The Jan. 6 committee: What it has done and where it is headed
Posted: Thu Apr 07, 2022 12:48 pm
“Eighteen died -- eight men and 10 women. At the moment, we are still digging through the rubble,” the Odessa regional administration said in a statement. It was the deadliest single strike so far of the day reported by Ukrainian officials, who had earlier put the death toll across the country at around 50, including about 10 civilians. The attack struck a military base about 100 kilometres north of Odessa, in a region near Ukraine’s border with Moldova. UEFA are to hold an emergency meeting on Friday to “evaluate the situation” concerning Russia’s invasion of Ukraine with the former set to host the Champions League final in Saint Petersburg in May. UEFA said in a statement their executive committee would “take all necessary decisions”. Lithuanian President Gitanas Nauseda on Thursday signed a decree declaring a state of emergency in the Baltic country in response to Russia’s military attack on Ukraine. The measure, in effect until March 10, allows for a more flexible use of state reserve funds and increased border protection, giving border guards greater authorities to stop and search individuals and vehicles in border areas.
We are taking this opportunity to continue the dialogue at Analysis Group about the impacts of everyday and systemic racism, and the ways in which we can all support our Black colleagues in feeling fully included. As part of this celebration, we are thrilled to be hosting two guest speakers in the next month - Dr. Maryam Jernigan-Noesi and Michelle Silverthorn - who will speak to members of our organization about bias, allyship, and mental health. Applications to our first-ever Rise@AG Externship are open! Rise@AG is a week-long, case-shadowing program designed to introduce academically curious sophomores (class of 2024) from underrepresented backgrounds to the world of economic consulting. All costs will be covered (travel, accommodations, meals, etc.), and each extern will receive a stipend. While the program will take place in person in the Boston office, at the end of the week, externs will be offered a final-round interview for a 2023 summer internship with the AG office of their choice (US only).
The voter is given a "smart card" -- basically a credit-card-type device with a microchip in it -- that activates the electronic voting machine. The voter casts his or her vote by touching a name on the screen. If the model includes printout capabilities (which is required by more than half of U.S. If the printout is correct, the voter inserts it into voting machine before leaving the booth to complete the voting process. In non-print-out models, the voter leaves the booth after cast his or her vote on the touchscreen. Once the polling place has closed, an election official inserts a supervisor's smart card into the voting machine and enters a password to access the tally of all votes on that machine. Election officials either transmit the tallies electronically, via a network connection, to a central location for the county, or else carry the memory card by hand to the central location. Election officials point out that there are many safeguards in place to make sure no one tampers with the voting machines -- this is an election we're talking about, after all.
US President Joe Biden has vowed the world will "hold Russia accountable" for the invasion, and is expected to spell out a set of additional sanctions, which were once meant to deter such an assault. Biden and European leaders have previously warned that Russia would suffer serious consequences should Putin move ahead with a wider invasion. But that has not stopped Russia from continuing to bolster its military positions. In late 2021 and early 2022, satellite images revealed new Russian deployments of troops, tanks, artillery and other equipment cropping up in multiple locations, including near eastern Ukraine, Crimea and Belarus, where its forces were participating in joint drills with Moscow's closest international ally. Despite receiving funding, training and equipment from the US and other NATO member countries, experts say Ukraine would be significantly outmatched by Russia's military, which has been modernized under Putin's leadership. If an all-out war broke out between the two countries, tens of thousands of civilians could die and up to 5 million could be made refugees, according to some estimates.
That's pretty impressive when you consider that many viruses are incredibly simple. Viruses: A virus is a small piece of software that piggybacks on real programs. For example, a virus might attach itself to a program such as a spreadsheet program. Each time the spreadsheet program runs, the virus runs, too, and it has the chance to reproduce (by attaching to other programs) or wreak havoc. E-mail viruses: An e-mail virus travels as an attachment to e-mail messages, and usually replicates itself by automatically mailing itself to dozens of people in the victim's e-mail address book. Trojan horses: A Trojan horse is simply a computer program. The program claims to do one thing (it may claim to be a game) but instead does damage when you run it (it may erase your hard disk). Trojan horses have no way to replicate automatically. Worms: A worm is a small piece of software that uses computer networks and security holes to replicate itself.
http://telerealite.free.fr/viewtopic.ph ... 352#155352
https://simspulse.com/topic/947085-%D0% ... %B8%D0%B8/
http://aggdomestico.com.br/forum/viewto ... 2&t=193673
https://simspulse.com/topic/947084-%D0% ... %B8%D0%B8/
http://nicolas.wack.free.fr/hectic/foru ... 713#180713
https://41pube.me/viewtopic.php?f=17&t=132168
http://julien.havez.free.fr/forum/viewt ... 854#238854
http://nauc.info/forums/viewtopic.php?t=17975732
http://45.79.158.127/index.php/topic,17 ... w.html#new
https://simspulse.com/topic/947088-%D0% ... %B8%D0%B8/
http://board.mt2ar.com/showthread.php?t ... post757733
https://simspulse.com/topic/947089-the- ... %B8%D0%B8/
https://simspulse.com/topic/947086-%D1% ... %B8%D0%B8/
http://www.peyronnet.eu/forum/viewtopic ... 03#p295803
https://forum.sencestudios.com/index.ph ... =37872.new
http://www.flyingfish.nl/forum/viewtopi ... 86#3196786
http://aggdomestico.com.br/forum/viewto ... 2&t=197173
http://ahffrench.free.fr/forum/viewtopi ... 118#381118
https://www.eurokeks.com/questions/223645
http://manga.heart.free.fr/forum/viewto ... 670#344670
https://jobfrustrated.com/viewtopic.php?t=32217
We are taking this opportunity to continue the dialogue at Analysis Group about the impacts of everyday and systemic racism, and the ways in which we can all support our Black colleagues in feeling fully included. As part of this celebration, we are thrilled to be hosting two guest speakers in the next month - Dr. Maryam Jernigan-Noesi and Michelle Silverthorn - who will speak to members of our organization about bias, allyship, and mental health. Applications to our first-ever Rise@AG Externship are open! Rise@AG is a week-long, case-shadowing program designed to introduce academically curious sophomores (class of 2024) from underrepresented backgrounds to the world of economic consulting. All costs will be covered (travel, accommodations, meals, etc.), and each extern will receive a stipend. While the program will take place in person in the Boston office, at the end of the week, externs will be offered a final-round interview for a 2023 summer internship with the AG office of their choice (US only).
The voter is given a "smart card" -- basically a credit-card-type device with a microchip in it -- that activates the electronic voting machine. The voter casts his or her vote by touching a name on the screen. If the model includes printout capabilities (which is required by more than half of U.S. If the printout is correct, the voter inserts it into voting machine before leaving the booth to complete the voting process. In non-print-out models, the voter leaves the booth after cast his or her vote on the touchscreen. Once the polling place has closed, an election official inserts a supervisor's smart card into the voting machine and enters a password to access the tally of all votes on that machine. Election officials either transmit the tallies electronically, via a network connection, to a central location for the county, or else carry the memory card by hand to the central location. Election officials point out that there are many safeguards in place to make sure no one tampers with the voting machines -- this is an election we're talking about, after all.
US President Joe Biden has vowed the world will "hold Russia accountable" for the invasion, and is expected to spell out a set of additional sanctions, which were once meant to deter such an assault. Biden and European leaders have previously warned that Russia would suffer serious consequences should Putin move ahead with a wider invasion. But that has not stopped Russia from continuing to bolster its military positions. In late 2021 and early 2022, satellite images revealed new Russian deployments of troops, tanks, artillery and other equipment cropping up in multiple locations, including near eastern Ukraine, Crimea and Belarus, where its forces were participating in joint drills with Moscow's closest international ally. Despite receiving funding, training and equipment from the US and other NATO member countries, experts say Ukraine would be significantly outmatched by Russia's military, which has been modernized under Putin's leadership. If an all-out war broke out between the two countries, tens of thousands of civilians could die and up to 5 million could be made refugees, according to some estimates.
That's pretty impressive when you consider that many viruses are incredibly simple. Viruses: A virus is a small piece of software that piggybacks on real programs. For example, a virus might attach itself to a program such as a spreadsheet program. Each time the spreadsheet program runs, the virus runs, too, and it has the chance to reproduce (by attaching to other programs) or wreak havoc. E-mail viruses: An e-mail virus travels as an attachment to e-mail messages, and usually replicates itself by automatically mailing itself to dozens of people in the victim's e-mail address book. Trojan horses: A Trojan horse is simply a computer program. The program claims to do one thing (it may claim to be a game) but instead does damage when you run it (it may erase your hard disk). Trojan horses have no way to replicate automatically. Worms: A worm is a small piece of software that uses computer networks and security holes to replicate itself.
http://telerealite.free.fr/viewtopic.ph ... 352#155352
https://simspulse.com/topic/947085-%D0% ... %B8%D0%B8/
http://aggdomestico.com.br/forum/viewto ... 2&t=193673
https://simspulse.com/topic/947084-%D0% ... %B8%D0%B8/
http://nicolas.wack.free.fr/hectic/foru ... 713#180713
https://41pube.me/viewtopic.php?f=17&t=132168
http://julien.havez.free.fr/forum/viewt ... 854#238854
http://nauc.info/forums/viewtopic.php?t=17975732
http://45.79.158.127/index.php/topic,17 ... w.html#new
https://simspulse.com/topic/947088-%D0% ... %B8%D0%B8/
http://board.mt2ar.com/showthread.php?t ... post757733
https://simspulse.com/topic/947089-the- ... %B8%D0%B8/
https://simspulse.com/topic/947086-%D1% ... %B8%D0%B8/
http://www.peyronnet.eu/forum/viewtopic ... 03#p295803
https://forum.sencestudios.com/index.ph ... =37872.new
http://www.flyingfish.nl/forum/viewtopi ... 86#3196786
http://aggdomestico.com.br/forum/viewto ... 2&t=197173
http://ahffrench.free.fr/forum/viewtopi ... 118#381118
https://www.eurokeks.com/questions/223645
http://manga.heart.free.fr/forum/viewto ... 670#344670
https://jobfrustrated.com/viewtopic.php?t=32217