The first online dictionary entry that google returned says "person without a paid job but available to work." Neither one includes any mention of "retired" or "wants to work".
I would count both of those as "not available". Most employers would, too, doubly so.
The only people who wouldn't are probably trying to sell you gold.
It, umm... actually is in this case. Nobody wants to immigrate and start a life in a place they might get kicked out of, depending only on the whims of politicians and the general electorate, so there's a shortage of labor... in job areas that that 4.3% of job seekers is either incapable of doing, or unwilling to do at previous prevailing wage rates.
Yeah, you just "figure out" that colon is being used as a control character. Right.
Only crazy people think using vi as the "only editor installed everywhere" is a great idea. It is unintuitive, and a royal PITA to use. Really "J" from outside insert mode to get rid of a newline? That's beyond cretinous. I can only guess that it persists due to the more sadistic greybeards wanting to lord it over the n00bs when they find themselves on a system with no decent editors.
I purge all vi from all my personal systems just to find the broken programs that don't use $EDITOR/$VISUAL.
Underscores in DNS names are reserved for use in SRV and other such records, where they are mandatory, and they serve to prevent SRV records from getting confused with A and AAAA records, which are not supposed to have them. Humans are supposed to be able to tell the difference between a SRV and A/AAAA record by looking at them, without any extra markup.
Real things use SRV records. Just take a look at any pcap of any enterprise network and you'll see them flying every which way. Lots of service discovery protocols use them, which means a lot of gadgets use them as well.
Yes, it is. Well. to the extent that systemd being used by the system for DNS resolution is correct, as opposed to using a real DNS resolver. The extra junk in systemd should only be used to bootstrap containers and VMs and should be replaced during boot with real services. And really, systemd and/or its packagers should ship a version without that crap for people not doing VM/container stuff so it doesn't get in their way or pull in unwanted dependencies.
most people doing this are dramatically boosting the transmission levels on their routers.
General rule of thumb: if you can't get a good signal at 15dBm on 2.4 and 18dBm on 5GHZ, do not try to go higher. Install more APs closer to your clients. Otherwise you are just damaging the spectrum. The higher levels are really meant for when you have real antennas on both ends, like a WDS. You can't make cheap client antennas better by shouting at them. Also, you should have a compelling reason to deploy 5GHz outdoors, even using factory firmware... you are a lot less likely to do something destructive fumbling around with the 2.4GHz band outdoors. Partly because it is already ruined, and partly because it doesn't have to worry about radar.
Many settings that are not strictly RF-related are bunched in with the RF settings, and can use some tuning, and are not settable from factory firmware -- which you should never run anyway because it is full of junk plug-and-play services and will stop receiving security updates long before you are done using the AP.
Vendors have no incentive to separate out these settings in hardware, nor support them in software, nor continue to support an AP after it is out of warranty, as then they are just decreasing demand for their latest models.
Most people who install Open Source firmware are after features not related to RF, few people feel any need to install custom firmware on the WiFi card (more on some models than on others) and what special WiFi card settings they are looking to alter are things like beacon formats and timing, noise floor detection, etc.
Refusal to publish solid specs from which open source drivers can be written probably account for the majority of issues where RF parameters are set up wrong. Especially, vendors shipping product whose EEPROM settings are wrong and then kludging things back together in their binary-only drivers, rather than reprogramming the EEPROM on upgrade, might be the number one cause.
Back in college there was a running battle over whether to keep the Gor books on shelves in the Sci-Fi library. It consumed an inordinate amount of time and bile. Never read them... never was into cheezy fantasy. Steered clear of the whole mess.
If I thought this White House was smart enough to play 3D chess, I'd say the converse: an attempt to use the Russia kerfluffle to keep the scent off appointing one of the dissenting rightist senators as AG and have a Republican governor appoint a yes vote on the repeal of health care.
If you already know coding, you can learn webdev in a few days from free on-line tutorials or maybe a $20 book from Amazon.
Not that this place actually taught it, I dunno, but this is no longer true. Proper web development these days involves learning to integrate tons of really bad declarative "code" from conflicting committee-designed standards together in a way that runs on tons of different poorly or only partialy implemented browsers and then integrating that with whatever flavor of backend was popular back when your predecessor implemented the last backend refactor. A good web developer knows a crapton about a lot of really awful software, and has to constantly jam more crappy knowlege into their head, plus suffer the constant discouragement of watching something you spent weeks learning cold become obselete every week. And get paid crap. And deal with customers/bosses who want things they can't even describe. I have a lot of respect for the guys who tough those positions out... not all of them are smart, but they tend to be motivated and energetic, because they have to be.
But.. knowing coding you can at least still develop basic non-"webscale" UIs using a mostly-compatible subset of browser features. So you're in a heck of a lot better position than someone trying to pick it up cold.
What's insane is the fact that I have to take time off work to do just about everything, because other than restaurants and convenience stores, everyone works the same damn schedule. You'd think if they wanted to restructure things they'd fix that, too, instead of just switching the time of the same damn schedule.
Oh, I know, believe me. But an ISP's "local network" is a chunk of the Internet. Also, just because that is the way it is now, doesn't mean it will stay that way... though I have to admit given the security state BGP is still in, progress is slllloooooow.
You realize "states rights" are a code word for racism?
I would not go that far. They are a frequent convenient excuse for racist policy, but if we let that turn them into a "code word" then eventually every word will be code for something or other.
Real easy... the base OS determines the safe range actions. The optimized service proposes actions. If those actions do not fall within the safety parameters established by the base OS, it takes over and uses its selected path. There is no contradiction there. It's already being done to some extent with aitomatic collision avoidance... with a human driver playing the role of the cloud.
By accusing someone else for the very actions she's been involved in
Oooh. A meta-Rovian-flip. The absurdity has started to eat its own tail.
Then: "I love my grandchildren so much, but if I talk about them for more than nine or 10 seconds... after that, what are you going to say?... I love golf, but after speaking about golf for a couple minutes, it’s tough.”"
Now: "I went down just to say hello to Melania, and while I was there I said hello to Putin. Really, pleasantries more than anything else. It was not a long conversation, but it was, you know, could be 15 minutes(sic). Just talked about things"
Notice all the others that smell opportunity after a Trump victory?
You forgot: workplace sex pigs, real estate money launderers, and just about every con artist in the world. To them, the election was a declaration that it is open season.
Really, just the encouragement the Trump victory provides to the worst assholes humanity has to offer represents a huge amount of damage to society.
Whatever, Trump is dirtier than socks. So obviously, that he is a national embarrassment. Doesn't matter how much other dirt is around, he is the skidmark on the national underwear, and gets top priority on laundry day.
I'd care, if these did something other than report your heart rate and location to a cloud service. I'd love to monitor actual data that matters. I'd also not like it to go to the cloud.
As the Snowman notes, I think given your leanings if you read into what civil asset forfeiture is, you'll come away pretty livid that such a thing was even allowed to exist in the first place.
I'll put my bet down: This rush to market will result in no measurable difference in automobile fatalities. But it will cause a bunch of traffic jams and consequential economic damage. 5 years from now Uber/Lyft drivers will be making a significant amount of their income getting dropped off at a hosed up autonomous vehicle to get in and manually extract it from a situation it cannot comprehend.
You should see them when it has to do with air travel. Every airline related thing sends the D.C. politicians into a tizzy because they have to personally use the airlines. Also most of the media, especially the business media. They'd preempt live coverage of the statue of liberty catching fire for a story about airlines banning duck boots.
Recently Sessions is on a tear to prevent states from banning civil asset forfeiture without a conviction by amping up the federal asset forfeiture adoption program. So much for Republican support for "states rights." Which is what GP is getting at: states rights are only a political convenience... when they disagree with federal policy because it doesn't let them keep the brown folks in the ghetto: "STATES RIGHTS!". When they want to beat up on poor people in blue states or do something to earn corporate campaign contributions, not so much.
The argument here is not whether there will be no driver. We all agree on that. The argument is whether all driving computations will be done on-board.
The first online dictionary entry that google returned says "person without a paid job but available to work."
Neither one includes any mention of "retired" or "wants to work".
I would count both of those as "not available". Most employers would, too, doubly so.
The only people who wouldn't are probably trying to sell you gold.
It, umm... actually is in this case. Nobody wants to immigrate and start a life in a place they might get kicked out of, depending only on the whims of politicians and the general electorate, so there's a shortage of labor... in job areas that that 4.3% of job seekers is either incapable of doing, or unwilling to do at previous prevailing wage rates.
Yeah, you just "figure out" that colon is being used as a control character. Right.
Only crazy people think using vi as the "only editor installed everywhere" is a great idea. It is unintuitive, and a royal PITA to use. Really "J" from outside insert mode to get rid of a newline? That's beyond cretinous. I can only guess that it persists due to the more sadistic greybeards wanting to lord it over the n00bs when they find themselves on a system with no decent editors.
I purge all vi from all my personal systems just to find the broken programs that don't use $EDITOR/$VISUAL.
Underscores in DNS names are reserved for use in SRV and other such records, where they are mandatory, and they serve to prevent SRV records from getting confused with A and AAAA records, which are not supposed to have them. Humans are supposed to be able to tell the difference between a SRV and A/AAAA record by looking at them, without any extra markup.
Real things use SRV records. Just take a look at any pcap of any enterprise network and you'll see them flying every which way. Lots of service discovery protocols use them, which means a lot of gadgets use them as well.
the systemd behavior is correct
Yes, it is. Well. to the extent that systemd being used by the system for DNS resolution is correct, as opposed to using a real DNS resolver. The extra junk in systemd should only be used to bootstrap containers and VMs and should be replaced during boot with real services. And really, systemd and/or its packagers should ship a version without that crap for people not doing VM/container stuff so it doesn't get in their way or pull in unwanted dependencies.
most people doing this are dramatically boosting the transmission levels on their routers.
General rule of thumb: if you can't get a good signal at 15dBm on 2.4 and 18dBm on 5GHZ, do not try to go higher. Install more APs closer to your clients. Otherwise you are just damaging the spectrum. The higher levels are really meant for when you have real antennas on both ends, like a WDS. You can't make cheap client antennas better by shouting at them. Also, you should have a compelling reason to deploy 5GHz outdoors, even using factory firmware... you are a lot less likely to do something destructive fumbling around with the 2.4GHz band outdoors. Partly because it is already ruined, and partly because it doesn't have to worry about radar.
Many settings that are not strictly RF-related are bunched in with the RF settings, and can use some tuning, and are not settable from factory firmware -- which you should never run anyway because it is full of junk plug-and-play services and will stop receiving security updates long before you are done using the AP.
Vendors have no incentive to separate out these settings in hardware, nor support them in software, nor continue to support an AP after it is out of warranty, as then they are just decreasing demand for their latest models.
Most people who install Open Source firmware are after features not related to RF, few people feel any need to install custom firmware on the WiFi card (more on some models than on others) and what special WiFi card settings they are looking to alter are things like beacon formats and timing, noise floor detection, etc.
Refusal to publish solid specs from which open source drivers can be written probably account for the majority of issues where RF parameters are set up wrong.
Especially, vendors shipping product whose EEPROM settings are wrong and then kludging things back together in their binary-only drivers, rather than reprogramming the EEPROM on upgrade, might be the number one cause.
Back in college there was a running battle over whether to keep the Gor books on shelves in the Sci-Fi library. It consumed an inordinate amount of time and bile. Never read them... never was into cheezy fantasy. Steered clear of the whole mess.
I'm betting he'll end up making it from week to week mowing John Boehner's lawn.
Nope.
If I thought this White House was smart enough to play 3D chess, I'd say the converse: an attempt to use the Russia kerfluffle to keep the scent off appointing one of the dissenting rightist senators as AG and have a Republican governor appoint a yes vote on the repeal of health care.
But I don't.
It's Scaramouche baaaayybeee!
If you already know coding, you can learn webdev in a few days from free on-line tutorials or maybe a $20 book from Amazon.
Not that this place actually taught it, I dunno, but this is no longer true. Proper web development these days involves learning to integrate tons of really bad declarative "code" from conflicting committee-designed standards together in a way that runs on tons of different poorly or only partialy implemented browsers and then integrating that with whatever flavor of backend was popular back when your predecessor implemented the last backend refactor. A good web developer knows a crapton about a lot of really awful software, and has to constantly jam more crappy knowlege into their head, plus suffer the constant discouragement of watching something you spent weeks learning cold become obselete every week. And get paid crap. And deal with customers/bosses who want things they can't even describe. I have a lot of respect for the guys who tough those positions out... not all of them are smart, but they tend to be motivated and energetic, because they have to be.
But.. knowing coding you can at least still develop basic non-"webscale" UIs using a mostly-compatible subset of browser features. So you're in a heck of a lot better position than someone trying to pick it up cold.
What's insane is the fact that I have to take time off work to do just about everything, because other than restaurants and convenience stores, everyone works the same damn schedule. You'd think if they wanted to restructure things they'd fix that, too, instead of just switching the time of the same damn schedule.
QoS is only useful on local networks.
Oh, I know, believe me. But an ISP's "local network" is a chunk of the Internet. Also, just because that is the way it is now, doesn't mean it will stay that way... though I have to admit given the security state BGP is still in, progress is slllloooooow.
You realize "states rights" are a code word for racism?
I would not go that far. They are a frequent convenient excuse for racist policy, but if we let that turn them into a "code word" then eventually every word will be code for something or other.
Real easy... the base OS determines the safe range actions. The optimized service proposes actions. If those actions do not fall within the safety parameters established by the base OS, it takes over and uses its selected path. There is no contradiction there. It's already being done to some extent with aitomatic collision avoidance... with a human driver playing the role of the cloud.
By accusing someone else for the very actions she's been involved in
Oooh. A meta-Rovian-flip. The absurdity has started to eat its own tail.
Then: ... after that, what are you going to say? ... I love golf, but after speaking about golf for a couple minutes, it’s tough.”"
"I love my grandchildren so much, but if I talk about them for more than nine or 10 seconds
Now:
"I went down just to say hello to Melania, and while I was there I said hello to Putin. Really, pleasantries more than anything else. It was not a long conversation, but it was, you know, could be 15 minutes(sic). Just talked about things"
Notice all the others that smell opportunity after a Trump victory?
You forgot: workplace sex pigs, real estate money launderers, and just about every con artist in the world. To them, the election was a declaration that it is open season.
Really, just the encouragement the Trump victory provides to the worst assholes humanity has to offer represents a huge amount of damage to society.
There's enough dirt to go around
Whatever, Trump is dirtier than socks. So obviously, that he is a national embarrassment. Doesn't matter how much other dirt is around, he is the skidmark on the national underwear, and gets top priority on laundry day.
I'd care, if these did something other than report your heart rate and location to a cloud service. I'd love to monitor actual data that matters. I'd also not like it to go to the cloud.
As the Snowman notes, I think given your leanings if you read into what civil asset forfeiture is, you'll come away pretty livid that such a thing was even allowed to exist in the first place.
I'll put my bet down: This rush to market will result in no measurable difference in automobile fatalities. But it will cause a bunch of traffic jams and consequential economic damage. 5 years from now Uber/Lyft drivers will be making a significant amount of their income getting dropped off at a hosed up autonomous vehicle to get in and manually extract it from a situation it cannot comprehend.
You should see them when it has to do with air travel. Every airline related thing sends the D.C. politicians into a tizzy because they have to personally use the airlines. Also most of the media, especially the business media. They'd preempt live coverage of the statue of liberty catching fire for a story about airlines banning duck boots.
Recently Sessions is on a tear to prevent states from banning civil asset forfeiture without a conviction by amping up the federal asset forfeiture adoption program. So much for Republican support for "states rights." Which is what GP is getting at: states rights are only a political convenience... when they disagree with federal policy because it doesn't let them keep the brown folks in the ghetto: "STATES RIGHTS!". When they want to beat up on poor people in blue states or do something to earn corporate campaign contributions, not so much.
The argument here is not whether there will be no driver. We all agree on that. The argument is whether all driving computations will be done on-board.