Bearfoot, the truth is, legally, when you're in a public setting, you don't have a reasonable expectation of privacy. What you're talking about on the other hand, is premeditated harassment.
"I'm all for it! ....just as long as I get to go into the home of every city council member of Tiburon and photograph their possessions. You know, to make sure none of it is stolen."
I can't even begin to explain the total lack of correlation here.
I'd bet this house has been on the market for a long time and is highly unlikely to sell. So, I wouldn't consider it a waste of time, labor or money to sell it off in pieces to people who can use the fixtures and materials.
@Him: Yes, I mentioned air resistance. Regardless, we're not talking an anvil and a feather; we're talking a drop of water and a drop of milk. Even if there were any difference in surface area due to surface tension, it would be so minuscule that the photog would never be able to tell a difference in speed over a fall of 12 inches.
Incidentally, I was lucky enough to meet one of the code talkers on a casual walk when I was visiting the Navajo capital at Window Rock, Arizona a couple of years ago.
He kindly spoke some of the language for me, but I stupidly hit the wrong button on my voice recorder and didn't get it on tape.
Jim, do you think there were no Japanese who were bilingual? The first paragraph should have summed it up for you:
"The Navajo language is incredibly complex, with syntax, tonal qualities and dialects that render it unintelligible to outsiders. A spoken language, it has no alphabet or symbols, and is used only in remote Navajo areas of the American Southwest."
Only the code talkers knew the language. The Japanese didn't have any code talkers.
"Corrie, 61, uses milk because it falls more slowly than water ..."
Didn't we all learn in grade school that all objects (wind resistance not taken into account) fall at the same rate? How exactly does a drop of milk fall more slowly than a drop of water?
I can't even begin to explain the total lack of correlation here.
He kindly spoke some of the language for me, but I stupidly hit the wrong button on my voice recorder and didn't get it on tape.
"The Navajo language is incredibly complex, with syntax, tonal qualities and dialects that render it unintelligible to outsiders. A spoken language, it has no alphabet or symbols, and is used only in remote Navajo areas of the American Southwest."
Only the code talkers knew the language. The Japanese didn't have any code talkers.
Friendly grammar notes end here.
Didn't we all learn in grade school that all objects (wind resistance not taken into account) fall at the same rate? How exactly does a drop of milk fall more slowly than a drop of water?