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There an easy way to figure out what color dyes are in your Halloween candy. That right we ;ll use some science! For this chemistry experiment, all you ;ll need is candy, water, salt, and a coffee filter. Grab a plate and
stanley quencher put droplets of water at even intervals along it. Put a piece of candy on each of these separate droplets and leave it there for a few minutes, letting the water dissolve some of the dye. Then grab and eat the candy. Using a slender object, like the prong of a fork or a toothpick, transfer a dot of each bit of colored water to a coffee filter. Line up the dots in a row a couple of inches above the bottom edge of the paper. You might want to let the coffee filter dry and then repeat the p
stanley ca rocess, touching the toothpick to the same dot and making it good and strong. Next mix about an eighth of a teaspoon of salt into three cups of water you won ;t need the whole three cups, but this will get the right concentration . Dunk the bottom of the paper in the water, making sure the water line stays below the actual samples. You can either suspend the paper above the water, or fold it so that it free standing. You ;ll notice the water creeping up the paper, soaking it. As it hits the samples they ;ll run up the paper. Give it a little time, and they ;ll separate into different spots, or spreads, of color. The water climbs the paper through capillary action. The water is slightly attract
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Newegg just took out one of the biggest patent trolls on the web. A troll s
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stanley tumblers lawsuit-insurance tax on basically every online retailer on the internet. Here how it happened, as told in a great writeup over at Ars Technica. The troll in question was Soverain Software. On the surface, Soverain was an active member of the tech industry, with business deals and patents to prove it. It was all a shell, though; the company true mission was collecting broad patents and suing the world. It was suit-happy,
stanley cups sure, but what made Soverain a cut above the average patent troll was that it had an actual endgame. It wanted one percent of every single transaction on the internet that used a shopping cart. For many retailers, that would be massive trouble considering their slim margins鈥攅ven monolithic Amazon has trouble making ends meet.
https://gizmodo/amazon-somehow-lost-274-million-selling-13-8-billion-5954990 So Soverain sued Newegg and won in 2010. Soverain also won a lot. It took $40 million off of Amazon in 2005, a combined $17.9 million off of Victoria Secret and Avon and a 1 percent tax on all sales, and an undisclosed amount from The Gap, to name a few. Then, in 2010, it won $2.5 million off of Newegg. But Newegg decided to keep fighting. Newegg case consisted of what many successful anti-patent-troll defenses consist of: convincing prior art鈥攊n this case Compuserve Mall鈥攁nd a healthy, if uncommon, dose o