You'd have to leave out the word "since" because that's fairly explicit in acknowledging that it has happened in the past on a specific date. Instead, you'd have to do a date range - "Reddit has not received any requests from these government agencies in Q2 2016" or next year " "Reddit has not received any requests from these government agencies in 2017..."
Even with a personal Gmail, you can import from a custom domain's POP account and send out via SMTP. Effectively, you can use Gmail as the front face of a domain-backed email for free.
At first glance, it would seem like a smart way to create a crowd-sourced whitelist. On the other hand, if you've ever created a contact with a silent ringer to block calls from junk callers, you've just broken part of the whitelist.
Or do both. I have about 300+ physical discs and a full Netflix subscription. Thinking about dropping the DVD/Blu-Ray side because I usually just end up buying things they don't have in their catalog anymore anyway. But the streaming still has value for now.
Let's see... I can spend $8/mo on Netflix or... I can spend my free time hunting down physical media at fucking garage sales, eBay, amazon's marketplace, and other random places, then rip them to a massive home storage library running Plex...? Yeah, no, I'll spend $8/mo instead thanks.
That only works if you just want to watch "something" instead of deciding for yourself what you want to watch.
It is a similar reason Netflix basically ignores its deaf subscribers and screws up the subtitles.
How do they even screw that up? A LOT of their streaming TV content is transferred straight from the beta broadcast tapes. In fact, a lot of times while streaming a TV episode, the picture will drop to a blue error screen that looks like you'd see when a VCR hits a bad spot on the tape.
This means that the Netflix encodes are coming straight off the tapes that likely have EIA-608 Closed Captions embedded on line 21 of the broadcast picture. It's a matter of just ripping and converting the timing instructions within to their own format.
And yet they're doing a bad job making money through other channels. I actually want to buy a Blu-Ray of Arrested Development season 4 and it's still not out there. It's been out for 3 years and they already get my subscription money - why won't they take more of my money and give me the Blu-Ray?
If only there was a way to have compulsory licensing for streaming movies like we have for music... That's the problem as it stands. But movies have a high production cost to recover, so compulsory licensing can't start until the movie has been out for several years.
Out of 200+ titles on my queue that haven't been phased out yet, more than 20 are Very Long Wait. Lots of older classic movies I'd never seen, but also a lot of obscure and UK/Canadian TV.
I still pay for DVD subscription for anything that isn't streaming. And they are shrinking their deep catalog fast. My queue has almost as many unavailable titles as available titles now. They are dumping used discs at Dollar General or Big Lots fast.
It used to be that just about anything you could think of was available on disc, and then there was streaming with the more limited catalog. Now, DVD is less and less worth paying for. I am turning to buying a copy of a movie rather than having any way to rent for the more obscure titles.
You make it sound like "Podcast" isn't some highly technical thing that never got enough adoption to "just work" in a lot of cases. What Podcasts really need is their own MIME type instead of application/rss+xml - which doesn't tell Windows or Android or iOS that it's specifically a Podcast, just that it's an RSS feed. That way, it could at least point an average user to a correct program to subscribe in.
For those who only want to listen within the silo and aren't tech savvy, I don't really have a better suggestion than what they've already done. If they drop RSS entirely in favor of it, then I might care.
I certainly am not going to try and stream a podcast over my phone while driving if I can listen to NPR on FM. So I'm actually listening more.
I'm not streaming either, but I listen to NPR programming via podcasts exclusively. I use a combination of BeyondPod and Android Auto and the podcasts are downloaded over wifi automatically when my phone is on the charger. It's far easier than radio and I don't miss anything if I have to turn off my car because it resumes automatically when I restart it.
Haven't any idea. I just simply don't have a use case where the same file will be open for editing on two systems at once. But I would assume both Samba and Netatalk pass file locks down to the underlying system, considering local access should be restricted the same way.
It's my home server. So any "user" is going to be me (I'm the one using Mac files). Most file types don't use resource forks anymore (Adobe Suite being the one main exception), but I think the only thing in the resource fork on AI or PSD files is just a preview thumbnail - which I don't want to lose. I can still open the file from Windows and it works just fine. Very few file types still have a separate mac-only variation, so all the important data is in the data fork anyway.
I prefer to have it show up as a Volume in Finder. Don't ask me why, because you won't get a good answer. I have NFS shares set up on that server too, which is how MythTV accesses my movie library.
The current approach seems to be to do speech recognition in the cloud
There's a reason for this. They use a neural network and an absolutely massive dataset. They seeded this data set with GOOG-411 a few years before Google Now came out. Microsoft did the same thing with BING-411 when GOOG-411 shut down and now we have Cortana.
I have Samba set to portray dot files as hidden, so I don't have any trouble there.
My server rarely reboots, but the server "goes away" when I have to reboot my cable modem (and then reboot my router or it won't work because it's a cheap modem).
You'd have to leave out the word "since" because that's fairly explicit in acknowledging that it has happened in the past on a specific date. Instead, you'd have to do a date range - "Reddit has not received any requests from these government agencies in Q2 2016" or next year " "Reddit has not received any requests from these government agencies in 2017..."
To prosecute someone for it, you'd have to acknowledge the NSL yourself. And why would they do that?
Even with a personal Gmail, you can import from a custom domain's POP account and send out via SMTP. Effectively, you can use Gmail as the front face of a domain-backed email for free.
I can't figure out what a 100 score actually represents
You don't belong here.
important capabilities like automatic failure detection, are being deferred, the audit noted
just barely survived and couldn't plan anything massive
Like preventing man-made climate change?
Salvia (from the mouth)
Do you mean saliva?
Regarding medical knowledge ... modern people have not much of it
Obviously.
At first glance, it would seem like a smart way to create a crowd-sourced whitelist. On the other hand, if you've ever created a contact with a silent ringer to block calls from junk callers, you've just broken part of the whitelist.
Wasn't that what they were saying?
We don't actually use "line 21" any more
See above - talking about shows on Netflix actually transferred from SD broadcast tape. The older captions would literally already be there.
Or do both. I have about 300+ physical discs and a full Netflix subscription. Thinking about dropping the DVD/Blu-Ray side because I usually just end up buying things they don't have in their catalog anymore anyway. But the streaming still has value for now.
Let's see... I can spend $8/mo on Netflix or... I can spend my free time hunting down physical media at fucking garage sales, eBay, amazon's marketplace, and other random places, then rip them to a massive home storage library running Plex...? Yeah, no, I'll spend $8/mo instead thanks.
That only works if you just want to watch "something" instead of deciding for yourself what you want to watch.
It is a similar reason Netflix basically ignores its deaf subscribers and screws up the subtitles.
How do they even screw that up? A LOT of their streaming TV content is transferred straight from the beta broadcast tapes. In fact, a lot of times while streaming a TV episode, the picture will drop to a blue error screen that looks like you'd see when a VCR hits a bad spot on the tape.
This means that the Netflix encodes are coming straight off the tapes that likely have EIA-608 Closed Captions embedded on line 21 of the broadcast picture. It's a matter of just ripping and converting the timing instructions within to their own format.
And yet they're doing a bad job making money through other channels. I actually want to buy a Blu-Ray of Arrested Development season 4 and it's still not out there. It's been out for 3 years and they already get my subscription money - why won't they take more of my money and give me the Blu-Ray?
If only there was a way to have compulsory licensing for streaming movies like we have for music... That's the problem as it stands. But movies have a high production cost to recover, so compulsory licensing can't start until the movie has been out for several years.
Out of 200+ titles on my queue that haven't been phased out yet, more than 20 are Very Long Wait. Lots of older classic movies I'd never seen, but also a lot of obscure and UK/Canadian TV.
I still pay for DVD subscription for anything that isn't streaming. And they are shrinking their deep catalog fast. My queue has almost as many unavailable titles as available titles now. They are dumping used discs at Dollar General or Big Lots fast.
It used to be that just about anything you could think of was available on disc, and then there was streaming with the more limited catalog. Now, DVD is less and less worth paying for. I am turning to buying a copy of a movie rather than having any way to rent for the more obscure titles.
You make it sound like "Podcast" isn't some highly technical thing that never got enough adoption to "just work" in a lot of cases. What Podcasts really need is their own MIME type instead of application/rss+xml - which doesn't tell Windows or Android or iOS that it's specifically a Podcast, just that it's an RSS feed. That way, it could at least point an average user to a correct program to subscribe in.
For those who only want to listen within the silo and aren't tech savvy, I don't really have a better suggestion than what they've already done. If they drop RSS entirely in favor of it, then I might care.
I certainly am not going to try and stream a podcast over my phone while driving if I can listen to NPR on FM. So I'm actually listening more.
I'm not streaming either, but I listen to NPR programming via podcasts exclusively. I use a combination of BeyondPod and Android Auto and the podcasts are downloaded over wifi automatically when my phone is on the charger. It's far easier than radio and I don't miss anything if I have to turn off my car because it resumes automatically when I restart it.
Haven't any idea. I just simply don't have a use case where the same file will be open for editing on two systems at once. But I would assume both Samba and Netatalk pass file locks down to the underlying system, considering local access should be restricted the same way.
It's my home server. So any "user" is going to be me (I'm the one using Mac files). Most file types don't use resource forks anymore (Adobe Suite being the one main exception), but I think the only thing in the resource fork on AI or PSD files is just a preview thumbnail - which I don't want to lose. I can still open the file from Windows and it works just fine. Very few file types still have a separate mac-only variation, so all the important data is in the data fork anyway.
How do you make the dotfiles hidden on Samba, but still accessible for the resource fork?
One, hidden files are not inaccessible.
Two, I don't use Samba with OS X - I access the same folder over AFP with Netatalk.
I prefer to have it show up as a Volume in Finder. Don't ask me why, because you won't get a good answer. I have NFS shares set up on that server too, which is how MythTV accesses my movie library.
The current approach seems to be to do speech recognition in the cloud
There's a reason for this. They use a neural network and an absolutely massive dataset. They seeded this data set with GOOG-411 a few years before Google Now came out. Microsoft did the same thing with BING-411 when GOOG-411 shut down and now we have Cortana.
I have Samba set to portray dot files as hidden, so I don't have any trouble there.
My server rarely reboots, but the server "goes away" when I have to reboot my cable modem (and then reboot my router or it won't work because it's a cheap modem).