It would be lovely on a celeste.
Maine seems to have pretty loose standards for what is considered a constitutional emergency…
HP0572, LD 821, item 1, An Act To Allocate the Balance of Funds Not Expended by the Task Force on Franco-Americans
Whereas, this legislation authorizes expending funds to offset costs associated with the Legislature's Franco-American Day, which is scheduled this spring; andWhereas, in the judgment of the Legislature, these facts create an emergency within the meaning of the Constitution of Maine and require the following legislation as immediately necessary for the preservation of the public peace, health and safety; now, therefore,
Maine is basically penetrating Canada, so we have to be ever vigilant and ready to give instant power to the governor in case they invade.
A day near and dear to my heart: my birthday!
To back up just a little, an event 833 (or error 833, as it’s sometimes called) is a signal from the SQL Server that it’s waiting for records that it’s requested. An 833 message reads like “SQL Server has encountered 49 occurrence(s) of I/O requests taking longer than 15 seconds to complete on file […file full path…] in database […database name…]….”
This is an “834 EDI transmission.” Insurers sometimes call it, more simply, “an 834.” It is a technical, back-end reporting tool that consumers never see. It is meant to be read by computers, not human beings. It’s the form that tells the insurer’s system who you are and what you need. And it might be the new health-care law’s biggest problem.
Obamacare’s most important number: 834
Also: 836 is a weird number. Its factorization is 22 × 11 × 19, so its divisors are 2, 4, 11, 19, 22, 38, 44, 76, 209, and 418. They sum to 843. As this is greater than 836, it is an abundant number, but no subset sums to 836, so it is not a semiperfect number; therefore it is weird.