There are people that can help you (for a price of course). They will help find her weaknesses and help you use them to break her as much as is needed. Mentally unstable women are the most fun as you can bring them to the brink of suicide - and over if ultimately needed. They can only win if you let them, and if you let them you deserve what's coming to you.
Wow, the A-Team have certainly changed their game.
Debian is the bees knees until something goes wrong. Then your server won't boot or there's a package that can't upgrade without dependency issues or will conflict and uninstall another essential package that your application depends on.
I still like Debian overall but it's sure bit me a few times. I've never had those issues with Slackware but it can take longer to get where you're going.
There's very little point validating an email address anyway. What are you trying to do? There's no way to check that the user is using a *real* email address (Though you can exclude some of the temporary domains if you wish) unless you actually send a validation link and if you're trying to protect the user against typos, they're just as likely to typo a valid address anyway.
Personally, I usually just check that there's something@something.something and call it done (somethings can include @s and.s).
The ebook market and format is f***ed up at the moment, only somewhat mitigated by varying degrees of success of third parties cracking the DRM. If you buy stuff from one provider right now, don't expect it to work on a different providers later. The good news is this will probably fix itself at some point when publishers start considering the sales they are losing when people choose piracy as the superior (not because of cost) option.
Perhaps. What's certain is that all PS3 exploits started on Linux, so shall we bet that the net result of this will be that Sony will think twice before adding the "Other Os" option in the PS4? Great.
Wasn't it the case that they only added it to take advantage of a tax loophole which has since been closed? If so, there was no way they were going to add it anyway.
Methinks you don't really comprehend the concept of a boycott.
It is not about just slightly changing your purchasing decisions as long as it's convenient to you, it's about making conscious decisions to avoid a product or supplier even when it leads to a slight short term negative to you. Yes, that may mean you watch something else instead of LOTR. If you don't want to boycott something, that's your choice and that's fine. Just realize and accept that you don't care enough or simply don't think a boycott would be effective to do anything about it.
Personally, I've been avoiding Sony products for a long time. They've always given me a bad vibe and I wasn't surprised when the shit started becoming actually overt and directly aimed at the consumer. Of the products I can think of that I've walked away from, I can immediately recall the Vaio, a flat panel TV, a cell phone, a Clie, a PMP and an e-reader and anything with the Sony Memory stick. Small peanuts for Sony I'm sure. My life has gone on.
If this were going to work, it would need to offer the remote site the opportunity to ping back "Tracking is required to obtain access to the content/services I am providing. Approve/Deny". I know most of us here don't like tracking but it's a two way street and if you make it all one sided, the other side is simply going to ignore your "Please don't track me" flag.
It seems obvious that this is the way Facebook has begun to position itself. It has increasingly encouraged the integration of its features with external websites while simultaneously removing features that allow external sites and applications to integrate with them (boxes and tabs). They already provide an API for sites to use Facebook logins for authentication.
It's either rather short sighted or an extremely wise move. I'm not as concerned about Facebook as some but personally, I hope it fails.
I got interested so I did a bit more searching after my last post. I didn't find one with outstanding reviews and some didn't have USB 2.0 but here's a couple that are in-stock that you could look into.
Overall, I like the phone. I'm not even fussed that it has the GPS issue too much (it seemed to work well at first and then stopped working well). I bought my phone with the expectation that it was an issue that would be dealt with in an appropriate amount of time but it has been 4 months now.
It's all about the lack of information coming out of Samsung about the issue. Complete stonewalling. No idea when or even if Samsung will get around to fixing it (They have left their device drivers high-and dry before) or whether it's a hardware or software issue. Nothing. That kind of lack of customer service in this day and age is just unacceptable.
The phone did develop the random shutdown issue a couple of weeks ago but AT&T was good about replacing it quickly so I count that as a positive experience overall. A problem does not have to turn into a customer abusing experience but Samsung have chosen to do so with the GPS issue.
There are people that can help you (for a price of course). They will help find her weaknesses and help you use them to break her as much as is needed. Mentally unstable women are the most fun as you can bring them to the brink of suicide - and over if ultimately needed. They can only win if you let them, and if you let them you deserve what's coming to you.
Wow, the A-Team have certainly changed their game.
I don't think Ellen Griswold appreciated it.
Debian is the bees knees until something goes wrong. Then your server won't boot or there's a package that can't upgrade without dependency issues or will conflict and uninstall another essential package that your application depends on.
I still like Debian overall but it's sure bit me a few times. I've never had those issues with Slackware but it can take longer to get where you're going.
Remember, my unfounded fear of gun owners might well curtail my freedom to walk in the park after dark
FTFY
There's very little point validating an email address anyway. What are you trying to do? There's no way to check that the user is using a *real* email address (Though you can exclude some of the temporary domains if you wish) unless you actually send a validation link and if you're trying to protect the user against typos, they're just as likely to typo a valid address anyway.
Personally, I usually just check that there's something@something.something and call it done (somethings can include @s and .s).
The ebook market and format is f***ed up at the moment, only somewhat mitigated by varying degrees of success of third parties cracking the DRM. If you buy stuff from one provider right now, don't expect it to work on a different providers later. The good news is this will probably fix itself at some point when publishers start considering the sales they are losing when people choose piracy as the superior (not because of cost) option.
I thought the "whoosh" was no longer in use but I hear it's been seen in the wild recently.
New LED watches are being made today.
Yes. About to enter its third year. Just upgraded it to the latest Mythbuntu and added the Hulu plugin.
Perhaps. What's certain is that all PS3 exploits started on Linux, so shall we bet that the net result of this will be that Sony will think twice before adding the "Other Os" option in the PS4? Great.
Wasn't it the case that they only added it to take advantage of a tax loophole which has since been closed? If so, there was no way they were going to add it anyway.
Methinks you don't really comprehend the concept of a boycott.
It is not about just slightly changing your purchasing decisions as long as it's convenient to you, it's about making conscious decisions to avoid a product or supplier even when it leads to a slight short term negative to you. Yes, that may mean you watch something else instead of LOTR. If you don't want to boycott something, that's your choice and that's fine. Just realize and accept that you don't care enough or simply don't think a boycott would be effective to do anything about it.
Personally, I've been avoiding Sony products for a long time. They've always given me a bad vibe and I wasn't surprised when the shit started becoming actually overt and directly aimed at the consumer. Of the products I can think of that I've walked away from, I can immediately recall the Vaio, a flat panel TV, a cell phone, a Clie, a PMP and an e-reader and anything with the Sony Memory stick. Small peanuts for Sony I'm sure. My life has gone on.
If this were going to work, it would need to offer the remote site the opportunity to ping back "Tracking is required to obtain access to the content/services I am providing. Approve/Deny". I know most of us here don't like tracking but it's a two way street and if you make it all one sided, the other side is simply going to ignore your "Please don't track me" flag.
Same here. The old design had something similar but you could turn it off.
That's what he said.
Microsoft can compete on merits but they stopped selling it the year after release? Could the one be the disproof of the other perhaps?
Yet more "Change I can believe in."
"The airport remained open on Monday evening, and passengers continued to flow through the hall where the bomb had exploded."
Good to see the terrorists haven't won everywhere...
The government is paying the banks not to lend out the money to prevent inflation.
http://www.samizdata.net/blog/archives/2010/06/money_supply_th.html
Strings indeed.
Clutching at straws to the last...
If you really care about your intellectual honest, I'd recommend some introspective study.
Or, indeed, the rabbits?
It seems obvious that this is the way Facebook has begun to position itself. It has increasingly encouraged the integration of its features with external websites while simultaneously removing features that allow external sites and applications to integrate with them (boxes and tabs). They already provide an API for sites to use Facebook logins for authentication.
It's either rather short sighted or an extremely wise move. I'm not as concerned about Facebook as some but personally, I hope it fails.
You beat me to it.
I got interested so I did a bit more searching after my last post. I didn't find one with outstanding reviews and some didn't have USB 2.0 but here's a couple that are in-stock that you could look into.
http://www.amazon.com/Memorex-TRAVELSYNC-USB-UFD-READER-32028501/dp/B000BZ4TY2/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1294097574&sr=8-1
http://www.amazon.com/Sima-USB-101-Digital-Transfer-System/dp/B000F9LRYY/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=electronics&qid=1294097546&sr=8-1
The second device appears to run Linux FWIW (Beowulf cluster etc)
I wouldn't be surprised if Android could be a USB host either with the right software but it just not be possible
The GPS. though not so much the issue itself as Samsung's refusal to communicate on the issue.
Overall, I like the phone. I'm not even fussed that it has the GPS issue too much (it seemed to work well at first and then stopped working well). I bought my phone with the expectation that it was an issue that would be dealt with in an appropriate amount of time but it has been 4 months now.
It's all about the lack of information coming out of Samsung about the issue. Complete stonewalling. No idea when or even if Samsung will get around to fixing it (They have left their device drivers high-and dry before) or whether it's a hardware or software issue. Nothing. That kind of lack of customer service in this day and age is just unacceptable.
The phone did develop the random shutdown issue a couple of weeks ago but AT&T was good about replacing it quickly so I count that as a positive experience overall. A problem does not have to turn into a customer abusing experience but Samsung have chosen to do so with the GPS issue.