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- Excite People With Your Beautiful Landscaping By:-Sarah Park
Individuals who live in a residence are usually proud of their house and make great efforts to keep their home looking great. The exterior landscaping is the first thing that visitors will see, therefore you will want to have it looking the best it can. Not just that, but it almost certainly enables you to feel pretty good, when you drive up to your own home, and enjoy what it looks like. You should utilize the right tools, and ingredients, to having your lawn and garden look its best.
- Find Artificial Grass Suppliers in the UK By:-josef spalding
In this article I am going to outline a few of the benefits of installing an artificial grass lawn and the ways it can help you to save time and money. Synthetic grass has a number of advatages over a real lawn. It is very environmentally friendly, fantastic for children and domestic pets and it can even save you a great deal of money. So if you want to enjoy your garden without all the time comsuming chores of keeping a lawn in good condition you should be thinking about artificial grass and a lawn that will look perfect all year round.
- "On Deck" and similar clauses relating to general shipping terms By:-Arnilt Durpont
Article 26 UCP 600 provides that a transport document must not indicate that the goods are or will be loaded on deck. Hence, if a beneficiary under a letter of credit presents a bill of lading showing that the goods have been loaded "on deck", a bank may properly refuse the documents and not pay the beneficiary. This seems quite a surprising result, particularly since generally containers are shipped on deck a vessel.
The term on deck, even though the UCP 600 do not specifically say so, only applies to marine transport.
A truck, a plane, a railway etc. do not have decks and the term is to be narrowly interpreted.
To get around the prohibition, carriers need to mention that they "may" load the goods on deck.
Article 26 a. UCP 600 specifically permits:
"A clause on a transport document stating that the goods may be loaded on deck is acceptable."
- Insurance documents and letters of credit By:-Arnilt Durpont
Article 28 UCP 600 prescribes the requirements an insurance document has to meet if it is to be accepted by a bank under a letter of credit. Previously detailed in Articles 34 to 36 UCP 500, the revision has not led to substantive changes, except for
- Admissibility of signatures by agents or proxies (Article 28 a UCP 600)
- Prescribed coverage amount is minimum coverage (Article 28 f (ii) UCP 600)
- Admissibility of any exclusions of liability (Article 28 I UCP 600)
Insurance documents include insurance policies, insurance certificates and declarations of insurance. These still need to be signed by underwriters, insurance companies or their agents and proxies. Cover notes, issued by insurance brokers are not acceptable.
When a consortium is the insurer the signature of only one member of the consortium is sufficient. The other members of the consortium need not be mentioned. This still does apply when the members of the consortium are not jointly and severally liable but only severally or proportionately liable, since the other members of the consortium and their respective quotas of liability can be determined through the consortium leader.
- Surprises in letter of credit transaction By:-Arnilt Durpont
To be precise pays off, not only in letter of credit transactions.
In case you describe an amount, a quantity or unit prices and precede it with the qualifier
"about" or "approximately", you will get up to 10 % more or less. This is what Article 30 a UCP 600 provides for.
"The words "about" or "approximately" used in connection with the amount of the credit for the quantity or the unit price stated in the credit are to be construed as allowing a tolerance not to exceed 10 % more or 10 % less than the amount, the quantity of the unit price to which they refer."
- The general public License and modules and plugins By:-Arnilt Durpont
The GPL (General Public License) allows developers to use source code easily , but once they modify and publish the executable, they must provide the
source code of the modified version as well.
Section 2 of the GPLv2 states the following in this regard:
" 2. You may modify your copy or copies of the Program or any portion of it, thus forming a work based on the Program, and copy and distribute such modifications or work under the terms of Section 1 above, provided that you also meet all of these conditions:
a) …
b) You must cause any work that you distribute or publish, that in whole or in part contains or is derived from the Program or any part thereof, to be licensed as a whole at no charge to all third parties under the terms of this License.
"
Problems arise when GPLed together with proprietary software is mixed, in particular when
a proprietary program uses GPL libraries or vice versa. With these constellations
the question is whether even the proprietary code ought to be distributed with source code as required by the GPL.
The following article gives an overview of what different parties suggest in regards to solving this issue.
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