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jvkv Cold temps set stage for ice storm, severe chill across U.S.
« le: Décembre 13, 2024, 10:45:09 am »
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 A judge rejected an attorney s request to subpoena former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright and others to show that the United States engages in terrorism.   The lawyer, David Baugh, represents Mohamed Rashed Daoud Al- Owhali, one of four men charged in the the Aug. 7, 1998, attacks on U.S. embassies in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, and Nairobi, Kenya, that killed 224 people, including 12 Americans.   Baugh made the requests during a hearing Thursday focused on what evidence would be presented if his client is convicted and stanley cup  a jury must decide whether he deserves the death penalty.   Baugh told U.S. District Judge Leonard Sand that in some cases, what the United States calls terrorism is actually  warfare between established states and non-established stanley termos  states.     Whenever you try to coerce a political result by bombing and killing people, that is classified under the federal code as terrorism,  he said.  Unfortunately, we do it, they do it, everybody does it. We all attempt to coerce political results through the use of force and the destruction and death of innocents.            The judge disagreed, saying Baugh s reasoning could be applied as well to the 1995 bombing of a federal building in Oklahoma City, which killed 168 people. Timothy McVeigh, 32, was sentenc stanley cup ed to death for the bombing.    Stating the equation that way ... puts McVeigh on the par with United States law enforcement,  the judge said.   He refused to let Baugh subpoena Albright or other current and former go Xoks San Francisco Delays Rollout Of ID Card Program
 If you ;ve ever been to a photography set, you ;ve probably noticed how much time the photographer and their assistants take to perfectly position the lighting鈥攐nly to have their efforts foiled when the model moves. That   why researchers at MIT are proposing using drones as lighting, as they can constantly ensure they ;re always in the perfect spot.     The research not only involves creating drones that can be easily positioned and then will autonomously maintain that position in relation to the movement of the camera and photographer. It   also working to develop sensor-equipped drones and algorithms that are smart enough to look at how the lighting falls on a subject, and then constantly adjust its position to achieve a desired effect no matter how often they move. And battery life aside, the lighting drones would make on-location setups far easier than they are now by eliminating the need for weighted stands and having to run cabling to a power source. A photographer could easily map out where they want each light positioned, and hit go. The drones would stanley quencher  then automatically maneuver themselves int stanley quencher o position, and automatically make adjustments as the  stanley mugs ambient lighting conditions changed. They certainly wouldn ;t completely eliminate the need for assistants, though. After all, getting a drone to get your coffee order exactly right is a whole other branch of research. [MIT via TechCrunch]                                                        D