Sony’s TV range has always looked sleek and minimal, but this year’s flagship W9 is a gorgeous set that’s finished with quartz to give each laser-cut bezel edge an aqua tint when it catches the light. It’s not just good looks that sets this TV apart, though. It’s the first to include Sony’s redesigned Triluminos colour system.
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Just over a century ago in Ludwigshafen, Germany, a scientist named Carl Bosch assembled a team of engineers to exploit a new technique in chemistry. A year earlier, another German chemist, Fritz Haber, hit upon a process to pull nitrogen (N) from the air and combine it with hydrogen (H) to produce tiny amounts of ammonia (NH₃). But Haber’s process was delicate, requiring the maintenance of high temperatures and high pressure. Bosch wanted to figure out how to adapt Haber’s discovery for commercial purposes — as we would say today, to “scale it up.” Anyone looking at the state of manufacturing in Europe around 1910, Bosch observed, could see that the task was daunting: The technology simply didn’t exist.
He has two boreholes already but both are running dry and milk yields have dropped three litres of milk per cow. It’s an expensive business: for a medium-sized herd of around 200 cows, that’s equivalent to losing around £5,000 per month.
the office of The U.S. special investigator Robert Mueller has a report on the serious accusation US President, Donald Trump had instigated his former lawyer, Michael Cohen, to commit perjury, and rejected. The presentation of “specific communications to the office of the special investigator,” as well as “the description of documents and witness statements” received by the office regarding the testimony of Cohen prior to the Congress, not to be “right,” said the office on Friday. The online portal “Buzzfeed” had previously reported, citing two anonymous law enforcement officials, Cohen had accused the President to have him for perjury in front of Congress instigated.
For evidence of just how strange the ’90s were, look no further than the Boredoms’ short-lived tenure on major label Reprise. Not that Royal Trux and Butthole Surfers weren’t similarly baffling as commercial prospects, but at least the latter had “Pepper.” Japan’s Boredoms never had anything close to a radio-friendly song, instead preferring a constantly rotating carousel of absurdity. Yet their best moment still arrived well after that flirtation with commercialism. Their Super æ album redefined Boredoms as a heavier, more psychedelic and powerful group, balancing noise with motorik rhythms, space-rock freak-outs, minimalist pulses, and a more spiritual center of gravity. “Super Are” smashes together their meditative side with their more chaotic side, two complementary halves that add up to a climactic and glorious whole. The band draws out a hushed drone, but the payoff is four minutes of percussion-heavy pounding, guitar squeal, and an unlikely infectiousness.
As an expression of his dissatisfaction, Xicheng district said, Jia wielded a hammer that he normally used for work to injure students during a class.
The Kalanako MRE is constrained by a conceptual (Whittle) pit based on a gold price of US$1,500/oz, mining cost of US$2.00/t, processing and G&A cost of US$21 for oxide, US$26 for transition and US$25 for fresh, 92 % gold recovery and a pit slope of 40o.
By Tilman Gerwien +++ 10.47 PM: CSU-Secretary-General flower: 2019 year of the unity of the Union +++
At the moment, global CO₂ emissions are about 37 billion metric tons per year, and we’re on track to raise temperatures by 3 degrees Celsius by 2100. To have a shot at maintaining a climate suitable for humans, the world’s nations most likely have to reduce CO₂ emissions drastically from the current level — to perhaps 15 billion or 20 billion metric tons per year by 2030; then, through some kind of unprecedented political and industrial effort, we need to bring carbon emissions to zero by around 2050. In this context, Climeworks’s effort to collect 1,000 metric tons of CO₂ on a rooftop near Zurich might seem like bailing out the ocean one bucket at a time. Conceptually, however, it’s important. Last year’s I.P.C.C. report noted that it may be impossible to limit warming to 1.5 degrees by 2100 through only a rapid switch to clean energy, electric cars and the like. To preserve a livable environment we may also need to extract CO₂ from the atmosphere. As Wurzbacher put it, “if you take all these numbers from the I.P.C.C., you end up with something like eight to 10 billion tons — gigatons — of CO₂ that need to be removed from the air every year, if we are serious about 1.5 or 2 degrees.”
Next up is the CyberPowerPC Hyper Liquid Series, fitted with the company’s hard-tube liquid cooling system. The company claims that its system is 14% better at cooling an overclocked CPU than a Corsair H55, and 27% better at cooling GPUs than regular coolers. There are over five models in this line, and like the Syber Gaming XL series, buyers chan choose among a wide range of internal hardware, including Intel’s Kaby Lake CPUs and the upcoming Ryzen processors.
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