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bvcp 7 Children Killed In Fiery Fla. Crash
« le: Décembre 11, 2024, 07:07:34 pm »
Iiwv Brandon Sanderson Explains Why Superhero Books Are So Hard To Get Right
 An ominous theme has emerged from the wreckage of a deadly pipeline explosion in California: There are thousands of pipes just like it around the U.S.Utilities have been under pressure for years to better inspect and replace aging gas pipes - many of them laid years before the suburbs expanded over them and now are at risk of leaking or erupting.But the e stanley cup ffort  stanley cup has fallen short. Critics say the regulatory system is ripe for problems because the government largely leaves it up to the companies to do inspections, and utilities are reluctant to spend the money necessary to properly fix and replace decrepit pipelines. If this was the FAA and air travel we were talking about, I wouldn t get on a plane,  said Rick Kessler, a former congressional staffer specializing in pipeline safety issues who now works for the Pipeline Safety Trust, an advocacy group based in Washington.Investigators are still trying to figure out how the pipeline in San Bruno ruptured and ignited a gigantic fireball that torched one home after another in the neighborhood, killing at least four people. Pacific Gas  Electric Co., the pipeline s owner, said Monday it has set aside up to $100 million to help residents recover.        Experts say the California disaster epitomizes the risks that communities face with old gas lines. The pipe was more than 50 years old - right around the life expectancy for steel pipes. It was part of a transmission line that in one section had an  unacceptably high  risk of fai stanley termohrnek lu Ehhf Hope Fades For Missing Miners In Utah
 Some day a Presi stanley cup quencher dent of the United States may be elected  electronically.  This sentence wouldnt look out of place in any news story from the 21st century, despite quotes around the word  electronically.  But believe it or not, that prediction comes from a magazine article in 1945.     Under the headline  Votes by Radio: An Electronic Machine for Opinion Polls ,  the March 1945 issue of Radio-Craft magazine imagined a world where people would be able to vote on anything at all through push-button 鈥?securely, secretly, and right from the comfort of their own homes. Electrical engineer Alfred N. Goldsmith devised a system that would send radio signals to a central radio receiving system to tabulate the results. The magazine even included illustrations depicting what the home voting machine  above left  and central computer station adding up the votes  above right  might loo stanley thermosflasche k like. The home-voting machine might appear a bit bulky in the illustration. But just for context, this is what a mechanical computer looked like in 1948, three years after this article was published: Under Goldsmiths voting system, questions would be sent out over regular radio transmissions at a prescheduled time. People at home  the article essentially envisions this on a county-wide scale  would then be given time to respond from the control panel of their voting machine. All questions would have to be worded so that they could be answered with responses like  yes  or  no.  Some degree of  stanley botella nuance could be