Domain: google.com
Stories and comments across the archive that link to google.com.
Comments · 95,278
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Re:Interesting
The accident occurred here: https://www.google.com/maps/pl...
It's a limited access highway and the speed limits in the area are 55 or 60 (I had to streetview quite a way south before I could find a speed limit sign, but the sign I found was 60)
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Re:Loved my PDP 11/70s
Oh lord... not one of those IBM plugboards. My Dad used those back in the '60s.
Pictures here.
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Re:Dang...
The problem isn't data collection per se. It's retention. If you want to put your entire life history on Facebook, it's not a problem as long as Facebook will delete it all if you change your mind and decide you no longer wish to share it with them. Facebook refuses to do that, and will hang on to your old data (apparently forever), which makes them by far the worst transgressor. (They used to also make it near-impossible to get a copy of all your data, in case you wanted to leave but didn't want to lose everything. But apparently they've addressed that recently.)
Google at least makes it easy for you to get a copy of your data should you wish to leave or change services, and to delete data they've collected on you from their servers.
I read TFA a few days ago when it first came out. What's notably lacking is that this isn't a way to delete your data from Apple's servers. Just a way for you to request a copy. -
I wonder if this'll impact their politics
In America Talk radio has a pretty large political impact. I worked as an apprentice electrician for a few years before going back to school and Rush Limbaugh was on pretty much everywhere, but that was mostly because it was on the classic Rock channel for an hour every day. I don't think anybody went out of their way to listen to it per se.
Digital means more spectrum going to phones, which means faster cell phone data and better reception for that data. And that means folks don't have to just listen to whatever comes on the radio. When folks can just listen to music all day I'm guessing they will. I know here in the state's Rush Limbaugh famously quotes listener numbers from the late 90s/early 2000s. I'm guessing it's been downhill since satellite radio was a thing and cheap smart phones have only pushed it lower. -
Re:They what now?
https://play.google.com/store/...
Which Outside app is it?
:P -
Re:People say that
I've a friend who wrote an android game in his spare time. https://play.google.com/store/...
For the amount of time he put into it I doubt it'll ever earn enough to be worth his time, but he didn't do it for that. It was a game written with passion for the type of game it is. There is no free version but it seems to be doing alright. I think he could have been getting $5 per copy but he said, and I'm not joking, that he would rather have more people enjoy the game then to make the extra money.
I know I'm bias but that game is so good he should be getting some serious money from it, but he's not. I see it as evidence that too many people on Android won't pay for apps. People in the Apple store will.
Interestingly, his first app which he released on Apple, Android and Windows got the most downloads from the Windows store.
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Re:FREEDOM COMPUTING
So you're telling me that DDNS propagates GLOBALLY in less than a minute? I understood that to be more like 24 hours (cite: https://www.google.com/search?...)... so I stand corrected. The last time I used a dynamic DNS service was about 6-7 years ago, and it was miserably unreliable at that time. I'm glad to hear it's improved. But it's also not free. This issue like the others circles back to the pretense that this a cheap and easy solution, when it is neither.
I'm glad we both agree that regardless of the details, this isn't practical for the majority of people.
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Re:Options for what?
I really don't have any idea from the submission what it is you're looking for. What is it you want for kids that's different from what you'd want for adult users? Give us some idea of your objectives.
I mean, there are entire fields of study (and industry) that have long been dedicated to understanding and catering to the educational needs of young learners, and there are more plain-English summaries of "what makes kids different from adults when it comes to learning" than I can list here.
At the risk of stating the blindingly obvious, children are not simply tiny grownups. What works best for an adult will rarely be what works best for a child, no matter what you're talking about. You can just throw whatever adults would use at them, and some kids will do just fine with that, but it won't be nearly as effective as a system that's been designed specifically with young users in mind.
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Possible answer
Bit deeper then that. I don't know what group of people are driving it but I can describe it. The more I look at especially some of the "synergies" between laws in countries that would otherwise be completely opposite, the more it becomes obvious there has been a serious push for globalization. It's to the point we don't have one, but MANY draconian laws straight out of batshit crazy countries, being passed with little to no discussion. It's like we're being prepped for habitation by the "royal families".
I've been thinking about that, and have a possible answer.
For context, I started thinking about this when I heard that London is now 42% foreign born. (Here's info from 2011.) England used to be predominately white and very conservative, but it's now peppered with no-go zones and full of foreign workers. Germany and Sweden are even worse, and are *still* importing refugees.
Why is this happening in Europe?
My best guess has to do with WWII, and the genocide of various peoples: Jews, but also Gypsies, Poles, Afro-Germans, homosexuals, Jehovas Witnesses, and others. Hitler made WWII essentially a war on other races.
That incident (WWII) has become so abhorrent in the collective psyche that people will do anything to escape the barest hint of being associated with it. The people of Europe are killing themselves trying to prove that they aren't racist.
We now have British police choosing not to prosecute Muslim rapists, while threatening prosecution for the fathers (of the raped girls) for Islamophobia for speaking out. We see the police suppressing reports of Muslim crime, but going after "hate speech" crimes from regular citizens.
We're seeing a little bit of that here in the US, where putting our own citizens first is called out as racist.
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Re:Don't raise income taxes
Now read up on employment tax incidence.
It's well established economically that taxes per employee, even if nominally supposed to be from the employer, actually cost the employee money, not the employer.
That said, most employers care about their employees needs and will notice that employees prefer to be paid a little more instead of working in downtown Seattle.
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You're talking about is the Laffer curve
and there's plenty of debate around the impacts of Kennedy's tax cuts. It's the classic line "But the Tax Cuts will Pay for themselves".
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Re: 5 million for A few camera??
https://www.google.com/search?...
I know this will shock you, AEtna is doing even better than gold which we all know is the holy grail of investing.
/s
The insurance companies are ripping people off genius. -
Re:“The Public Good”
Actually, since we're on Slashdot and all, the instruction should be:
Install your own VPN server and use that on all public networks. It's not that hard.
- https://openvpn.net/index.php/...
- https://wiki.openwrt.org/doc/h...
- https://play.google.com/store/... -
Re:Worst. Idea. Ever.
Hopefully this can be disabled...
Here, hope that helps.
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Re:It's the whiplash with a touch of insider tradi
I've noticed. Actually, I think one of Trump's most amazing characteristics is what a terrible liar he is. It's kind of like political humor. The joke depends on understanding the reality, and Trump can't lie well because he can't recognize such basic concepts as truth and reality upon which to base more sophisticated lies.
Time for my little ontology of lies, but let me see if I can just dig up a link... That's extremely interesting. I know exactly what to look for and I know that I've published it in many places on the Web, and yet the google doesn't return ANY link to my writing. I even pushed it by adding my name to some of the searches, and still came up dry. However, one of the early hits is from someone else, who is an Internet acquaintance and who is citing my ontology as the first part of his comment.
https://plus.google.com/104092...
Hey, if the search engines [I double-checked with Bing] can't find it, then that's the same as never having written it these days.
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Fact Check
A company is moving in to exploit your cheap labor
False.
Labor costs in the United States are not low. This is why U.S. companies seeking cheap labor establish factories in foreign countries, such as Mexico.
...with a special license to pollute from the government,
False.
Foxconn has not been granted a "special license to pollute from the government."
...while your leader is a grade-A supercrook
False.
The fake accusations against Trump have proven to be the work of a corrupt federal officials at the FBI and Justice Department in the Obama Administration, working together with the Hillary Clinton campaign.
...and mostly just his political opposition cares.
True.
A clear indication that this caring is actually a politically-motivated partisan political attack.
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Re:I dropped a word and you dropped your link...
The US is lowering its coal and China increased it's coal by 0.4%, congratulations. But then why does America still use more coal powered electricity per person then China? This site tracks coal plants and if you look at you will see that
Chinese coal plants produced 3,573 MT of CO2 in 2017
American coal plants produced 1,056 MT of CO2 in 2017
Since China has 4.2 times as many people (over a billion extra people). America uses far more coal powered electricity per person,despite people like you claiming they are clean. (ie the only reason China's coal use is bigger is because China is a much bigger country than America.)
Could it be because American households use 8x as much power as Chinese households, 3x the world average?No electricity consumption doesn't necessarily spell carbon emissions, but in the case of America is most certainly does. Don't feel too bad, the overlap of ignorance and self-righteousness entitlement is quite high. You are not alone.
I didn't even add in all the extra natural gas you use as well, it only gets worse for you.How about you go fuck yourself instead. Pull your head out from your ass and try to understand actual reality.
Take a look in the mirror, because ignorant people like you are a much bigger problem than coal is. -
probably why they block passworded ZIPs
I tried to send some bank routing info to a business associate. Well withing their posted guidelines (it was a simple text file, stored in a passworded zip), but they did not deliver it to the intended recipient.
At the time (and, still, I think), it was more like an attempt to push me into using a Google Drive, which is never going to happen. Why give them time to brute-force (or try using Big Data to guess) the password?
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Re:Lowering grades?
An opinion piece from the WSJ isn't exactly a useful citation. It's paywalled - do they ever get around to comparing the US to other countries or do they just whine about the term 'mass incarceration'?
It's not difficult to find articles and studies that contradict the whole 'incarceration reduced crime' theory. This one includes this bit:
Fortunately, there is a real-time experiment underway. For many reasons, including straitened budgets and a desire to diminish prison populations, many states have started to cut back on imprisonment. What happened? Interestingly, and encouragingly, crime did not explode. In fact, it dropped. In the last decade, 14 states saw declines in both incarceration and crime. New York reduced imprisonment by 26 percent, while seeing a 28 percent reduction in crime. Imprisonment and crime both decreased by more than 15 percent in California, Maryland, New Jersey, New York, and Texas.
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Re:Democrats in the US...
Yes, Democrats have a well-known negative stance about Rh-positive babies. Including A+, B+, AB+, and of course O+(?)
Oooh-kay. For those of you not familiar with basic newborn hematology, if a mom has Rh-negative blood (relatively rare compared at 15% to Rh-positive blood) and the baby has Rh-positive blood, and during pregnancy the mom's blood gets exposed to babies (can happen in car accidents and other placental problems resulting in fetal-maternal hemorrhage - the fetus's blood ends up in mom's circulation) the mom will start to make antibodies against the babies Rh antigens (more specifically, Rh-D antigens - there's more than one - Rhesus is a whole group; the D antigen is the troublesome one). This is one of the reasons couples contemplating marriage used to get blood tests in the United States, before the introduction of the medicine folks like James Harrison made possible.
In the United States, anti-D is typically referred to by its brand name, RhoGAM. It has antibodies to Rh-D - just a small amount, though. You inject this into a mom, her immune system detects them, and then if it sees actual anti-D from the fetus her immune system doesn't freak out and attack the fetal blood cells. Now and then we run into patients who do not like vaccines, which RhoGAM more or less is. The first baby is fine. The second baby to be exposed will often die (NSFW: pictures). In babies who don't die from hemolytic disease of the newborn (where their blood cells are destroyed, by maternal antibodies, among other problems) they can suffer brain damage. Treatment involves exchange transfusion and, in less severe cases, phototherapy, where we shine 460 nm light on them for a few days—hopefully not knocking too many DNA off the strand in the process.
Alternatively, you can take your chances with red raspberry and nettle tea, according to this person who claims to uphold evidence-based wellness, though she doesn't actually cite any evidence.
RhoGAM is made from pooled human plasma, like the gentleman cited in the article. He just happened to have a substantial amount of the antibodies, likely the result of blood transfusion exposure.
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Washington in England
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Re:Shouldn't that be...
The US is the greatest country in the world! Why would a US citizen want to go to any other country, which are all Hellholes?
They are not all hellholes, I think some of them are shitholes instead.
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Re:Tesla smashed into starbucks
And in this particular situation, the driver would have had to keep that pedal jammed for a long time and through lots of chaos. Look at the setup where the accident happened. The car had to first jump the curb, which takes a lot of force and gives the driver plenty of feedback that something is very wrong, and then still managed to run across the entire sidewalk area and hit the building with enough force to embed itself almost fully through the wall.
I think you seriously over-estimate people's abilities to correct themselves, and how long it takes these events to unfold
In most pedal errors, the first instinct is to press harder on the pedal. Remember, the person generally thinks they have their foot on the brake, now the car is moving -- better push on that "brake" pedal harder.
In addition to that confused impulse, the car (which is under heavy or full acceleration at this point) can traverse quite some distance before you can even physically react. At 10 mph you cover 14.6 feet per second -- so in the time it takes for you to recognize what's wrong, remove your foot from the accelerator, and begin pushing on the brake, reasonably about 2 seconds, you've already covered 30+ feet -- but by the end of that 2 seconds you're already moving at 20 mph or more (or have already crashed into a stationary object).
A few years back, as my wife finished parking our car, the parked car opposite suddenly lurched over the curb, across an embankment that is wider than the sidewalk you referenced, over another curb, and into the front end of our car. The driver, an older gentleman in his 80s, was understandably horrified. It was a clear case of mistaking the gas and brake while getting ready to leave, as well as mistaking forward and reverse. Nobody was hurt, but our car was totalled, and the gentleman never drove again. The point to the story is, these things happen faster than you imagine.
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Re:Location?
I've read this headline several times. My biggest question is, where is this taking place? Southern Georgia Southern Georgia Apparently it's South Georgia. Which I thought I had never heard of, but my browser's search history tells me otherwise.
What the heck is up with all the ship propellers on the Stromness beach? I can't fathom any reason for this whatsoever.
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Re:Tesla smashed into starbucks
I think that this is the least likely to be related to a drive by wire and will probably come down to driver error. For whatever reason people make this mistake all the time - they jam the wrong pedal, make the wrong drive mode selection, etc.
Pedal errors do happen, but this particular kind is a rare bird indeed according to this study:
Before leaving the serious error category, it should be mentioned that there were only two instances in which the subject depressed the accelerator instead of the brake. In both cases the subject recognized the error immediately and made a correction. There were no instances, in other words, in which the subject persisted in mistaking the accelerator for the brake.
And in this particular situation, the driver would have had to keep that pedal jammed for a long time and through lots of chaos. Look at the setup where the accident happened. The car had to first jump the curb, which takes a lot of force and gives the driver plenty of feedback that something is very wrong, and then still managed to run across the entire sidewalk area and hit the building with enough force to embed itself almost fully through the wall.
Given all that and the fact that we're talking about a car that has full control of its faculties and regularly makes bad "decisions" about how to use them, Occam says it most likely wasn't the driver.
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Re:This isn't good
So you don't remember where the numbers came from? But that they may be a guess 3 years ago. Did you pull the number from your own ass or pull it from those 'others' asses.
At least link to any site you think may be able to justify the 75% you claimed. Jesus show a range even. Find any site to show 70-80 if you like. Then we can check how credible they are, to know how credible you are (not very for those playing along at home).
It most certainly does matter.
You keep claiming I'm lying even when I show where my info comes from. You claim you are telling the truth, but can't even show us where it came from.
Are you intentionally using extremely outdated info to 'make a case' or did you really just make up what suits your narrative.If i put China 75% coal into google I mostly see good things.
Like thisHowever, coal as a proportion of China's energy mix peaked at 75% in the late 1980s and by 2016 it had fallen to 62%, the lowest since the establishment of the People's Republic in 1949.
Is this your 75%? The highest level ever, back in the 80's?
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Re:I can't even imagine...
Indeed. It would no doubt have been built on farmland with the local farmers - of thich there will be many - having their land compulsory purchased. All they'd see out of it is reduced income and more traffic.
It was to have been built in this forest area adjacent to the golf club. https://www.google.com/maps/@53.28715,-8.8337841,2827m/data=!3m1!1e3
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Re:I can't even imagine...
Go do your own damn research. I'm not your servant. I just said "I don't want a data center in your town"
I did. But what you are saying is that you won't back up your opinion when challenged.
You haven't even seen a data center apparently.
Please read my other post. I specifically posted images of Apple's data center in North Carolina. 1) You can't really see it from the road. 2) It's located 4 miles outside the nearest town.
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Re:I can't even imagine...
Have you guys ever seen a datacenter? "Nondescript" is one word for them. Who would want that in their town?
Yes I have. Here is Apple's datacenter in North Carolina. It looks like a one-story building in the middle of nowhere that you can't really see from the road.
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Re:First time
careful ivan, someone is stealing your potato vodka.
Probably Hillary!, that wonderful "napper"
Imagine Trump habitually hitting the booze hard enough to need "naps". Think the press would have covered it up?
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Re:You just cant stop pulling #'s from your ass Wi
I've been looking and stumbled upon this interesting fact
Chinese coal plants produced 3,573 MT of CO2 in 2017
American coal plants produced 1,056 MT of CO2 in 2017
You can see where this is going can't you Windy...
Yes, per person America (less than 1/4 China's population) produces more CO2 from coal plants than China does...much more...OOPS. -
Re:Hypocrisy...
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Re:Like breathing at high altitude w/o O2.
HOWEVER you must still question WHY KILL?
* It prevents the offender from hurting anyone again. Incarceration does not. Incarcerated murder kill prison staff and other prisoners, as well as escape, or serve out their sentences and re-offend.
* It deters as surely as lesser punishments deter, like incarceration or fines. Charts of death penalty vs. murder rate in the US underscore this point. It's curious to assert that lesser punishments deter, but the harshest does not.
* It's the closest to justice as we can get (i.e. a commensurate cost imposed on the offender). Most think the offender should incur some cost for malicious pain inflicted on others. Codes of justice going back to Hammurabi reflect a sense of fairness that it should be commensurate.
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Re: Like breathing at high altitude w/o O2.
I bet you even claim to be Christian. And you claim to go to church every Sunday? (Or maybe just at Easter?)
Did you forget the part where your God told you "Thou shalt not kill" ?
Or where your Saviour – Jesus – taught that you should forgive, and turn the other cheek?
Your "visible justice" is working so well; after a few thousand years of it look how much it's cutting down violent crimes. Whoever said it (no, it wasn't Einstein, look it up): the definition of insanity is keep doing the same thing but expecting a different result.
And while we're having that conversation about something that you imagine happens so frequently (raped and urdered daughters? hyperbole much?), let's also have a conversation after finding out we've put an innocent person to death. I really would prefer to err on the side of not killing anyone to prevent ever killing an innocent.
And I don't know why it should cost $150K/year to lock someone up. Maybe someone should try to fix that. Might be other case of keep doing the same thing but expecting a different result. Regardless, it's has almost nothing to do with capital punishment.
A. Forgiveness and justice are two completely separate things. I could choose to forgive my daughter's rapist and murderer, but justice must still be served. Providing the killer with a lifetime of free housing, clothing, food, medical care, even some entertainment and leisure and relative safety, at our expense (and as an oft shared meme suggests, "treating them better than a homeless veteran") doesn't feel like justice to many.
B. If you're going to cite Moses writing the commandment of God "Thou shalt not kill," how about another commandment from God also written by Moses "Thou shalt... utterly destroy them." I won't really get into this, but for one perspective on how this is not actually a contradiction, see: Christian and War, Robert Le Roy Moyer
C. You have no data to prove the death penalty hasn't had any deterrent effect on crime because you cannot compare apples to apples with and without it. There might be some effect or there might not be, however (big shocker to people who pay no attention to actual facts CRIME ACTUALLY HAS BEEN TRENDING DOWNWARD on the whole.
In short, you're full of crap. Be a bleeding heart if you want to, but don't pretend to be in a position to judge others based on misconceptions, false data, and straw man arguments.
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Re:AMD
TL:DR; Cross Licensing
Intel cross licensed the x86 stuff (32-bit) to AMD.
AMD cross licensed the AMD64 stuff (64-bit) to Intel.The longer version:
Intel and AMD got tired of suing each other over patents. They have a LONG history of cross licensing agreements. They renewed it in 2001 and again in 2009.; AMD clarifyied the deal in 2015
It is only natural AMD would use Intel's docs as part of the verification process for the 32-bit stuff.
You can search intel amd cross license agreement for more info. but the agreement are (usually?) confidential.
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It happens
Children occasionally do things their parents would rather them not do, you know.
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Re:So who is to blame?
A little more rational than the anonymous crazy person.
So here's a link.
https://www.google.com/maps/@3...
The uber car hit the pedestrian about 40' past the white sign on the right.
You'll note the road widens from 2-4 lanes at the white sign and there is heavy landscaping on the median.
There are also multiple signs telling pedestrians to *not* cross there but there is an inviting paver path there and no railing/barrier.
When this accident first occurred the media was full of reports about how the car was speeding when backing up only a little bit to just before the prior overpass you can see a sign that says 45mph.
---
I am not a fan of Uber. I think they are scammy and I believe they ignore the law and they lie.
But I'm also not a fan of *emotionally* processing the event and making a decision before the facts are in like the screaming anonymous coward above.
I have some friends in the a.i. car industry and they think uber's a.i. solution is less robust than some others. But... they are going to be suspect because... they don't work for uber and they do work for uber's competition. Still data to consider.
I'm a strong proponent of sealed black boxes which gather high quality video and all relevant data about car speed, position, acceleration, braking, etc.
My point isn't that the bushes on the left and the fact the road widens from 2 lanes to 4 lanes and the fact that light maps show the area is slightly darker explain away the death of a pedestrian who ignored multiple warning signs and who failed to see the car approaching her and in the video wasn't even looking in the direction of oncoming traffic.
My point is we should consider the facts, analyze the data, *genuinely figure out what went wrong so we can improve it* and avoid emotional histrionics because they interfere with the ability to think rationally.
With a sub point that if A.I. kills 300 pedestrians instead of the roughly 2000 pedestrians now being killed, then that is 1700 lives better and *perfect* is impossible.
That's why I said, "improve" instead of "fix". It will never be perfect when interacting with random events. But it will eventually be much better than humans.
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Re:Finally someone using one of Nicola Tesla's Pat
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Re:let them have adult games in the app store
Do you ever tire of making stupid statements that can be disproven with 2 seconds of internet searching? If your claim was true why do all the modern-day app stores sell Leisure Suit Larry?
Google Play: https://play.google.com/store/...
iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/us/ap...
Windows Store: https://www.microsoft.com/en-u...And this version is more graphic than the original.
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Re:please, do not break a language
But we had one certain thing about a human language, - that the words are separated with a space, with one space. Now even this will be gone.
Certain? Hardly.
You ignore the fact that languages such as English and German evolve, in part, through the gradual creation of compound words. "Air port" was in the running up until ~1925, then *poof*, the space went away in the vast majority of use cases.
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Re: Small bump
Exactly, the combination or OS X 10.4 and Intel sparked the onrush, not some trendy overpriced shit in a colored case from 1998.
You could get a machine with twice the specs as the original iMac for the same price, 17" monitor included, along with trendy MS Natural Keyboard Elite and Office.
Just look at the Progen Polaris for the same time period:
These worthless systems has such incedible mnarkup, it was astoundiing. At least when Apple learned ghow to design with the second gen, it ws at least pretty.
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Re: Small bump
https://www.google.com/search?...
Those show exactly what he was talking about, iMacs didn’t explode till 2005-2006, OS X came out 2001.
People were tired of five years of Windows XP, Vista was rushed, Intel Macs were announced. I remember this clearly.
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Re: Small bump
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Re: Taxes and control
Of course it's not directly $1 equals x increase in CO2. There will be some variation based on what the people are willing to sacrifice. Don't get worked up between the difference between 60k 70k and 80k for already developed countries. Check the countries like China at 10k India at 2k, any other developing countries you want to choose.
Or are you really claiming Norway and Australia are developing countries?
It's not a secret every one already knows this.
It's the whole reason people are worried about poor countries developing and polluting like rich countries. If they didn't develop, there wouldn't be a problem. For rich countries anyway. But how to explain to the poor countries that they can't do exactly what you do? That is the problem. -
Re:"Memory" vs. "storage"
How nice it would be if at least technical sites such as Slashdot could get straight the difference between memory/RAM and SSD/flash storage.
Why limit your complaint to Slashdot? 36.5 million results for flash memory.
They're all wrong. Because it couldn't possibly be you...
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Re:The War Between Man and Machine
It begins....
Man and machine? The driver identifies as "Rafaela", so maybe it should be woman vs machine? Or peoplekind vs machinekind?
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Only Raspberry Pi computers should connect?
Please provide a link. I want to try the Raspberry Pi you recommend.
Only Raspberry Pi computers should connect to the internet? Why Raspberry Pi isn't vulnerable to Spectre or Meltdown
Intel CPUs are not safe: Intel reportedly gears up to patch 8 Spectre Next Generation CPU flaws. (May 3, 2018)
Computers running Windows 10 with internet access are not safe. Some of the huge number of shockingly ugly problems with Windows 10:
Windows 10 is possibly the worst spyware ever made.
7 ways Windows 10 pushes ads at you...
Microsoft is infesting Windows 10 with annoying ads.
Years of bugginess: Windows 10 bugs
Problems this year: Windows 10 problems 2018
Update problems this year: Windows 10 update problems 2018 -
Only Raspberry Pi computers should connect?
Please provide a link. I want to try the Raspberry Pi you recommend.
Only Raspberry Pi computers should connect to the internet? Why Raspberry Pi isn't vulnerable to Spectre or Meltdown
Intel CPUs are not safe: Intel reportedly gears up to patch 8 Spectre Next Generation CPU flaws. (May 3, 2018)
Computers running Windows 10 with internet access are not safe. Some of the huge number of shockingly ugly problems with Windows 10:
Windows 10 is possibly the worst spyware ever made.
7 ways Windows 10 pushes ads at you...
Microsoft is infesting Windows 10 with annoying ads.
Years of bugginess: Windows 10 bugs
Problems this year: Windows 10 problems 2018
Update problems this year: Windows 10 update problems 2018 -
Only Raspberry Pi computers should connect?
Please provide a link. I want to try the Raspberry Pi you recommend.
Only Raspberry Pi computers should connect to the internet? Why Raspberry Pi isn't vulnerable to Spectre or Meltdown
Intel CPUs are not safe: Intel reportedly gears up to patch 8 Spectre Next Generation CPU flaws. (May 3, 2018)
Computers running Windows 10 with internet access are not safe. Some of the huge number of shockingly ugly problems with Windows 10:
Windows 10 is possibly the worst spyware ever made.
7 ways Windows 10 pushes ads at you...
Microsoft is infesting Windows 10 with annoying ads.
Years of bugginess: Windows 10 bugs
Problems this year: Windows 10 problems 2018
Update problems this year: Windows 10 update problems 2018 -
Just don't write about George Carlin on it
Otherwise the TOS thought police might get you if you start using any of the 7 words