This is an interesting article about what is considered the most remote point on earth:
https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2024/11/point-n...
A lot of satellite debris is targeted there but of course we cannot expect all space debris to be so controlled and in this case SpaceX went for a region that was quite remote.
We make an IoT device that is used for precision agriculture data collection out in the field, close to the crop that is being grown. We specialize in capturing spectral data related to plant growth and can also cat as a hub for connected sensors from other companies measuring complementary data.
Good question. I would assume that with the visualization being defined by the public-key of the server, this cannot be use to reverse-engineer the private key. Also, the linked paper (I just read the summary) does try to attempt this and partially succeeds and talks more about the implication.
Regarding the last point of US putting balloons over China, that page has the following two paragraphs:
"Worldwide, there are about 1,300 upper-air stations. Observations are made by the NWS at 92 stations - 69 in the conterminous United States, 13 in Alaska, nine in the Pacific, and one in Puerto Rico.
NWS supports the operation of 10 other stations in the Caribbean. Through international agreements data are exchanged between countries worldwide."
This seems to suggest that NWS does not operate those over China but the map simply shows all the balloon weather stations that are part of this system.
One of the prerequisites is that the candidate does not otherwise need a visa to travel Iceland. Which means that foreign nationals who reside in the US and work in the kind of jobs that will meet the criteria Iceland is looking for will not be eligible for this.
Would you ming sharing what you are looking for. I work for Arable (arable.com) and am interested in your use case, both to see if our product helps and to learn about new requirements.
Well I'm not sure this will help from a business perspective but here it goes: my father is reaching 65 and he's retiring in a year or so. He's an electronics engineer (and I'm a comp. eng). He doesn't want to stop working, so an idea is to buy a small, cheap, country side property (around 20000m2) to grow easy crops and have a relaxed but active lifestyle. I'll learn some stuff to help him have an easier time managing said crops (sensors for soil check etc) so I'm looking for DIY easy stuff or cheap things.
This particular requirement is tied to operating what's called a single-brand retail outlet in India. That would be Apple-owned Apple Stores. It is not clear to me if this is a requirement for foreign manufacturers who are manufacturing/assembling products in India and then exporting them.
The dates in this dataset are "decision" date, not the application date.
In that year, there was a fast forward movement in backlog of India's GC application... Green cards have a per country cap-- at the end of fiscal year, USCIS can use the "unused" GC quota of other countries for the backlogged countries. This is why you see that "priority date" for India stays at a fixed place (e.g., 2005 for EB2 India) for most of the year, and then suddenly moves forward at the end of fiscal year.
I regularly use Muni line 29. At least a couple of times a week, commute hour buses do this. Usually it works out okay for two reasons:
1. The next bus is right around the corner or I have my transit App to give an idea about delay if I cannot see the next bus yet. generally the delay is of teh order of 2 ~ 3 minutes.
2. The next bus is also has less people and the journey is thus more pleasant.
Things do screw up at times though. This weekend, a driver did not stop and indicated that there was a bus following him. The App showed the next bus was 20 minutes behind. I had to catch a different bus after that. I hope this does not happen on working days.
That is indeed the case. The 'at the rate of' usage was quite popular in arithmetic problems even in the early 90s when most of the population was unaware of emails. My parents still say it as at the rate of when reading aloud an email address.