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Triple your socket space in the home, garage and office

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Side Socket Offer)
Thu Dec 12 13:04:52 2013

Envelope-to: linuxch-announce.discuss@charon.mit.edu
Date: Thu, 12 Dec 2013 10:04:49 -0800
From: "Side Socket Offer" <SideSocketOffer@hallmsb.us>
To: linuxch-announce.discuss@charon.mit.edu

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Side Socket — Clean Up Your Holiday Lights

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t get our 
cell provider at the time to release that information, Missey Smith told 
FoxNews.com. This is not an issue of privacy. Its not a matter 
of content  were not asking for text messages or information about 
who the person is contacting. Were simply asking for the location of 
the phone.This law costs zero to implement, she added. And it absolutely 
saves lives.Such was the case in Loudon County, Tenn., in May 2012, 
one month after the governor signed the bill into law. Local authorities 
there were able to quickly obtain cellphone records from Verizon leading 
them to a suspected child rapist who was believed to have snatched 
a child."They had reason to believe the child was in imminent danger, 
and we were able to use the Kelsey Smith Act to obtain 
the location of the suspects cellphone without having to go through a 
court order process," said Jennifer Estes, president of the Tennessee Emergency 
Number Association.In most cases, victims of abductions by strangers are 
killed within a very narrow window of time -- making it imperative 
for law enforcement to obtain cellphone records quickly."Time is of the 
essence when a child is missing -- the first 3 hours are 
critical to recovering a child alive," John Ryan, chief executive officer 
of the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children, said in an 
email to FoxNews.com. "Law enforcement must be able to obtain cellphone 
locations as quickly as possible in these circumstances. We supp
 a petroleum engineer -- and her longtime commitment to 
conservation made Jewell the right person for the job."She brings an important 
mix of strong management skills, appreciation for our nation's tradition 
of protecting our public lands and heritage, and a keen understanding of 
what it means to be good stewards of our natural resources," Obama 
said.Jewell, 57, of Seattle, also was a banker before taking over Kent, 
Wash.-based REI in 2005. She also served on the board of the 
National Parks Conservation Association, an advocacy group that works to 
protect and enhance national parks.Jewell has made it clear she intends 
to strike a balance between the dual roles of conserving and developing 
resources, Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., the chairman of the Senate Energy and 
Natural Resources Committee, said. "That's exactly the right approach to 
take on the diverse issues facing Interior, including safely developing 
natural gas, maximizing jobs and opportunities from recreation and improving 
management of federal forests."Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., said she worked 
closely with Jewell on wilderness legislation in Washington state and was 
confident that Jewell "will bring her skills as an effective CEO in 
the business community to the Cabinet."The Senate vote came after Sen. Jim 
Risch, R-Idaho, lifted a "hold" on Jewell's nomination. Risch and other 
lawmakers, including Sen. Dean Heller, R-Nev., have expressed concern that 
the Interior Department appe

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<strong><center><a href="http://www.hallmsb.us/3424/32/418/183/458.10tt71675797AAF1.php"><H3>Side Socket &mdash; Clean Up Your Holiday Lights</a></H3></strong>
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            <p>Triple your socket space and clear up those cords with Side Socket. It's the world's only 90 degree swiveling surge protector that's ideal for using behind hard to reach places.</p>
            <p><a href="http://www.hallmsb.us/3424/32/418/183/458.10tt71675797AAF2.php">Learn More</a></p>
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<p style="font-size:xx-small;">nical capacity to identify the specific location of a phone? 
Tippie said. That information was available to their engineers back in the 
day, but it wasnt available to the Verizon person we contacted at 
2 oclock in the morning.That has now changed, he said. We call 
them up and say we have an emergency and we get the 
information immediately.But that isnt always the case for local law enforcement 
in many states. Only nine have adopted Kelseys Law, requiring cellphone 
companies to release pertinent information to police in an emergency, like 
an abducted teenager or an elderly person who wanders off and cant 
be found. Since Kansas adopted the law in 2009, Nebraska, Minnesota, New 
Hampshire, North Dakota, Missouri, Hawaii, Tennessee and Utah have followed 
suit.Missey Smith and her husband, Greg, a Kansas state senator, are the 
law's toughest proponents, traveling the country to lobby the legislation 
by speaking before lawmakers in various states. The couple visited Rhode 
Island last week and Nevada on Monday.The latest draft of Kelseys law, 
obtained by FoxNews.com, also protects cellphone providers from lawsuits, 
stating, No cause of action shall lie in any court against any 
provider of a commercial mobile service or an IP-enabled voice service, 
its officers, employees or agents for providing call location information 
in an emergency situation. The information is readily available to cellphone 
providers within 15 to 20 minutes and we could no
 aper 
signed by Satoshi Nakamoto -- likely a pseudonym -- and the coins 
made their online debut in 2009. How the coins are created, how 
the transactions are authenticated and how the whole system manages to power 
forward with no central bank, no financial regulator and a user base 
of wily hackers all comes down to computing power and savoir faire.Or, 
as Nicholas Colas, chief market strategist for the ConvergEx Group, describes 
it: "genius on so many levels."The linchpin of the system is a 
network of "miners" -- high-end computer users who supply the Bitcoin network 
with the processing power needed to maintain a transparent, running tally 
of all transactions. The tally is one of the most important ways 
in which the system prevents fraud, and the miners are rewarded for 
supporting the system with an occasional helping of brand-new bitcoins.Those 
bitcoins have become a dangerously hot commodity in the past few days.Rising 
from roughly $13 at the beginning of the year, the price of 
a single bitcoin blasted through the $100 barrier last week, according to 
Mt. Gox, a site where users can swap bitcoins for more traditional 
currencies.On Tuesday, the price of a single bitcoin had topped $200. On 
Wednesday, it hit $266 before a flash crash dragged it back down 
to just over $100. By Thursday, bitcoins were trading for around $150.The 
rebel currency may seem unstable, but then so do some of its 
more traditional counterparts. Some say Bitcoin got 
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