After all, if a little hype helps a little, then a ridiculous amount of hype will help a whole lot, right?? Kids just love when you obsolete their brand new 700$ toy before summer is even over.
Yea, so? I also glossed over the fact that he sold out the entire gaming industry to make a quick buck with Facebook, and the fact that a guy that smart should have expected a law suit when he decided to violate the terms of his contracts with his previous employers.
... I think they're gonna string him out to dry on this one. Over a decade ago there was already stereoscopic and anaglyph 3d rendering code in Quake3. That I know of. (I have little reason to expect Quake2 and Quake1 didn't as well, but I haven't actually looked myself.) It's pretty clear to anyone paying attention that they had this VR plan cooking well before they sold iD to ZeniMax. Legal technicalities aside, ZeniMax appears to have a case here.
I know the point you're trying to imply but in reality, that experience should merely serve as an admonishment against retroactively adding accessibility compliance to a site built from the ground up by people who neither understand nor care about it.
He's dead. He died crazy, poor and lonely, because he was an unappreciated genius who'd been repeatedly robbed by corporate villains. I swear if the next thing some greedy corporate bastards name after Tesla isn't a cure for mental illness or a solid-state generator that provides unlimited free wireless power I'm going to blow a gasket.
It's actually not bad advice as a base exercise to start with for public sites that have to comply with accessibility laws. If it's not readable visually in Lynx, there's little to no chance for some poor blind sod who's limited to using screen reader software.
The problem is that the phrase "hacked the election" is being bandied about because most interested parties aren't actually intelligent or educated enough to comprehend that social networking itself, as a paradigm, was an entry vector through which public perception was hacked. No actual computers were hacked, though some espionage occurred.
If wrapping one's head around this seemingly absurd notion that in a networked system, the people are actually the weakest links is a task that the bulk of our populace simply can't grasp, how do you expect them to come to terms with the fact that it was they themselves who were, in fact, "hacked."
* Hillary decides to keep a ridiculously ill-advised private email server, then destroys evidence when she is ordered to turn it over (at her convenience). And there was STILL incriminating crap in there.
Ill-advised, but also common practice. Note that she wasn't prosecuted for this because they'd have to prosecute half of Washington with her.
* DKIM-validated DNC emails are released that prove that the national party was actively working to sabotage Bernie Sanders, the candidate with the clear enthusiasm advantage.
Also common practice. Nobody expected this was NOT happening on BOTH sides during EVERY election in modern times.
* Thousands of emails...
12 emails dude. There were only 12 motherfucking emails. Comey just got fired over this gross distortion of facts. Do try to keep up.
That is, unless the documents are blatantly obviously false. You seem to be assuming that it wasn't obvious to the majority of French voters. You seem to have failed at a basic conceptualization of cause and effect.
This almost never happens, but for once I agree with Microsoft here, even though I believe their real justification has something to do with sticking it to Apple.
Yea but what I'm telling you is I've seen it first-hand. You have to know these people to know what they go through. Yes, some of it is clearly self-inflicted. But how do you convince them to stop it? Oh, right... education.
Legal precedent on this one actually seems to vary from state-to-state. Also note that it's a federal crime for companies to compile personal identifying information of children under the age of 13. So if you're using a 3rd party data service for this type of spying, on a cellphone contract you've signed yourself for a physical device you then handed to a child under 13...
Will Oremus, reporter at Slate said, "I asked Facebook whether the 3,000 new content-moderation jobs will be employees or contractors. The company declined to comment."
Ironically, they'll be hired from the same foreign worker pool that's being paid to post the videos in the first place.
After all, if a little hype helps a little, then a ridiculous amount of hype will help a whole lot, right?? Kids just love when you obsolete their brand new 700$ toy before summer is even over.
Crap. Thanks for reminding me to renew my Science License!
Is this why WoW gets slower with every release?
Yea, so? I also glossed over the fact that he sold out the entire gaming industry to make a quick buck with Facebook, and the fact that a guy that smart should have expected a law suit when he decided to violate the terms of his contracts with his previous employers.
... I think they're gonna string him out to dry on this one. Over a decade ago there was already stereoscopic and anaglyph 3d rendering code in Quake3. That I know of. (I have little reason to expect Quake2 and Quake1 didn't as well, but I haven't actually looked myself.) It's pretty clear to anyone paying attention that they had this VR plan cooking well before they sold iD to ZeniMax. Legal technicalities aside, ZeniMax appears to have a case here.
Then you're dead.
Well, it's really more of a moral victory.
He should have asked Slashdot. What a noob.
spoiler alert. it will be something dumb.
I know the point you're trying to imply but in reality, that experience should merely serve as an admonishment against retroactively adding accessibility compliance to a site built from the ground up by people who neither understand nor care about it.
He's dead. He died crazy, poor and lonely, because he was an unappreciated genius who'd been repeatedly robbed by corporate villains. I swear if the next thing some greedy corporate bastards name after Tesla isn't a cure for mental illness or a solid-state generator that provides unlimited free wireless power I'm going to blow a gasket.
It's actually not bad advice as a base exercise to start with for public sites that have to comply with accessibility laws. If it's not readable visually in Lynx, there's little to no chance for some poor blind sod who's limited to using screen reader software.
... does not a "DDOS" entail.
The problem is that the phrase "hacked the election" is being bandied about because most interested parties aren't actually intelligent or educated enough to comprehend that social networking itself, as a paradigm, was an entry vector through which public perception was hacked. No actual computers were hacked, though some espionage occurred.
If wrapping one's head around this seemingly absurd notion that in a networked system, the people are actually the weakest links is a task that the bulk of our populace simply can't grasp, how do you expect them to come to terms with the fact that it was they themselves who were, in fact, "hacked."
* Hillary decides to keep a ridiculously ill-advised private email server, then destroys evidence when she is ordered to turn it over (at her convenience). And there was STILL incriminating crap in there.
Ill-advised, but also common practice. Note that she wasn't prosecuted for this because they'd have to prosecute half of Washington with her.
* DKIM-validated DNC emails are released that prove that the national party was actively working to sabotage Bernie Sanders, the candidate with the clear enthusiasm advantage.
Also common practice. Nobody expected this was NOT happening on BOTH sides during EVERY election in modern times.
* Thousands of emails...
12 emails dude. There were only 12 motherfucking emails. Comey just got fired over this gross distortion of facts. Do try to keep up.
That is, unless the documents are blatantly obviously false. You seem to be assuming that it wasn't obvious to the majority of French voters. You seem to have failed at a basic conceptualization of cause and effect.
This almost never happens, but for once I agree with Microsoft here, even though I believe their real justification has something to do with sticking it to Apple.
Yea but what I'm telling you is I've seen it first-hand. You have to know these people to know what they go through. Yes, some of it is clearly self-inflicted. But how do you convince them to stop it? Oh, right... education.
Poverty and low education simply cannot explain low life expectancy...
Spend some time in Pine Ridge.
ANSI C
Legal precedent on this one actually seems to vary from state-to-state. Also note that it's a federal crime for companies to compile personal identifying information of children under the age of 13. So if you're using a 3rd party data service for this type of spying, on a cellphone contract you've signed yourself for a physical device you then handed to a child under 13...
Obvious case of the pot calling the kettle black right here. I bet you think you have the right to hit your children too.
It is not a revolutionary neural simulation. Its basically just a 80's-era chess machine.
Will Oremus, reporter at Slate said, "I asked Facebook whether the 3,000 new content-moderation jobs will be employees or contractors. The company declined to comment."
Ironically, they'll be hired from the same foreign worker pool that's being paid to post the videos in the first place.
They will as soon as people start needing them for fixes instead of avoiding them because of breakage.
Require you to buy one in order to get security updates for Windows 10.