@sehe I don't care if I have the permission. What are they gonna do, come after me? In the case of Sokolov, I know he gives zero shits; he virtually never visited a recording studio. All his recordings were made live at recitals, and the vast majority of them are bootlegs, i.e. there are no official copyright holders. I could look for a bootleg recording of his Brahms Ballades, but this is a good, clean recording, so it does the job.
> GS: I am being constantly recorded. Every programme has been taped at least twice or three times. All the tapes are now in Paris with Opus 111. WB: When will these be released?? I can tell you that I have friends all over the world, most of whom worship you and can only think of “more, more, more!” GS: Diffiult to say, it is my fault. I should go to Paris, listen to the tapes and approve them.
He doesn't even care about making money off his recordings.
@sehe What I care about is making more people appreciate great artists' work.
@sehe What do you frickin' mean? Clearly, Youtube has detected that I used copyrighted music in my video. And the copyright holder has, according to my above quotation, decided to monetarize off it.
And regardless, I made the choice, and I feel good about it.
:-)
And I am certain that he would approve of what I've done. Tell you what, next time I'll visit his recital in Hamburg, I'll try to catch him after the show and ask.
I think it's doable, especially given that my mom knows him from the Moscow Conservatory
This is my night cap. Fond memories of that piece.
@Columbo Nice. That's more like it. I've only ever heard that from repeated sightreading it myself. It was one of those pieces I'd only play when I was "borrowing" an apartment of a co-student to look after his cats piano
Looks like I have my day in music set for tomorrow.
[Freely admitting I love this general availability of excellent classical recordings.]
@sehe So do I. It's such a privilege. It's what got me back into playing, too.
@sehe I managed to play the grand in one of our college's music practice rooms so loudly that someone could hear it through two windows in his room, and reported it to the staff
So now they'll install proper isolation
lol
There's a small period of time where I can't touch a proper grand on a regular basis now :(
Fortunately, I'll get home on the 11th, where a freshly tuned and restored grand is waiting
@Columbo Yes and no. The problem basically comes down to the fact that even though the odds of winning aren't particularly high, the profit when he does win can be pretty huge. So, he just needs to take on enough cases to win a case once or twice a year (or so) to make a really decent living out of it.
The other big problem is that juries all too frequently just get things wrong. Attorneys pretty routinely do tests on things like this. One thing they find is that they can put together a test case where the evidence is heavily stacked in one direction. so any competent jury would have to find in one direction--and mock juries will find in the wrong direction something like 15-20% of the time. So even taking on cases with no real evidence in their favor isn't necessarily a huge problem.
There is a couple in the neighbourhood who have a couple of samoyeds, not sure they are breeders. I used to always bump into them when jogging. The dogs are absolutely beautiful. But one always barked when I went pass.
New rule of coding practice, each line should contain 2^n spaces, each tab should be 2 spaces, each variable name should be each 4, 8 or 16 letters long </trollololo>
@BartekBanachewicz I seem to remember at least some versions auto-saving, but it's been long enough that I'm quite uncertain about that. For quite a while back then, I mostly used Microsoft's "Programmer's Work Bench" as my text editor. It was strange, but versatile (actually, I think by rms' definition, it probably qualified as an emacs, though I never looked at all the dark corners to verify that).
People in the US don't like the $100 billion dollar (a year?) fund, although its not clear exactly where the money comes from,or if its possible to get that much money
This is a list of countries by external debt, which is the total public and private debt owed to nonresidents repayable in internationally accepted currencies, goods or services, where the public debt is the money or credit owed by any level of government, from central to local, and the private debt the money or credit owed by private households or private corporations based in the country under consideration.
For informational purposes, several non-sovereign entities are also included in this list.
Note that while a country may have a relatively large external debt (either in absolute or per capita...
External debts: 1 United States 18,235,489,000,000 31 December 2016[1] 2 United Kingdom 7,554,815,500,000 31 December 2016[2] 3 France 5,104,831,200,000 31 December 2016[3]
The confusing part of the $100 billion is the source. I think the aim was to create a sovereign wealth fund thing, which would pay interest, or some other nonsense. But honestly I don't know enough to figure it out.
@Mikhail Ellipses. Very solid reasoning. You're now stating a tenuous observation (with plenty of really forgiving interpretations), however, you were saying something quite different before. You should be looking to remove ellipses, not add more.
@Mikhail People can't gauge the scale of "100 billion dollars". It sounds big. And when you put it next to "if it's possible to get that much money", it all sounds plausible, but in reality it's bollocks.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Its hard to measure, for a example a large part of US government spending is non-discretionary, which means the government is legally obligate to spend. $100 billion is more than the sum of federal housing (HUD), education, EPA, and some other agencies. BUT the messed up thing is that its not clear if its money that US government spends or just a financial vehicle for investment.
The Pentagon Wars is a 1998 dark comedy film from HBO, produced by Howard Meltzer and Gary Daigler, directed by Richard Benjamin, that stars Kelsey Grammer, Cary Elwes, and Richard Schiff. It is based on the book The Pentagon Wars: Reformers Challenge the Old Guard by Colonel James G. Burton, USAF (retired).
The film describes the dishonesty associated with the 17-year development of the M2 Bradley fighting vehicle.
Tagline: They aimed to build the ultimate fighting machine. They missed.
== Plot ==
Major General Partridge (Kelsey Grammer) is in charge of the Bradley project, that has been...
> He delves into the mountains of paper documenting the Bradley's history and comes to the conclusion that it is "a troop transport that can't carry troops, a reconnaissance vehicle that's too conspicuous to do reconnaissance, and a quasi-tank that has less armor than a snowblower, but has enough ammo to take out half of D.C."
Also the pie chart is messed up because things like education are mostly local spending, and vary state-to-state. And actual US states don't have much military spending.
humans are really smart - spending way more on things that could potentially destroy us than technologies that can help us escaping it when the potential disaster happens
Lista państw świata według wydatków na wojskowość – poniżej znajduje się lista państw według wydatków wojskowych z porównawczym uwzględnieniem Unii Europejskiej. Lista oparta jest na Sztokholmskim Międzynarodowym Instytucie Badań nad Pokojem. SIPRI jest bazą danych, która oblicza wydatki na zbrojenia w poszczególnych krajach świata. Obejmuje również wydatki wojskowe jako procent produktu krajowego brutto (PKB) w 2008 roku.
== 2010 ==
Poniżej znajduje się tabela z listą 15 krajów o najwyższym stopniu wydatków wojskowych w 2010 r,
== Zobacz też ==
Lista państw nieposiadających sił zbrojny...
The United States Climate Alliance is a group of three states in the United States that are committed to upholding the 2015 Paris Agreement on climate change within their borders. It was formed on June 1, 2017, by Governors Jay Inslee (Washington), Andrew Cuomo (New York), and Jerry Brown (California) as a result of U.S. President Donald Trump's decision to withdraw the United States from the agreement. A press statement released by Inslee states that "New York, California and Washington, representing over one-fifth of U.S. Gross Domestic Product, are committed to achieving the U.S. goal of reducing...
@R.MartinhoFernandes But people that aren't too versed in US politics don't understand that much of the opposition to "green" efforts comes from the Obama years where they invested in a lot of money into failed ventures. For example, Solyndra. In reality it was supporting the industry of one region over another.
I was "impressed" by his ability to stay on topic for quite long. Apparently, if he gets carte-blanche to rant about "They're are stealing our wealth" he can go on a bit.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Not sure what bickering means. I think the justification is that it doesn't benefit the part of the country that elected Trump - and that a large investment fund that will take that money and spend it on technology not from the USA (or not from his supporters' states).
The only action of "reality bending" is that its not clear where or how the $100 billion dollar fund is going to be made. Otherwise its a politician trying his best to deliver on an item he campaign on.
In economics, the free-rider problem occurs when those who benefit from resources, goods, or services do not pay for them, which results in an underprovision of those goods or services. For example, a free-rider may frequently ask for available parking lots (public goods) from the ones who have already paid for them, in order to benefit from free parking. At the end of the day, one may see that the free-rider have used the parking even more than the others without paying a single penny. The free-rider problem is the question of how to limit free riding and its negative effects in these situations...
@Telkitty I don't think so, because pollution is bad in both the long term (depletion of natural resources) and the short term (protests). So, I think all countries, even poor ones would benefit from tighter restrictions.
@Telkitty And if they grow to 2000 people with high technology there will be little global warming. Its not about people as much as its about people do. For example, coal/gas power plants make no sense when you can build nuclear.
A nuclear and radiation accident is defined by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) as "an event that has led to significant consequences to people, the environment or the facility." Examples include lethal effects to individuals, large radioactivity release to the environment, or reactor core melt." The prime example of a "major nuclear accident" is one in which a reactor core is damaged and significant amounts of radioactivity are released, such as in the Chernobyl disaster in 1986.
The impact of nuclear accidents has been a topic of debate since the first nuclear reactors were constructed...
@sehe Could be, but time isn't strechable (at least, not by a school teacher). I don't see how they could integrate that homework part into the class time schedule
Without having to cut the learning material somehow
@Mikhail At a global scale, the FAO has recently estimated that livestock (including poultry) accounts for about 14.5 percent of anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions estimated as 100-year CO2 equivalents.[38] A previous widely cited FAO report using somewhat more comprehensive analysis had estimated 18 percent - source: wikipedia
It's what has been happening - in mild measures - in the Netherlands. It's partly motivated by more dual income families, so kids spending more time at school because no parent is home happened anyways
The Voluntary Human Extinction Movement (VHEMT) is an environmental movement that calls for all people to abstain from reproduction to cause the gradual voluntary extinction of humankind. VHEMT supports human extinction primarily because, in the group's view, it would prevent environmental degradation. The group states that a decrease in the human population would prevent a significant amount of human-caused suffering. The extinctions of non-human species and the scarcity of resources required by humans are frequently cited by the group as evidence of the harm caused by human overpopulation.
VHEMT...
@Rerito I personally don't view this "privilege" of "equal employment" as a net win (in practice it's a requirement to work twice as much for the same socio-economic opportunities. But I digress)
@Telkitty You sent me a link to something about meat production - perhaps everybody should become vegetarian. Nothing to do with population but rather dietary preferences.
@sehe I agree. However, since society seems to be evolving this way, we should at least try to adapt our infrastructures or w/e to these new standards of living (regardless of our adherence to that standards)
I've wasted ENORMOUS amounts of time. But thinking of it that way would just lead to (more) depression. I had fun doing many of those things. That's a strangely human reprieve
@sehe Yeah I mean it's not that I'm now despairing because I went to school. I just look back at it and think "well I could've done different/better" but that's about it.