And I missed it all. I don't live there anymore, but my parents do. Before I found out it was the last one, I'd already made plans to visit some of my wife's family in Texas that week.
The timing might have been uploaded as timestamps. If one byte was missed in the data stream (due to jitter in transmission), it could have overflowed every timestamp if using signed numbers, or giving a very small number if unsigned. Either way, if the timestamps were all in the past, then they would all fire at once to catch up.
They should have a checksum on the whole configuration in addition to validation on the values.
PHP is a weakly-typed language. The conversion happens automatically. In a lot of cases, this is good. As long as you understand this, it can save time in coding.
No, 0 is not NULL. But "" cast as an INT could be considered NULL. It's not an INT. The parameter of 0 means 0 digits after the decimal. Why they don't just round or floor/ceil instead, I don't know. But first things first - you need to pass in a number to format a number.
The proof of not being able to afford it is gross income - not net income minus my pre-existing financial obligations and subject to a concerned party's review.
So mortgage payers pay less, meaning the gap has to be filled from somewhere - it certainly didn't force the government to get that much more efficient with its operating expenses. Effectively, it's a tax on not having a mortgage.
Before I got a job that came with health insurance, I hadn't been to a doctor in 10 years. Finally being able to afford it, I've had 5 or 6 doctor visits in a year and dental surgery. You can't tell me this isn't increasing costs for everyone. Perhaps my benefits haven't cost anything beyond my premiums yet, but if I was seriously ill I wouldn't have found out about it soon enough to live long enough to spend much taxpayer money on my healthcare.
Back when I didn't have health coverage, I wanted to fend for myself rather than pay a fine I couldn't afford. There was to be no option to fend for myself any longer.
Fully socialized medicine would have been better. Trying to have people that are bad with money wrangle around their take-home pay budget to pay for health insurance or even to pay the fine is not a smart idea. And neither is letting corporate interests benefit by rule of law. Our government couldn't bear the thought of killing the insurance industry - even with as much of a mess as that is. Yes, I imagine the inefficiency of government bureaucracy would cost just as much - but would do so with more jobs and no huge payouts to a small number of benefactors.
When I couldn't afford insurance, I didn't go to a doctor. I had the right numbers that said I should be able to afford insurance, but I put my budget into a state that was only sustainable if some major mandate like this didn't come along. You can't remove your liabilities when you find out that everything changed. I can't sell my car to get rid of my car payment - I still have to drive to work. I didn't have TV, had basic Internet, and cheap prepaid cell phones. I was trying to get back on track, though, paying a large amount of debt with a large number of minimum payments.
My new job comes with healthcare benefits, and the increase in pay helps me pay the rest of the premiums. But before that, I'd not have been able to afford the fines.
And "can't afford insurance" is probably based on income. Well - I'm an established adult, married. My wife and I pay $600/mo. in student loans, plus we are paying off $15,000 in debt from almost a year when we didn't make enough to pay rent AND buy groceries. Last year, we still had two modest car payments. When I heard that we had to pay more money than we had available to get insurance OR pay a fine that we equally couldn't afford, I nearly panicked. Then, I reassured myself that the law would be struck down before it went into effect. According to my understanding of the law, we made enough to supposedly be able to afford insurance.
Fast forward a year, we both got new jobs, and both jobs come along with health insurance - which wasn't available at my previous employer or for what we were bringing home. Without that, we'd be lost when this went into effect. Even though we're barely floating but WITH health insurance, I can't forget what things were like only a year ago.
The problem is that people's budgets aren't being wiped to a clean slate. I had obligations that I couldn't get rid of, and I could not afford insurance. The government cannot tell me that I can afford it, and they couldn't fine me. I'd be off to jail.
Maybe it's bypassing UAC. The article was unclear.
And I missed it all. I don't live there anymore, but my parents do. Before I found out it was the last one, I'd already made plans to visit some of my wife's family in Texas that week.
Price gouging for lousy hardware with a resistive touch screen is unlikely to get much positive attention.
Engraving makes it harder to sell stolen ones. Makes it slightly less likely to be stolen.
Looking at your list, I would guess you know where I'm talking about if I said my hometown was Bushnell, IL.
You don't necessarily need sun. Capillary damage from constant alcohol use can cause a red neck with little sun.
The timing might have been uploaded as timestamps. If one byte was missed in the data stream (due to jitter in transmission), it could have overflowed every timestamp if using signed numbers, or giving a very small number if unsigned. Either way, if the timestamps were all in the past, then they would all fire at once to catch up.
They should have a checksum on the whole configuration in addition to validation on the values.
Wha? Isn't Scotland part of the United Kingdom / Great Britain and NOT a part of England?
Except in JavaScript, where "1"+"1" is "11" and "1" + "" is 1.
Here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Strong_typing
PHP is a weakly-typed language. The conversion happens automatically. In a lot of cases, this is good. As long as you understand this, it can save time in coding.
That's a web server. A browser is the client to the web server. Do you know you're not making sense?
No, 0 is not NULL. But "" cast as an INT could be considered NULL. It's not an INT. The parameter of 0 means 0 digits after the decimal. Why they don't just round or floor/ceil instead, I don't know. But first things first - you need to pass in a number to format a number.
The proof of not being able to afford it is gross income - not net income minus my pre-existing financial obligations and subject to a concerned party's review.
Ah, yes - LILO. The friendly bootloader with helpful error messages like L or LI.
So mortgage payers pay less, meaning the gap has to be filled from somewhere - it certainly didn't force the government to get that much more efficient with its operating expenses. Effectively, it's a tax on not having a mortgage.
Wait - the rich get free healthcare and the new law doesn't cover this loophole???
Before I got a job that came with health insurance, I hadn't been to a doctor in 10 years. Finally being able to afford it, I've had 5 or 6 doctor visits in a year and dental surgery. You can't tell me this isn't increasing costs for everyone. Perhaps my benefits haven't cost anything beyond my premiums yet, but if I was seriously ill I wouldn't have found out about it soon enough to live long enough to spend much taxpayer money on my healthcare.
Good point. I don't know how I didn't see it that way before. I do think the mandate was stupid, but never realized it was that stupid.
That's fine for you if you're not the one whose life is ruined by being the worst case scenario.
Back when I didn't have health coverage, I wanted to fend for myself rather than pay a fine I couldn't afford. There was to be no option to fend for myself any longer.
Fully socialized medicine would have been better. Trying to have people that are bad with money wrangle around their take-home pay budget to pay for health insurance or even to pay the fine is not a smart idea. And neither is letting corporate interests benefit by rule of law. Our government couldn't bear the thought of killing the insurance industry - even with as much of a mess as that is. Yes, I imagine the inefficiency of government bureaucracy would cost just as much - but would do so with more jobs and no huge payouts to a small number of benefactors.
When I couldn't afford insurance, I didn't go to a doctor. I had the right numbers that said I should be able to afford insurance, but I put my budget into a state that was only sustainable if some major mandate like this didn't come along. You can't remove your liabilities when you find out that everything changed. I can't sell my car to get rid of my car payment - I still have to drive to work. I didn't have TV, had basic Internet, and cheap prepaid cell phones. I was trying to get back on track, though, paying a large amount of debt with a large number of minimum payments.
My new job comes with healthcare benefits, and the increase in pay helps me pay the rest of the premiums. But before that, I'd not have been able to afford the fines.
And "can't afford insurance" is probably based on income. Well - I'm an established adult, married. My wife and I pay $600/mo. in student loans, plus we are paying off $15,000 in debt from almost a year when we didn't make enough to pay rent AND buy groceries. Last year, we still had two modest car payments. When I heard that we had to pay more money than we had available to get insurance OR pay a fine that we equally couldn't afford, I nearly panicked. Then, I reassured myself that the law would be struck down before it went into effect. According to my understanding of the law, we made enough to supposedly be able to afford insurance.
Fast forward a year, we both got new jobs, and both jobs come along with health insurance - which wasn't available at my previous employer or for what we were bringing home. Without that, we'd be lost when this went into effect. Even though we're barely floating but WITH health insurance, I can't forget what things were like only a year ago.
The problem is that people's budgets aren't being wiped to a clean slate. I had obligations that I couldn't get rid of, and I could not afford insurance. The government cannot tell me that I can afford it, and they couldn't fine me. I'd be off to jail.
Where are you getting that number? Most people who have Windows 7 are on 64-bit.