This blog is a virtual note pad for the Bristol-Plymouth Regional Technical School Junior CIT students.
Friday, November 5, 2010
Texting and Driving!
Add Rhode Island to the list!
This concern was brought upon Rhode Island in November of 2009. Just like my state, Massachusetts, all drivers under the age of 18 are prohibited from using their cellphone. This is such a great law. Kids are new drivAers and need to learn how to drive without the distraction of a cell phone. All drivers are under the same law of no texting and driving! Is a text really worth a life? My favorite law that Rhode Island enforces is no talking unless you have ONE headset in your ear. If you are caught talking it cost you a $100 fine. I wish Rhode Island would make a law saying their is no cell phone use allowed at all, but I guess only time will tell what happens with that one. Just remember its not where your hands are, its where your mind is!
Of Texting and Driving, Maine’s Regulations, and frightening PSAs.
- Learner’s Permit
- Intermediate License
- Unrestricted license
Thursday, November 4, 2010
Massachsetts Law of Texting While Driving
Sooo New Hampshire is TOTALLY against texting and driving!
Don't mess with Rhode Island!!!
Texting While Driving
In the state of Connecticut texting is outlawed. The fines go from $100 to $150 to $200 but that’s only for hand held cell phones. Adults 18 and older must use hands-free devices while talking on cell phones or using a “mobile electronic device.” Minors are prohibited from using wireless phones or other mobile electronic device while driving- with or without hands-free devices. If you’re a school bus driver in the state of Connecticut, you are not allowed to use your cell phone at all.
Do you text? Do you text while driving? Do you support the new laws? You should read up on all that cell phones cause. Look at the statistics, click the link below. Are you a smart driver? Think before you act. Do the right thing, not just for you but for everyone else. Don’t be a statistic, prevent an accident and save a life.
http://www.edgarsnyder.com/car-accident/cell-phone/statistics.html
Texting in Rhode Island
The Laws:
It states that no one can text and drive. It also says that everyone under 18 can't us a cell phone at all but everyone 18 and older can make only phone calls when they drive.
Fines:
1st offense:$85
2nd offense: $100
3rd offense: $125
Here is the Providence Journal news article about texting in RI
http://newsblog.projo.com/2009/11/governor-signs-text-messaging.html
Massachusetts driver's and texting
Texting while driving
"Distracted Driving Laws" They do exist in Maine!
Wednesday, November 3, 2010
Texting and Driving in RI
This morning I watched a commercial for a funeral home, it was about texting and driving. It said "if you text and drive, ill see you soon."
Connecticut has Laws! (Seriously!)
Tuesday, November 2, 2010
Massachusetts and Texting
Friday, September 24, 2010
Looking for a Master's in Accounting?
Monday, September 20, 2010
Of Woodblock Printing, Early Storage Technologies, and other amusements.
Kellianna: singer/songwriter. |
Earliest printed Chinese book. 868 Han Dynasty |
New York woman creating raven prints.
- The artisan produced a master drawing in ink.
- An assistant (hikkō) would then create a tracing (hanshita) of the master.
- Craftsmen glued the hanshita face-down to a block of wood and cut away the areas where the paper was white. This left the drawing, in reverse, as a relief print on the block, but destroyed the hanshita.
- This block was inked and printed, making near-exact copies of the original drawing.
- A first test copy, called a kyōgo-zuri, would be given to the artist for a final check.
- The prints were in turn glued, face-down, to blocks and those areas of the design which were to be printed in a particular color were left in relief. Each of these blocks printed at least one color in the final design.
- The resulting set of woodblocks were inked in different colors and sequentially impressed onto paper. The final print bore the impressions of each of the blocks, some printed more than once to obtain just the right depth of color.[3]