The issue is that when a product's paper trail is lost and it is sold to consumers all you have to do is hope there isn't a problem with that batch and you are fine. With the government you can lost your multi-million dollar contract so I am assuming they have to take more precautions and keep the data for a long time.
For some reason that page took forever to load an had a banner at the top that said
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The company could be a small server farm or something similar where they would have 24 IT employees working on the actual network and 6 employees to support the sales, management,marketing, etc. departments. It could also be a company which needs a lot of small scripts and programs written and has a fairly large infrastructure for 500 people. Also remember that only 6 of the guys are helping out the 500 other employees.
The problem is that in most professional environments you are supposed to look like everyone else. Remember that when working the company isn't paying you to represent yourself but that you are representing the company. If you feel that you need to express your individuality to the point that a uniform wouldn't allow you to do that then you probably shouldn't be working in that sort of environment anyway.
Except eventually they will get some guy in a different country who will say "blow it out your ass I dont need to listen to you" and they will be stuck.
The only time I ever use cursive is when I sign something and it looks like a squiggly mess. We could just teach kids to sign their name in cursive and be done with it after that.
I took a half year Intro to Computer Science class as a senior in high school. The class was actually paired with a half year of Principles of Engineering. The thing I loved about these classes it that they were very broad based. We did just about everything in a very basic form. I am a second year CS Major and I am still seeing stuff I learned in the class. We were able to get so much because we used Python but we started with C-- then moved to C then we learned python. Originally the course had used java but you need to know more to be able to have a good project at the end of the course. If I were to make a CS class for High School students I would do a similar thing as what I took. Concentrate on keeping things simple and make most of the point(like 50%) are for projects and labs. About 20% for small tests(only have 1 or 2), 10% for homework and the 20% for a final project. Our project was programming a poker game using a provided graphic library. We also got more than a week in class to work on it in groups of two. I would do something like this because it will give you enough time to do everything at a basic level but at the same time it will allow the students to get something at the end of the course that they can see and looks cool. We only had 1 test in the class and 1 quiz but each week we had a lab which we worked on mostly in class. My teacher would give a hand out the first class each week and would lecture off of it. After the lecture class we would then work on a small project that used what we learned. I don't know if this class would be good for the general person to take or if there would be a lot of support for it from the students but in my school(around 800 students) there was 1 CS class which had a about 5 people who actually wanted to take it and about 20 who were just filling a science requirement. The 20 students who took it and weren't interested in CS as much as I was did struggle and had a hard time but because of the Lab/Project based structure it allowed them to ask for help. I must say this, had the class been a full year of CS there wouldn't have been enough students to fill the class so I would make sure there would be some interest in the class before fully building the curriculum.
When I was in high school we had a foreign language lab which was use occasionally for activities. When ever we went into the lab the teacher would sit there an monitor our screens and had the ability to listen into what we were saying. Because the listening part was built into the software I was forced to use I was unable to disable that but I did kill the winvnc process that they use to spy on the screen. Our school was horrible in their security practices as I was also able to look up the password that was assigned to every student in the Junior and Senior class the put the password in the comment of the user. Plus I was able to gain access to the main server's C:\ drive using the "dummy computers" the terminal like computer connections and a link in my Documents folder to the C:\ that I made on one of the few real computers in the building.
Someone needs to find his mother's address and send her a letter advocating the beating of Jack Thompson. I swear if someone did that to me as a grown man with my own separate life from my parents I would be very pissed off and would probably try to sue for harassment. This is borderline stalking.
I understood that we were talking about desktops, people see linux as a hard to understand operating system that is alien to them. Sure Ubuntu is great and you can do most things with a GUI but people don't see it like that. In the mass's mind linux is all command prompt or a majority of it is command propmt with no support. The biggest thing hurting linux is not the OS its self but people's perception of the OS. Also when I was complaining about the config files I meant that it shouldnt be the only option.
When I was moving from a windows server 2003 server to a Ubuntu server I realized the main reason people refuse to switch to linux. I noticed that even though it will install everything I need right off the bat and there are nice guides on The Perfect Ubuntu Server it was still more work then I was willing to do. I had been hosting 3 of my private owned domain names on my "server"(old P4 desktop) and in order to set up the Virtual Hosts I had to make configuration files and use command prompt. Until they make it so you don't need to read an entire manual on how to setup a simple configuration of the linux software then it will not be the year of the linux desktop.
The issue is that when a product's paper trail is lost and it is sold to consumers all you have to do is hope there isn't a problem with that batch and you are fine. With the government you can lost your multi-million dollar contract so I am assuming they have to take more precautions and keep the data for a long time.
Too bad you will never get any
To view this and many other websites faster in the future please upgrade your Service plan to a Platinum level plan at $199.99 per month not including taxes and fees
The company could be a small server farm or something similar where they would have 24 IT employees working on the actual network and 6 employees to support the sales, management,marketing, etc. departments. It could also be a company which needs a lot of small scripts and programs written and has a fairly large infrastructure for 500 people. Also remember that only 6 of the guys are helping out the 500 other employees.
The problem is that in most professional environments you are supposed to look like everyone else. Remember that when working the company isn't paying you to represent yourself but that you are representing the company. If you feel that you need to express your individuality to the point that a uniform wouldn't allow you to do that then you probably shouldn't be working in that sort of environment anyway.
Except eventually they will get some guy in a different country who will say "blow it out your ass I dont need to listen to you" and they will be stuck.
The only time I ever use cursive is when I sign something and it looks like a squiggly mess. We could just teach kids to sign their name in cursive and be done with it after that.
If CLR doesn't kill it you could always dip it in bleach over night. Plus bleach is really cheap and even a diluted bath will work.
We Americans like out fences and guns(in case you haven't noticed).
Its the Impossible Planet tell him to look for The Satan Pit
How many hard drives are we talking about here?
I wish that it didn't have the take a picture stipulation because then you could just call up his hotel or other forms of shelter when you find him.
According to the math on this QDB, the average ejaculation is 7.49400542 petabytes. So I would say less than an ounce.
Oh yea... Well I bet he hasn't been laid. ...
Oh wait neither have I. fuck!
I took a half year Intro to Computer Science class as a senior in high school. The class was actually paired with a half year of Principles of Engineering. The thing I loved about these classes it that they were very broad based. We did just about everything in a very basic form. I am a second year CS Major and I am still seeing stuff I learned in the class. We were able to get so much because we used Python but we started with C-- then moved to C then we learned python. Originally the course had used java but you need to know more to be able to have a good project at the end of the course. If I were to make a CS class for High School students I would do a similar thing as what I took. Concentrate on keeping things simple and make most of the point(like 50%) are for projects and labs. About 20% for small tests(only have 1 or 2), 10% for homework and the 20% for a final project. Our project was programming a poker game using a provided graphic library. We also got more than a week in class to work on it in groups of two. I would do something like this because it will give you enough time to do everything at a basic level but at the same time it will allow the students to get something at the end of the course that they can see and looks cool. We only had 1 test in the class and 1 quiz but each week we had a lab which we worked on mostly in class. My teacher would give a hand out the first class each week and would lecture off of it. After the lecture class we would then work on a small project that used what we learned. I don't know if this class would be good for the general person to take or if there would be a lot of support for it from the students but in my school(around 800 students) there was 1 CS class which had a about 5 people who actually wanted to take it and about 20 who were just filling a science requirement. The 20 students who took it and weren't interested in CS as much as I was did struggle and had a hard time but because of the Lab/Project based structure it allowed them to ask for help. I must say this, had the class been a full year of CS there wouldn't have been enough students to fill the class so I would make sure there would be some interest in the class before fully building the curriculum.
That hasn't stopped people in the past
When I was in high school we had a foreign language lab which was use occasionally for activities. When ever we went into the lab the teacher would sit there an monitor our screens and had the ability to listen into what we were saying. Because the listening part was built into the software I was forced to use I was unable to disable that but I did kill the winvnc process that they use to spy on the screen. Our school was horrible in their security practices as I was also able to look up the password that was assigned to every student in the Junior and Senior class the put the password in the comment of the user. Plus I was able to gain access to the main server's C:\ drive using the "dummy computers" the terminal like computer connections and a link in my Documents folder to the C:\ that I made on one of the few real computers in the building.
You could always download something to do with Bittorrent :P
He should find Jesus I bet he would help.
Where do we place bets?
Oh... wait... not that kind of porn fight.
Someone needs to find his mother's address and send her a letter advocating the beating of Jack Thompson. I swear if someone did that to me as a grown man with my own separate life from my parents I would be very pissed off and would probably try to sue for harassment. This is borderline stalking.
Seven pages to install the server many more to get it to work the way you want it.
I understood that we were talking about desktops, people see linux as a hard to understand operating system that is alien to them. Sure Ubuntu is great and you can do most things with a GUI but people don't see it like that. In the mass's mind linux is all command prompt or a majority of it is command propmt with no support. The biggest thing hurting linux is not the OS its self but people's perception of the OS.
Also when I was complaining about the config files I meant that it shouldnt be the only option.
When I was moving from a windows server 2003 server to a Ubuntu server I realized the main reason people refuse to switch to linux. I noticed that even though it will install everything I need right off the bat and there are nice guides on The Perfect Ubuntu Server it was still more work then I was willing to do. I had been hosting 3 of my private owned domain names on my "server"(old P4 desktop) and in order to set up the Virtual Hosts I had to make configuration files and use command prompt. Until they make it so you don't need to read an entire manual on how to setup a simple configuration of the linux software then it will not be the year of the linux desktop.
My dog actually will run on my treadmill and loves it! unfortunately there isn't enough room for both of us at the same time(he is a 75lbs lab).