Well, look, they'd digitize the data anyway. I guess this way (encouraging people to do it themselves) it saves time,energy thus money for them.
It's also compulsory for enterprises to hand in things this way. The "possibility" for paperwork is only for private people.
One year a science magazine had a 4/1 article about an 'arctic mole' that borrowed under the ice. The article said it had a large mass of blood vessels in it's forehead it used to melt the ice... I told numerous people before I realized how ridiculous it sounded.
Ok mind torture is finished you have quasi find π
I don't said the same day π
You can also take your index fingers left and right and move it on the way from farm to mountain, when they cross it they will be at the same place and at the same hour π
For the Darwin's Year, we just know a little about Life on Earth. We are a limited specie, but the only one, that consider itself beside. In french we say: we are sawing the branch which we are sitting on....
Ok, thanks T & Tt. I understand so far. I have tables very similar to the examples, with the exception of the Authors_Plugins table. I wasn't sure if that was a good design choice or not, nor do I have any idea how to get the information out as a single record.
... Perhaps the fountain pen solution should have been adapted for the printer.
An elegant idea. The Fisher company spent millions of dollars to develop a pen that would write in zero gravity for NASA. It got a closeup in Kubrick's "2001". The Russians used pencils.
Not quite. Fisher spent about $1m of their own money to develop the pen and patent it. NASA bought about 400, apparently at around $6 each. The Soviet program bought a hundred or so to replace the grease pencils they had (like NASA) previously used. No one would use normal graphite pencils; at least not if they wanted to survive the mission. Care to imagine the electrical problems that might arise from graphite dust floating around a micro-gravity capsule? Dead astronauts are such an embarrassment.