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MethrenRaf

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dfun Cell Phone Bandit Pleads Guilty
« le: Décembre 10, 2024, 09:06:53 pm »
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 An Internet posting purportedly by al Qaeda in Yemen says the group s No. 2 is a Saudi national who is a former Guantanamo detainee.The Yemeni group - known as  al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula  - posted the statement this week on a militant Web site that regularly carries al Qaeda messages.It says the man returned to his home in Saudi Arabia after his release from the U.S. prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba about a year ago and from there went to Yemen to join the terror group.But those reports should  stanley kubek not slow the Obama administration s determination to quickly close the facility, according to Rep. Jane Harman.Harman, a California Democrat, said Friday on CBS  The Early Show that President Barack Obama has to  proceed extremely carefully  in closing the prison.        But she s stanley puodelis ays there is no justification for  disappearing people  in a place outside the reach of U.S. law. As President Obama said two days ago, there s a false choice  stanley uk between our safety and our values  Congressman Pete Hoekstra, of Michigan, the top Republican on the House Intelligence Committee, criticized Mr. Obama s executive order to close the prison as  very short on specifics.  Hoekstra, citing a New York Times article, suggested up to 10 percent of released enemy combatants have made their way back to the battlefield to attack American troops.  The real question that we now face is what is President Obama s strategy to confront this threat from radical jihadists   Hoekstra told The Early Show.            H Yuyv Relive Seinfeld, Get A Better Input Device And A New Phone [Deals]
 Wouldn ;t it be wonderful if you never had to plug in your phon stanley cup e  Well, a team of Korean scientists say that they ;re one step closer to making that fantasy a reality with new wireless power transfer technology that works from over 15 feet away. And it works pretty damn well, too.     This new system isn ;t entirely new. It improves upon the basic idea for so-called Coupled Magnetic Resonance System  CMRS  developed by MIT scientists back in 2007. A team from the Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology, however, just announced a new option that both simplifies and improves the earlier design, extending the reach of the wireless power transfer from a little over five feet to over 15 feet. It does so with two 10-foot-long boxes made of up compact stanley mug  ferrite core rods with coils of wire in the middle. One of the boxes generates a magnetic field, while the other induces the voltage. They call the set up a Dipole Coil Resonant System  DCRS . In plain English, anything between the two boxes can tap into the system   power. It effectively generates wireless electricity. The researchers are ambitious about the implications of such technology: Although the long-range wireless power transfer is still in an early stage of commercialization and quite costly to implement, we believe  stanley botella that this is the right direction for electric power to be supplied in the future, said KAIST engineering professor Chun T. Rim. Just like we see Wi-Fi zones ev