When I'm riding my motorcycle through traffic, the smell of MJ from some cars is really obvious, you can smell it some 40-50 yards behind. If you smoke it a lot, as with tobacco, I bet your car will smell of it whether you're smoking at the time or not. So, I'm inclined to believe this, though I expect pinpointing the target would be more difficult from a car where you're not so exposed to the passing air.
Microsoft may have changed, but they're still there to make money, and screw over Linux. They keep on trying on a new sheepskin coat every few months, but deep down there's still a big, bad, capitalist wolf after Linux's FUD and guts. How much do you think MS would care if there was a 'mysterious' intermittant 'problem' with a lot of open-source repos that caused a lot of issues for the Linux devs?
By the time we get to a position where your car knows that there are other vehicles with higher value occupants, surely it, and all the other vehicles, will have enough situational awareness to NEVER get into an accident in the first place? Otherwise, how could the vehicle even attempt to make such a decision in the first place? Even a wildly out of control vehicle will be reported over the intercar network so those ahead of it can take avoiding action.
So amusing that three of the top five results for him on duckduckgo are Techdirt articles. The other two are the FTC page detailing a complaint regarding a scamming company and a linkedin page. I won't mention what the other links lead to, but no wonder Thomas Goolnik wants his history erased.
I have to agree. The W3C can decree as many standards as it likes, but if general opinion among developers is that it no longer deserves that role, it's standards won't get supported. Who fancies starting the New Open Markup Standards commitee? I think NOMS has a long way to go!
The way I see it, the moment the chemical leaves the pipe, it leaves the company's control, and at that point there's no difference between this and a chemical spill. I don't see any company being able to deny govt. agencies access to the recipe of what they've just poured into a water-course on the basis of 'trade secrets'
From what I've read he gave away information about the underpants bomb, which could have only come from a small group of people, thus endangering the life of an undercover informant.
I believe Samsung also manufacture that lovely "retina" display that Apple use. How can anyone not understand that suing your own supplier will only increase your own costs?
On the post: Appeals Court Says It's Entirely Possible For Cops To Pinpoint Marijuana Odors In Moving Cars
My POV
When I'm riding my motorcycle through traffic, the smell of MJ from some cars is really obvious, you can smell it some 40-50 yards behind. If you smoke it a lot, as with tobacco, I bet your car will smell of it whether you're smoking at the time or not. So, I'm inclined to believe this, though I expect pinpointing the target would be more difficult from a car where you're not so exposed to the passing air.
On the post: Three Takes On Microsoft Acquiring Github
Little pig, little pig.
On the post: ICE Finally Gets The Nationwide License Plate Database It's Spent Years Asking For
Re: Constitutional right to bear vehicles.
On the post: ICE Finally Gets The Nationwide License Plate Database It's Spent Years Asking For
Re: bigger picture
On the post: ICE Finally Gets The Nationwide License Plate Database It's Spent Years Asking For
On the post: FBI Arrested NSA Contractor For Walking Off With 'Highly Classified Information'
The big question.
On the post: People Support Ethical Automated Cars That Prioritize The Lives Of Others -- Unless They're Riding In One
It's a strawman...
On the post: Facebook Has Lost The War It Declared On Fake News
Re: Damn you PETA
On the post: Thomas Goolnik Really Wants To Be Forgotten: Google Disappears Our Post About His Right To Be Forgotten Request
On the post: Switzerland Could Offer Snowden Safe Conduct To Testify About Surveillance, But Accepting Seems Risky
Have they not heard of...
On the post: Switzerland Could Offer Snowden Safe Conduct To Testify About Surveillance, But Accepting Seems Risky
Re: Re: Re:
On the post: Switzerland Could Offer Snowden Safe Conduct To Testify About Surveillance, But Accepting Seems Risky
Re: Intercepted in flight
On the post: Not Cool: MPAA Joins The W3C
On the post: Energy Companies Trying To Abuse Intellectual Property Law To Hinder Research Into Impact Of Fracking
On the post: Every Time A State Tries To 'Protect The Children' Online, It Makes Things Worse
On the post: 9-Year-Old Sneaks Onto Flight; TSA Blames The Government Shutdown, Then Says It Did Its Job Just Fine
Re: Re:
On the post: DOJ Puts Another Leaker In Jail: The War On Whistleblowers Rolls On
Re: Whistleblower
On the post: Verizon Steps In On Prenda Case; Says Brett Gibbs Never Informed Them Of Judge's Order Killing Subpoenas
Re: Caused to be Served
On the post: DailyDirt: Storing Data On DNA
Covert data transfer
On the post: Apple Learns That Suing A Key Supplier May Not Be So Smart; Samsung Jacks Up Prices On Apple
Not only, but also...
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