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lykj New Wildfire Erupts In Arizona
« le: Décembre 30, 2024, 05:16:45 pm »
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 The election of Democratic Nominee Barac stanley cups uk k Obama as the 44th president of the United States triggered mixed reactions amongst members of militant Islamist Internet forums.Some saw Obama s victory as a triumph for al Qaeda s leader Osama bin Laden, with one member even claiming al Qaeda played a role in the elections.  America has elected Obama because al Qaeda decided so, the same way they elected Bush in 2004, also because al Qaeda had decided so,  said  Al Hakim  in a posting on al Hesbah forum.Others expressed scepticism about Obama being able to bring about the  stanley quencher change he proclaimed.   Don t get too excited. Obama is nothing but the  black gloves  that the Americans will use to strike against Muslims,  said one member who goes by the name  Nasr al Islam. One member who uses the name  The Supporters of God  predicted that Obama s victory will make it possible for militant groups to declare a truce with the U.S.  Now that Obama has won the vote, I think it s time to declare a truce with the Romans in the United States after they ve lost their w stanley tumblers ar on Islam. God willing, the leaders of the victorious bloc shall now order the renewal of the truce.    Al Qaeda organization has not issued any official statements so far to comment on the elections. Senior al Qaeda leader Abu Yahya al Libi had referred to  the defeat of Bush and his party  in a video recorded in early October. In 2004, Bin Laden issued a video addressed to the American people days before the elections and said it do Lmtk This video is so viscerally satisfying, my body is actually tingling
 3D printing and additive manufacturing may be destined to change how we make and acquire objects forever. But it   also spurring a shadow revolution鈥攐ne that focuses on how to stop us from replicating.     Concerns over intellectual property are as old as the idea of 3D printing itself. Here   how the nightmare goes: A consumer wants to buy your product鈥攁n iPod, let   say. But, thanks to the magic of 3D scanning and printing, they can just make their own version, using an iPod borrowed, scanned, and replicated from a friend. Then they can copy that again鈥攁nd again鈥攁nd now they ;re in the electronics business! So, spurred by concerns such as these, companies are struggling to come up with reliable ways to protect their products from replication. There are plenty of precedents. New Scientist points outthe practice of record companies that embed copyright information into mp3s at a frequency too high for human ears to hear. Or the fact that most modern banknotes are printed with a pattern ca water bottle stanley lled the E gourde stanley URion constellation, which can shut down color copiers that detect it being scanned. In the U.S. twenty-dollar bill, this pattern is represented by the tiny yellow 20s: In theory, 3D objects could be protected the same way: By including a pattern or mark in a product   surface that   too small for human eyes to see, but which contains a c stanley quencher ommand that will shut down the 3D scanner or printer being used to copy it. BLDGBLOG considers ano