a space-time eddy, represented by an anachronistic chesterfield sofa. The two end up at Lord's Cricket Ground two days before the Earth's destruction by the Vogons. Shortly after they arrive, a squad of robots land in a spaceship in the middle of the field and attack the assembled crowd, stealing The Ashes before departing. Another spaceship, the Starship Bistromath, arrives, with Slartibartfast at the helm, who discovers he is too late and requests Arthur and Ford's help.
https://www.goodreads.com/quotes/385444-arthur-felt-happy-he-was-terribly-pleased-that-the-day“Arthur felt happy. He was terribly pleased that the day was for once working out so much according to plan. Only twenty minutes ago he had decided he would go mad, and now here he was already chasing a Chesterfield sofa across the fields of prehistoric Earth.”