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Programación en general => Vb.net => Mensaje iniciado por: rubo9940 en Septiembre 27, 2013, 05:02:30 am
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That's it for today. Thanks for the comments.5.39pm: Verdict: Earlier on Sky Joey Jones was talking about the concept of "coalition manners". It's a useful phrase which helps to explain what was going on during David Cameron's two-hour appearance at the despatch box. Conservative Eurosceptics have won a great victory. As John Redwood (see 3.19pm) and others have explained, they forced David Cameron to veto a new EU treaty by making it clear that they would not support it in the Commons. They could have spent the last two hours gloating publicly. But by and large (apart some of the fanatics, like Nadine Dorries and Philip Davies) they resisted the temptation. Attacks on the Lib Dems from the Conservative benches were mostly non-existent,kate spade bags (http://www.cnnhkids.com/), and the Eurosceptic crowd did not spend all afternoon - as some of us thought that they might do - demanding the repatriation of countless new powers to the UK.
The change does not seem to have improved the divorce rate, as we were piously told it should.There is another problem. The old Victorian debating chamber, designed for adversarial and noisy politics, is out of fashion and increasingly out of use, though immensely popular when it does engage in a debate of major importance nowadays, often on social issues – gay marriage or the right to die. Though David Cameron echoes Tony Blair's excuse that he gives frequent statements on which MPs can challenge him it's not the same as a debate on a substantive motion.In my youth, Jim Callaghan's government fell on such a motion – "that this House has no confidence in… " as moved by Margaret Thatcher.
It's full of hunger and milk, and honeycombs and fantastic-sounding shepherd's pies – and what could be more redolent of boyhood?As for the fantasy, I'm perhaps not quite so sceptical as Docx. But I do get nervous when writers start talking about "old tongues", labouring the mythology and messing with space and time. If you can bend the rules of physics enough to create a psychotic tent from another dimension, what's to stop you from bending them again at the last minute to give you just the denouement you want to your novel? Nothing much, as it turns out. The grand climax seemed to me to be pretty arbitrarily decided. The visuals were there (I don't want to say too much for fear of spoiling the ending), but there was no tension.
Depending on what those questions produce,marc jacobs wallets (http://www.ytcgzx.net/), the people responsible for his company can decide on the appropriate action but I think it is seriously premature to decide now what action should be taken.One of those engaging in a "seriously premature" call for Diamond's resignation is Lord Oakeshott, the Lib Dem peer who is close to Cable. According to PoliticsHome, this is what Oakeshott told BBC News.The key thing that must happen that Bob Diamond must either resign or be sacked as chief executive of Barclays ... We've seen quite clearly what was going on there in Barclays Capital, which for that time was under the direct control of Bob Diamond, and frankly whether he knew what was going on or whether he didn't, his position is equally hopeless.
4.53pm: Readers have been posting some links below the line highlighting politics coverage in regional newspaper from across the UK. Fainche picks out a number of articles in the Western Mail including the news Wales has the highest unemployment figures in the UK.This WalesOnline report quotes professor David Adamson from the University of Glamorgan who argues Wales needs to tackle its social problems to avoid seeing riots in the nation (there were a few scuffles reported in Cardiff but it remained otherwise largely quiet). There's also more on the Rhondda Cynon Taf council leader's pay packet after it slashed council jobs last year.ArthurtheCat links to this piece in the Lancashire Evening Post about signatures of support for what could be Preston's first People's Council.
Berry Potter and the Container of Secrets looks to be a crowd-pleaser, with its "magical blend of butter beer, Bertie Bott's Strawberry Flavour Beans and chocolate frogs". Oliver Twist: Please Sir, I Want Some More – to be eaten "sparingly" – promises a "rich dark chocolate and simple vanilla flavours with a smattering of English toffee."War and Peach sounds tempting,ytcgzx (http://www.ytcgzx.net/), especially for those with a healthy appetite: "An ambitious, sweeping and impeccably detailed frozen treat of truly epic proportions … Not easy to get through without a headache, but if you make it, you can brag about finishing it for the rest of your life."I'm less sure about One Fish, Two Fish, Red Fish, Blue Fish, though Quirk promises "candy fish in a chocolatey goo … with marshmallows too".
A lot of what I do on my blog is aggregation – finding the good stuff and passing it on – and you can do this, too (as I know, because it happens every day when I'm blogging).All today's Guardian politics stories are here, and all the politics stories filed yesterday, including some in today's paper, are here.Politics Live blog: Monday 5 December 20119.00am: It's a big day for Europe. Angela Merkel and Nicolas Sarkozy are meeting to thrash out details of a plan that could set up a fiscal union in Europe and may (or may not) lead to some sort of resolution of the debt crisis. But this blog - like the UK - is sitting on the sidelines. My colleague Alex Hawkes will be covering the Merkozy meeting on the business live blog.