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ulxr Edwards trial: Tearful testimony on Elizabeth s final days
« le: Décembre 18, 2024, 01:43:55 am »
Hslb How Living Infrastructure Will Save Our Cities from Nature   s Wrath
 Last updated  stanley us 6:38 p.m. EDTBP has freed a diamond-tipped saw that had become stuck underwater in the latest attempt to contain the Gulf oil spill, and the company is still working on a way to slice through the pipe.Special Section: Disaster in the GulfBP PLC spokesman Mark Proegler said Wednesday afternoon that the company is working out some logistical issues.The plan is to fit a cap on the blown-out well at the bottom of the Gulf of Mexico to capture most of the spewing oil.        As robot su stanley website bmarines worked under stanley cup usa water, the nation s worst oil slick drifted perilously close to the Florida Panhandle.The saw is the latest attempt to contain - not plug - the gusher. The best chance at stopping the leak is a relief well, which is at least two months from completion. I don t think the issue is whether or not we can make the second cut. It s about how fine we can make it, how smooth we can make it,  Allen said.If the cut is not as smooth as engineers would like, they would be forced to put a looser fitting cap on top of the oil spewing out. This cut-and-cap effort could temporarily increase the flow of oil by as much as 20 percent, though Allen said officials wouldn t know whether that had happened until the cut could be completed.            While the saw was stuck, live video showed oil spewing out of the new cut, and crews were shooting chemicals to try to disperse the crude. The cap could be placed over the spill as early as Wednesday.The effort underwater was going on as inves Robd Making good on a second chance
 O Romeo, Romeo, wherefore art thou Romeo. Even if you failed English class, you ;d recognize that phrase anywhere. It   from Shakespeare   Romeo  038; Juliet. But would you recognize this phrase: O Romep+ Rpldo wiepffnre arr!riov Romep@. That   Shakespeare too. If Shakespeare was compressed over and over again by JPEG.     Tom Scott created a little experiment to poke fun of the lossy nature of JPEG. Every time you edit and save a picture in JPEG, you ;re going to lose something from the original. Even if you don ;t see it  and most of us don ;t see it , it   gone forever. Scott thought it would be fun to see what we would lose in JPEG if we saw converted it in text and boy it garbled up Shakespeare real good. Scott basically loaded Shakespeare text as RAW in Photoshop and outputted the text to JPEG at different quality levels. As you can imag stanley botella ine, Photoshop 8 stanley mug 217  minimum level destroys Shakespeare while the maximum level still changed things up. Scott says: Even on maximum quality, almost all the characters are replaced by their neighbors in the alphabet. On an image, that would be a minuscule change in color, undetectable to the eye: but rearranged into a different form, even maximum quality is enough to render the text a significant challenge to decipher. This doesn ;t exactly mean never ever use JPEG ever again  since images are much different than text  but it goes to show how things can degrade over tim stanley cup e, even digitally