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I send spam callers to (858) 651-5050. It's called the Harvard Sentences, an endless string of weird sentences in different pitches and tones to test phone lines. It'll keep you company forever if …
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On December 14, 2018, the Death Penalty Information Center released its 2018 year-end report, detailing death penalty developments across the nation. The report notes that 2018 marked the fourth consecutive year with fewer than 30 executions and less than 50 new death sentences.
The state parole board holds hearings that determine when, during that range, the convicted person will be eligible for parole. The principle behind indeterminate sentences is the hope that prison will rehabilitate some prisoners; those who show the most progress will be paroled closer to the minimum term than those who do not.
On September 1, 2001, one of the most drastic changes for sex offense sentencing took effect in Washington. The Legislature voted in the 2001 Legislative Session to authorize indeterminate sentences for sex offenders, and placed those convicted under the authority of the Indeterminate Sentence Review Board (ISRB).
Out of this came the Harvard sentences, a set of standardized phrases still widely used to test everything from cellphones to VoIP. Few know about the sentences themselves other than speech scientists and audio engineers, but the technologies they’ve helped build are everywhere. Verizon’s real-life Can you hear me now? guy uses them.
So, if you’re feeling ambitious and want to hear some weirdly soothing sentences on your phone, give it a call at (858) 651-5050. As the Harvard Sentences would put it, “Open your book to the first page.”