January 18, 2008 at 1:41 pm
· Filed under MythTv
Sharp LC-46D62U Notes
Enter service menu by first unplugging set, then while holding both input button and volume down button, plug TV back in. Within about 5 seconds, the set will power up (without pressing the “on” button); keep holding the input and volume down buttons until a small “K” appears in a box on the left side of the screen. Then press and hold the channel down and vol down buttons at the same time to enter the service menu.
I’m assuming that my Sharp will use the same procedure, even though it isn’t a 46″.
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January 15, 2008 at 9:32 am
· Filed under General
Study traces origins of syphilis in Europe to New World
New evidence from the jungles of Guyana suggests Christopher Columbus and his crewmates carried syphilis-causing bacteria from America to Europe, triggering a massive epidemic that killed more than five million people there.
Smallpox went from Europe to North America, syphilis went the other way.
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January 13, 2008 at 1:53 pm
· Filed under Gardening
Minerals Industry - Energy and Resources - Government of Saskatchewan
Saskatchewan has the largest potash industry in the world, accounting for about 33% of the world’s trade in potash. The potash reserves in Saskatchewan are massive. The exceptional size and quality of ore reserves combine with the lowest production costs in the world. By conservative estimates, Saskatchewan could supply world demand at current levels for several hundred years.
The earth has potash (the K in NPK) reserves for several hundred years. After that, where does it come from? Generally the organic source for potash is from wood ash, but I doubt that burning large areas of forest would be looked upon as a positive by the public.
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January 13, 2008 at 11:19 am
· Filed under General
There is a thread on the fool.com boards discussing a fair tax, ie a simple sales tax on everything, and income tax would then be abolished. People much smarter than I am are talking about why it wouldn’t work:
TMF: Re: fair tax / Atheist Fools
Wealthier people certainly use the roads to get goods delivered to them, don’t they? That big house, with the marble from Vermont and the lumber from Oregon? Didn’t that come in via roads? Those 5 big screen TV’s, didn’t those come on a truck? In this society, if you spend more, you are surely using the roads to procure those goods, aren’t you? Speaking of “wealthy”, it’s clear that most of the corporations in America are owned by the wealthy, or at least “not the poor”. Both private and public corporations, I would guess, since “the poor” don’t tend to own much of anything, stocks included. Wouldn’t you say that corporations make pretty good use of the roads? From General Motors to Amazon.com, without those “good roads” their business would be very different, wouldn’t it?
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January 8, 2008 at 9:25 am
· Filed under Computers
The Daily, Tuesday, January 8, 2008. Study: Scientists and engineers and urban growth
The mix in university-educated workers mattered. Scientists and engineers are often seen to play a catalytic role regarding employment growth in cities. Here, the study found that the share of workers in science and engineering occupations, the “left brain” of cities, is closely connected to employment growth when these workers are located in cities with large and diverse pools of university-educated workers.
Statscan shows an interesting trend on growth rates in cities, where the employment grew by 2.0% in areas of higher concentrations of university graduates, vs 1.6% for lower concentrations. Compound that annually over 20 years and you get 49% growth vs 37% growth.
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January 7, 2008 at 11:28 am
· Filed under General
Copyright quagmire
Our customers shouldn’t have to worry about being sued for private, non-commercial activities. Canada is not a litigious “zero tolerance” regime. If the law is amended to facilitate such litigation here, experience suggests that it will surely happen. We agree with Steven Page of the Barenaked Ladies who says, “We think lawsuits … would be terrible for the music business in Canada. It’s short-sighted to say ‘See you in court’ one day and ‘See you at Massey Hall’ the next.”
Seeing the editorial in the Sun from Ron Wilson of Best Buy has floored me. I never expected to see a retailer weigh in on the customers’ side here, but I guess it makes sense. They want to sell electronics and media, and having a restrictive Copyright Act will reduce people’s willingness to buy new equipment if there is a risk of incompatibilities between DRM systems.
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January 4, 2008 at 8:57 am
· Filed under General
No sign of slowing down: Ont. man, 85, sets street-racing record
An 85-year-old man has sped into the record books as the oldest person charged under Ontario’s street-racing legislation. An officer on patrol north of Toronto spotted an Oldsmobile Intrigue zipping through the eastbound lanes of Highway 407 on Wednesday morning, Ontario Provincial Police Sgt. Cam Woolley told CBCNews.ca on Thursday.
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