Apple's mail client - The one built in to OSX. Kinda janky and apparently is getting worse. They keep removing features and breaking things. Offers some nice integration if you're in to the apple world with both feet. Desktop mail software is fiddly and requires a lot of strange exceptions because of the ancient nature of email systems. This is not Apple's strong suit.
I use Thunderbird, Outlook, and Apple Mail at different times. Out of the 3, I prefer using Apple Mail. Though I am still a version or two behind. It's buggy, but the UI is a little more functional then either Outlook or Thunderbird.
If you want to encrypt files on your computer, use disk encryption. There's no reason to separately encrypt data files in each application. Your user account is either allowed to open all your files or it's not.
Most of the rest of your account information is usually queryable. I'm not sure what there is to protect in your non-password account information.
I'm hoping maildir support will finally be good enough to start using. I suspect that it will work better than mbox on an SSD - especially with a huge inbox. I have 100K+ emails in my inbox and never delete anything, so things move slowly.
just have a high school degree; that is not someone with a talent.
That's not how talent works. You have to apply it to either earn an advanced degree or undergo training. I'm using talent to mean aptitude if that's a better word for you.
I think the point OP was trying to make is that it only works if you already have talent. It's not some magical way to gain skills or potential you don't already have to some extent.
I don't know if the "despecialized edition" torrents still have as close to an official blessing as possible - they still haven't been sued or C&Ded out of existence.
Any company that does DSL right has remote DSLAMs that are not in the CO. They run fiber out to remote DSLAM nodes and copper for the last mile. Frontier was doing this even in extremely rural areas of Southern Illinois until a couple of years ago. And it's step one of an all-fiber network anyway, so it's not even a bad long-term strategy.
The EU is a lot more likely to stop big companies from putting pressure to squeeze out the little guy. If I went and started laying fiber in my town, the incumbent ISPs would price me out of the market until I went under. They are so large that they can afford to.
both already have infrastructure, whereas any new ISP is going to have to lay cable.
It's worse than that. Any large enough ISP can just undercut them on price and force the new provider out of business. Then they can buy up all the new infrastructure that was built for way below cost in the bankruptcy sale.
And as long as that "free market" option is open to big companies that can afford to bleed money in one area to preserve profits overall, there will never be competition.
Population overdensity is just stupid on all levels. Fiber is our way out of this mess by de-centralizing a lot of our employment. It's cheaper for everyone. Digging in the dirt is cheaper than pounding concrete to upgrade lines.
Regulation against bundling was attempted but overturned. Currently a lot of providers just make bundled and unbundled either cost the same amount or make phoneless DSL cost more. That way, the bundling isn't forced, just preferable pricewise (before taxes).
We're actually post-post-modern now. I think just calling it post-truth will suffice, as facts (relative or otherwise) are no longer important to a large number of people.
All street signage in the US (at least in the midwest) is in English. That doesn't stop Google Maps from showing "Illinois Route 155" as "Ruta de Illinois 155" (Spanish). It did this for multiple years, but I think it's working now.
I'm not sure anything they've done under Cook can be counted as 'innovation', just straight up evolution of a product.
That's actually good, except people keep upgrading when their devices work fine. The reason to standard on iOS now is that it won't radically innovate. This is good for corporate adoption and for older consumers who hate re-learning UIs every few years.
Wild innovation got them to where they are with this product. They need a new hit, not to try to keep wringing excess profit out of a stable source of income for decades to come. Even Microsoft is starting to learn this a little bit with Office and Windows 10 - don't ruin something people like or they won't buy it anymore.
Maybe 15 is the exact number of times there has been any change at all to the internal HTML of the home page. Then they have plausible deniability on that "good faith" argument. No less a horrible lie, but one that isn't provably a lie.
You can get smartphones down to the $30 range here in the US. They're not great but in emerging markets (like some regions of Africa) the price is well below that. And a lot of that is presumably profit because they're mass-produced commodities. Yes, that's expense for NK. There are so few citizens that just creating a nationwide network for government use would be a fixed cost and any usage fees for anyone else would basically be pure profit since it's a sunk cost they would have spent anyway.
Fascism is, most certainly, not a terminology. Perhaps, you meant "ideology"? Still wrong...
To get pedantic, I mean item of a larger terminology. And yes, the word happens to describe an ideology. Every historian classifies fascism as right-wing. Don't take it up with me - it's settled history.
That is not fascism, those are the tenets of the Nazi party. Fascism might have inspired it, but they are not the same. And both have very populist and actually good ideas. It's both the implementation and the motive that are the problem in both cases. That's not to say that the motives of any political group in this country are pure either.
Don't forget Lightning. Apple only adopted Thunderbolt for their laptops.
Apple's mail client - The one built in to OSX. Kinda janky and apparently is getting worse. They keep removing features and breaking things. Offers some nice integration if you're in to the apple world with both feet. Desktop mail software is fiddly and requires a lot of strange exceptions because of the ancient nature of email systems. This is not Apple's strong suit.
I use Thunderbird, Outlook, and Apple Mail at different times. Out of the 3, I prefer using Apple Mail. Though I am still a version or two behind. It's buggy, but the UI is a little more functional then either Outlook or Thunderbird.
And what protocol has replaced IMAP or SMTP? It's still current at this point. The entire email system sort of requires SMTP.
If you want to encrypt files on your computer, use disk encryption. There's no reason to separately encrypt data files in each application. Your user account is either allowed to open all your files or it's not.
Most of the rest of your account information is usually queryable. I'm not sure what there is to protect in your non-password account information.
good god this change log is boring. Who cares?
I'm hoping maildir support will finally be good enough to start using. I suspect that it will work better than mbox on an SSD - especially with a huge inbox. I have 100K+ emails in my inbox and never delete anything, so things move slowly.
just have a high school degree; that is not someone with a talent.
That's not how talent works. You have to apply it to either earn an advanced degree or undergo training. I'm using talent to mean aptitude if that's a better word for you.
I think the point OP was trying to make is that it only works if you already have talent. It's not some magical way to gain skills or potential you don't already have to some extent.
I don't know if the "despecialized edition" torrents still have as close to an official blessing as possible - they still haven't been sued or C&Ded out of existence.
It's one of those things where there could always be an alternate explanation that would hold up in a weak court.
Any company that does DSL right has remote DSLAMs that are not in the CO. They run fiber out to remote DSLAM nodes and copper for the last mile. Frontier was doing this even in extremely rural areas of Southern Illinois until a couple of years ago. And it's step one of an all-fiber network anyway, so it's not even a bad long-term strategy.
The EU is a lot more likely to stop big companies from putting pressure to squeeze out the little guy. If I went and started laying fiber in my town, the incumbent ISPs would price me out of the market until I went under. They are so large that they can afford to.
both already have infrastructure, whereas any new ISP is going to have to lay cable.
It's worse than that. Any large enough ISP can just undercut them on price and force the new provider out of business. Then they can buy up all the new infrastructure that was built for way below cost in the bankruptcy sale.
And as long as that "free market" option is open to big companies that can afford to bleed money in one area to preserve profits overall, there will never be competition.
Population overdensity is just stupid on all levels. Fiber is our way out of this mess by de-centralizing a lot of our employment. It's cheaper for everyone. Digging in the dirt is cheaper than pounding concrete to upgrade lines.
Regulation against bundling was attempted but overturned. Currently a lot of providers just make bundled and unbundled either cost the same amount or make phoneless DSL cost more. That way, the bundling isn't forced, just preferable pricewise (before taxes).
We're actually post-post-modern now. I think just calling it post-truth will suffice, as facts (relative or otherwise) are no longer important to a large number of people.
All street signage in the US (at least in the midwest) is in English. That doesn't stop Google Maps from showing "Illinois Route 155" as "Ruta de Illinois 155" (Spanish). It did this for multiple years, but I think it's working now.
I'm not sure anything they've done under Cook can be counted as 'innovation', just straight up evolution of a product.
That's actually good, except people keep upgrading when their devices work fine. The reason to standard on iOS now is that it won't radically innovate. This is good for corporate adoption and for older consumers who hate re-learning UIs every few years.
Wild innovation got them to where they are with this product. They need a new hit, not to try to keep wringing excess profit out of a stable source of income for decades to come. Even Microsoft is starting to learn this a little bit with Office and Windows 10 - don't ruin something people like or they won't buy it anymore.
Or perhaps you think itâ(TM)s easier to get all iPhone users to change their behaviour than it is to get /. to fix their shitty code?
Clearly the former is true. It's been 11 years.
Maybe 15 is the exact number of times there has been any change at all to the internal HTML of the home page. Then they have plausible deniability on that "good faith" argument. No less a horrible lie, but one that isn't provably a lie.
Surface mining is still mining.
A very small mine, about the size of the materials harvested.
It's not different. That's the problem - if we were more self-regulating our extinction won't be the final solution.
Until the solution is large numbers of humans dying off. Yeah the Earth itself will balance, but there are more ways than one to decrease demand.
You can get smartphones down to the $30 range here in the US. They're not great but in emerging markets (like some regions of Africa) the price is well below that. And a lot of that is presumably profit because they're mass-produced commodities. Yes, that's expense for NK. There are so few citizens that just creating a nationwide network for government use would be a fixed cost and any usage fees for anyone else would basically be pure profit since it's a sunk cost they would have spent anyway.
Fascism is, most certainly, not a terminology. Perhaps, you meant "ideology"? Still wrong...
To get pedantic, I mean item of a larger terminology. And yes, the word happens to describe an ideology. Every historian classifies fascism as right-wing. Don't take it up with me - it's settled history.
That is not fascism, those are the tenets of the Nazi party. Fascism might have inspired it, but they are not the same. And both have very populist and actually good ideas. It's both the implementation and the motive that are the problem in both cases. That's not to say that the motives of any political group in this country are pure either.