I would be surprised if the Nexus devices didn't support USB On The Go as my android phone does. Out of curiosity I connected all sorts of things to it to see what works and what didn't. It didn't like my 64 GB USB flash drive but my 500 GB external USB drive it liked just fine, same with the keyboard, track ball, and 32GB USB flash drives I tried.
Sounds like you had a better experience than I did when I bought my lake property. The title company seemed about as incompetent as could be and the seller and I repeatedly found errors in the documents they provided. The worst one was that the lot description they had was not for the correct property but for the one next door. There was probably 4 or 5 revisions and neither I or the seller was very pleased with their quality of work. I just wish in cases like mine where they buyer and seller have known each other for years, it is a cash deal, and the title was free and clear that we could have instead showed up at the county offices with IDs, cash, and deed/title and done it there while paying for the nominal state and county recording fee. Instead we first had to get a purchase agreement from a real estate agent that we would then hand off to a title company who then does their "title work" and files the transfer with the county and state. For parties who don't know each other I can see the benefit of this but for parties who have known each other for 20 years it seems like there should be a simpler way.
Nope.
While not the GP I live in a state that hasn't gone R in over 40 years for president. So given that if you aren't voting democrat in my state you are wasting your vote. So why not waste it on a candidate I believe in instead of some orange colored turd.
I find it heartbreaking that in these egregious cases politicians don't speak out against it as well as attorney generals don't prosecute people for violating the law. If you are training your replacement then it is obvious that there is an American capable of doing the job and that a H-1B holder should not have it. I have written my polished turds of elected representatives on this issue and from most I got a non response (thank you for contacting your congressman or senator form letter) or a letter blaming republicans for blocking last year's comprehensive immigration law that would have expanded the H-1B program (thanks Amy Klobuchar you ignorant senator of small things)
Yes I understand that hence the quotes. I really wish that for the dog alerting that it wasn't considered to be probabal cause unless the dog had a substantially higher true positive rate than false positive rate. I would also like to know about their true negative and false negative rates as well.
Whitelisting and mandatory access controls (e.g., SELinux) are the only truly effective measures
And the shit storm from the general population with this will be a huge problem. It already is for me trying to get a very regulated industry to do it.
I would disagree with you there. To me it almost seemed like James Comey's statements were him being told to produce one result but an attempt to tell the truth. I found the whole statement to be a laundry list of things Clinton did wrong in regards to this matter interspersed with lots of "lack of intent" statements. The law that everyone has been referencing that Clinton may have broken is 18 U.S. Code 793 (F) which doesn't require intent only gross negligence. So on one hand we have what appears to be rampant incompetence in her handling of e-mail as documented by the FBI and on the other a law that only requires negligence not intent and from these a recommendation to not proceed with indictment proceedings. This is one where it just doesn't' pass the smell test, and no I am not a Trump supporter as most of what comes out of his mouth doesn't pass the smell test either.
I'm tempted to see if I could register "A Pile of Rocks" as a write in candidate for president in MN. It costs nothing beyond a simple letter mailed to MN Secretary of State's Office. I've been telling people in MN who are considering voting Trump because he is the "lesser evil" to instead vote for Gary Johnson as this state won't go republican anyway. The same would apply for people in other very blue states, and the reverse in those very red states. Personally I would like to see the president be elected with only getting like 35% of the vote as it would make it clear that the general population doesn't want what they are offering.
He should have waited to be told to reach for his wallet.
It seems that there may be evidence that he was doing just that. Granted that is what was livestreamed by his girlfriend in the immediate aftermath but it is something more that we have in a lot of cases.
Telling them "no" to almost anything they want will set them off on a rampage.
Yup, although in my case not a rampage but a power trip to show you who is actually in charge. Over the summer when I was in college I was stopped by a cop on my way home from work because as he put it he heard me peel out from a stop light. Problem was the car I had at the time physically couldn't as originally was under powered and now was a worn out rolling pile of crap. The cop asked if they could search my car and I said no so I got put into the back of the squad car while he called for a k-9 unit that they walked around the car that alerted back by the trunk. I then got asked if there was anything in the trunk they needed to know about and I told them no. they opened the trunk and of course saw my tools and some spare parts (like I said the car was a rolling pile). One of the cops comes over and demands to know why I have tools and car parts in my car to which my response was that I drive a pile of shit that likes to break down. The other officer is now busy dumping my tools out on the side of the road and unloading everything else from the trunk, like the spare tire, jack, tire iron, carpet, etc. After not finding anything there they proceed to unload most things from the interior of my car. Once done they didn't find anything, there was nothing to find, I get told that I am free to go but that I have to clean up the mess otherwise I will be ticketed for littering. I demanded their badge numbers and told them I would be filing a complaint which I did but that of course had gotten lost when I inquired about it a few weeks later.
Ever since then I have been very skeptical of anything where a police dog is used and "alerts", and of the police in general.
I would add in that it seems to more rock solid than most distros. Also it seems to have a cleaner install as there is some software I use regularly that I have to build from source as well as the need libraries and on Slackware I don't have a big song and dance like I did the last time I tried Ubuntu. Add in that it doesn't treat me like a retarded baboon and it is a really good distro.
And I imagine most people installed it by getting a CDROM out of the back of their first linux book.
Book? Try ordered from Walnut Creek CDROM. I still have that cdrom and is my official geek card. I helped make a lot of floppies and zip disks from that CD.
Buying used is took risky if you don't know about cars.
My advice is find a friend or relative who knows about cars and bring them along. My dad and I are that person in my family and have been car shopping a number of times with others. Also listen to them if they tell you to stay clear of a vehicle as they do have your best interests at heart. My cousin's wife realy wanted one neon and brought me with to check it out and I told her to stay clear of that car as even for a neon it was a rolling pile but she really wanted it and got it anyway and the thing has been a money pit.
10k miles per year isn't a lot as the average is about 12k. For comparison I typically put between 25k-30k per year on my car and have done so for close to the past 20 years. You are correct in that buying good used vehicles is a great way to save money and they do last, mine never seem to never last year wise as long as I would like but almost every one gets sent off to the scrap yard with well over a quarter million miles on them with one almost reaching 400,000 miles.
Apart from my wife's Mexican made 2000 VW (that thing has been a basket case since day 1) and the, '85 Bronco II I had as a beater, I haven't done any of those things on a vehicle I've owned in ages. Power steering pumps get neglected by most people as they never change the fluid which is what does them in, not to mention turning until until they hit the stop and keep the wheel there for a while which is hard on the pump. My current car has 172,XXX miles on it now and runs and looks great and doesn't even have any strange noises like the whine of a starting to fail power steering pump or audible click from the lifters that so many higher mileage vehicles get.
until such time that the repair costs are no longer economical when prorated over the additional mileage gained
My rule of thumb is generally for each $1000 put into repairs I expect either another 10,000 miles of trouble free usage or 1 year which ever comes first. A good exception is if the vehicle is so old that the cost of the repair exceeds the vehicles value if it were functioning properly.
It should only take about an hour to replace all four sets.
It should unless the the previous owner rounded off a couple of bolts which is what I found when I did brakes on my car last summer so I had to add in a stop midway through to go get a couple of new bolts and a bolt out.
Well for some reason resale value never really applies to the vehicles I own. I pile the miles on them so fast that if they run they end up being worth $1500-$2000 yet run great so it doesn't make sense to dump them until they don't run anymore. At that point the salvage yard will pay me to haul them off and I get between $300-$500 for it. Then again I go and buy nice used vehicles for about $10,000 and the fewest miles I have put on one was 99,000. Keeping up on maintenance really keeps the unexpected repair costs down. Granted things that I consider standard maintenance also include suspension parts, radiators, and engine gaskets as once a vehicle starts getting up around 200,000 miles those things do just wear out, more so when you start approaching 300,000 even when not abused. If you can do those things your self, as well as all the other regular maintenance, cars are really cheap to maintain.
I know that as does probably just about everyone on/. but do you remember how much of a deal the newsmediamadeabouttheterroristsusing encrypt during their coverage of the attacks. It now looks like since the initial frenzy is over with that and people have it in their mind that it was because of encryption officials were unable to stop the attacks the media come out stating that they used unencrypted communication but that gets a lot less if any air play or only a brief mention in a small article buried on the inside.
I would be surprised if the Nexus devices didn't support USB On The Go as my android phone does. Out of curiosity I connected all sorts of things to it to see what works and what didn't. It didn't like my 64 GB USB flash drive but my 500 GB external USB drive it liked just fine, same with the keyboard, track ball, and 32GB USB flash drives I tried.
I took the GP to mean that the population will be doing the shakeup not the president.
To answer your question, more than will have died by giving up their privacy.
For those wondering who is in the 4th Amendment caucus you can find the list at the bottom here.
Not surprising my congressman John Kline is absent from this list but then he hasn't met a war or surveillance action he didn't like.
Sounds like you had a better experience than I did when I bought my lake property. The title company seemed about as incompetent as could be and the seller and I repeatedly found errors in the documents they provided. The worst one was that the lot description they had was not for the correct property but for the one next door. There was probably 4 or 5 revisions and neither I or the seller was very pleased with their quality of work. I just wish in cases like mine where they buyer and seller have known each other for years, it is a cash deal, and the title was free and clear that we could have instead showed up at the county offices with IDs, cash, and deed/title and done it there while paying for the nominal state and county recording fee. Instead we first had to get a purchase agreement from a real estate agent that we would then hand off to a title company who then does their "title work" and files the transfer with the county and state. For parties who don't know each other I can see the benefit of this but for parties who have known each other for 20 years it seems like there should be a simpler way.
Nope.
While not the GP I live in a state that hasn't gone R in over 40 years for president. So given that if you aren't voting democrat in my state you are wasting your vote. So why not waste it on a candidate I believe in instead of some orange colored turd.
I find it heartbreaking that in these egregious cases politicians don't speak out against it as well as attorney generals don't prosecute people for violating the law. If you are training your replacement then it is obvious that there is an American capable of doing the job and that a H-1B holder should not have it. I have written my polished turds of elected representatives on this issue and from most I got a non response (thank you for contacting your congressman or senator form letter) or a letter blaming republicans for blocking last year's comprehensive immigration law that would have expanded the H-1B program (thanks Amy Klobuchar you ignorant senator of small things)
Yes I understand that hence the quotes. I really wish that for the dog alerting that it wasn't considered to be probabal cause unless the dog had a substantially higher true positive rate than false positive rate. I would also like to know about their true negative and false negative rates as well.
Whitelisting and mandatory access controls (e.g., SELinux) are the only truly effective measures
And the shit storm from the general population with this will be a huge problem. It already is for me trying to get a very regulated industry to do it.
I would disagree with you there. To me it almost seemed like James Comey's statements were him being told to produce one result but an attempt to tell the truth. I found the whole statement to be a laundry list of things Clinton did wrong in regards to this matter interspersed with lots of "lack of intent" statements. The law that everyone has been referencing that Clinton may have broken is 18 U.S. Code 793 (F) which doesn't require intent only gross negligence. So on one hand we have what appears to be rampant incompetence in her handling of e-mail as documented by the FBI and on the other a law that only requires negligence not intent and from these a recommendation to not proceed with indictment proceedings. This is one where it just doesn't' pass the smell test, and no I am not a Trump supporter as most of what comes out of his mouth doesn't pass the smell test either.
I'm tempted to see if I could register "A Pile of Rocks" as a write in candidate for president in MN. It costs nothing beyond a simple letter mailed to MN Secretary of State's Office. I've been telling people in MN who are considering voting Trump because he is the "lesser evil" to instead vote for Gary Johnson as this state won't go republican anyway. The same would apply for people in other very blue states, and the reverse in those very red states. Personally I would like to see the president be elected with only getting like 35% of the vote as it would make it clear that the general population doesn't want what they are offering.
He should have waited to be told to reach for his wallet.
It seems that there may be evidence that he was doing just that. Granted that is what was livestreamed by his girlfriend in the immediate aftermath but it is something more that we have in a lot of cases.
Telling them "no" to almost anything they want will set them off on a rampage.
Yup, although in my case not a rampage but a power trip to show you who is actually in charge. Over the summer when I was in college I was stopped by a cop on my way home from work because as he put it he heard me peel out from a stop light. Problem was the car I had at the time physically couldn't as originally was under powered and now was a worn out rolling pile of crap. The cop asked if they could search my car and I said no so I got put into the back of the squad car while he called for a k-9 unit that they walked around the car that alerted back by the trunk. I then got asked if there was anything in the trunk they needed to know about and I told them no. they opened the trunk and of course saw my tools and some spare parts (like I said the car was a rolling pile). One of the cops comes over and demands to know why I have tools and car parts in my car to which my response was that I drive a pile of shit that likes to break down. The other officer is now busy dumping my tools out on the side of the road and unloading everything else from the trunk, like the spare tire, jack, tire iron, carpet, etc. After not finding anything there they proceed to unload most things from the interior of my car. Once done they didn't find anything, there was nothing to find, I get told that I am free to go but that I have to clean up the mess otherwise I will be ticketed for littering. I demanded their badge numbers and told them I would be filing a complaint which I did but that of course had gotten lost when I inquired about it a few weeks later.
Ever since then I have been very skeptical of anything where a police dog is used and "alerts", and of the police in general.
I wish more Facebook narcissists would realize that.
But people really do care about the inane shit I post, or is that shit post.
I guess that would be covered by Deuteronomy 14:3, the "don't eat abomination" part.
So Canadian Geese are out then?
I would add in that it seems to more rock solid than most distros. Also it seems to have a cleaner install as there is some software I use regularly that I have to build from source as well as the need libraries and on Slackware I don't have a big song and dance like I did the last time I tried Ubuntu. Add in that it doesn't treat me like a retarded baboon and it is a really good distro.
And I imagine most people installed it by getting a CDROM out of the back of their first linux book.
Book? Try ordered from Walnut Creek CDROM. I still have that cdrom and is my official geek card. I helped make a lot of floppies and zip disks from that CD.
Buying used is took risky if you don't know about cars.
My advice is find a friend or relative who knows about cars and bring them along. My dad and I are that person in my family and have been car shopping a number of times with others. Also listen to them if they tell you to stay clear of a vehicle as they do have your best interests at heart. My cousin's wife realy wanted one neon and brought me with to check it out and I told her to stay clear of that car as even for a neon it was a rolling pile but she really wanted it and got it anyway and the thing has been a money pit.
10k miles per year isn't a lot as the average is about 12k. For comparison I typically put between 25k-30k per year on my car and have done so for close to the past 20 years. You are correct in that buying good used vehicles is a great way to save money and they do last, mine never seem to never last year wise as long as I would like but almost every one gets sent off to the scrap yard with well over a quarter million miles on them with one almost reaching 400,000 miles.
Apart from my wife's Mexican made 2000 VW (that thing has been a basket case since day 1) and the, '85 Bronco II I had as a beater, I haven't done any of those things on a vehicle I've owned in ages. Power steering pumps get neglected by most people as they never change the fluid which is what does them in, not to mention turning until until they hit the stop and keep the wheel there for a while which is hard on the pump. My current car has 172,XXX miles on it now and runs and looks great and doesn't even have any strange noises like the whine of a starting to fail power steering pump or audible click from the lifters that so many higher mileage vehicles get.
Sounds like you need to find a better gas station that doesn't have shitty gas.
until such time that the repair costs are no longer economical when prorated over the additional mileage gained
My rule of thumb is generally for each $1000 put into repairs I expect either another 10,000 miles of trouble free usage or 1 year which ever comes first. A good exception is if the vehicle is so old that the cost of the repair exceeds the vehicles value if it were functioning properly.
It should only take about an hour to replace all four sets.
It should unless the the previous owner rounded off a couple of bolts which is what I found when I did brakes on my car last summer so I had to add in a stop midway through to go get a couple of new bolts and a bolt out.
Well for some reason resale value never really applies to the vehicles I own. I pile the miles on them so fast that if they run they end up being worth $1500-$2000 yet run great so it doesn't make sense to dump them until they don't run anymore. At that point the salvage yard will pay me to haul them off and I get between $300-$500 for it. Then again I go and buy nice used vehicles for about $10,000 and the fewest miles I have put on one was 99,000. Keeping up on maintenance really keeps the unexpected repair costs down. Granted things that I consider standard maintenance also include suspension parts, radiators, and engine gaskets as once a vehicle starts getting up around 200,000 miles those things do just wear out, more so when you start approaching 300,000 even when not abused. If you can do those things your self, as well as all the other regular maintenance, cars are really cheap to maintain.
I know that as does probably just about everyone on /. but do you remember how much of a deal the news media made about the terrorists using encrypt during their coverage of the attacks. It now looks like since the initial frenzy is over with that and people have it in their mind that it was because of encryption officials were unable to stop the attacks the media come out stating that they used unencrypted communication but that gets a lot less if any air play or only a brief mention in a small article buried on the inside.