Except they'll probably partner with every company that doesn't have a smart speaker to control other home devices. This is petty and childish and one of the reasons why none of these devices has much of a future yet.
I've been waiting to hear that it isn't compatible with iTunes Home Sharing either (streaming from iTunes on your LAN). They have already created an in-home streaming solution, but they would be the first to allow it from a smart speaker. Everyone requires your music to be on a cloud service.
It's just one more nail in the coffin before it even hits a ship date.
There is no gerrymandering in presidential elections except the electoral college.
Gerrymandering happens before the election and it has little to do with the electoral college process. The electoral college just means that the actual deciding votes are cast by electors rather than the tallied votes themselves. Some states use a winner-takes-all approach, some do it proportionally. Neither really has anything to do with how a state is divided into its districts per se - it's up to the state decide how electors are chosen.
The electoral college is a check and balance against gerrymandering. Of course, gerrymandering still won him the presidency. But don't blame the electoral college.
If I had known I'd lose my chance to buy full suites ever again, I would have bought CS6. I got extremely lucky to have 5.5 over 5, I guess. If you want to see quirky, try running Photoshop CS2 on 64-bit Windows 10 with high DPI settings (zoom) turned on. The worst part is that it still sort of works, so I haven't been motivated to do anything about it.
Unless there's Firewire passthrough and decent video performance, I think it would be a rough battle for video. I am using CS5.5 successfully on Sierra (though not Premiere). What happens with CS5?
For a while, laws were passed to require the companies that ran telephone lines (ILECs, in the industry jargon) to provide reasonable and non-discriminatory access for competitive providers (CLECs) to the switching offices where customers' telephone lines were aggregated. The ILECs successfully lobbied to have those requirements struck for non-POTS systems, like FTTP, and then effectively killed their POTS systems to kill the CLECs.
Just like there's only so much room in the broadcast spectrum (traditional TV), there's only so much room for last-mile structured cabling on the poles or under the ground. And there's only so much cost that can be absorbed.
No, I don't think telecoms should be handed money to build out and then be forced to lease it to competitors - but that's already happened. I think that last-mile should be a public utility built and paid for by the public. I'd love to see this being a make-work project by our government, and should have been considered as part of Obama's economic stimulus alongside roads and bridges. And honestly, if Trump were thinking about greatest public good for our taxpayer dollar (actual fiscal conservatism) rather than tax breaks, he would do it too.
Final Cut Pro 7 (the last version before X) is already incompatible with High Sierra, but it's also 32-bit. I'm going to have to keep around a machine with Sierra if I want to keep using this expensive ($999 originally) software package.
You can't control that by voice command. Stop with the false equivalence.
Except they'll probably partner with every company that doesn't have a smart speaker to control other home devices. This is petty and childish and one of the reasons why none of these devices has much of a future yet.
I've been waiting to hear that it isn't compatible with iTunes Home Sharing either (streaming from iTunes on your LAN). They have already created an in-home streaming solution, but they would be the first to allow it from a smart speaker. Everyone requires your music to be on a cloud service.
It's just one more nail in the coffin before it even hits a ship date.
There is no gerrymandering in presidential elections except the electoral college.
Gerrymandering happens before the election and it has little to do with the electoral college process. The electoral college just means that the actual deciding votes are cast by electors rather than the tallied votes themselves. Some states use a winner-takes-all approach, some do it proportionally. Neither really has anything to do with how a state is divided into its districts per se - it's up to the state decide how electors are chosen.
The electoral college is a check and balance against gerrymandering. Of course, gerrymandering still won him the presidency. But don't blame the electoral college.
For all that long rant, you missed the point. Impeach Trump and you don't get a do-over, you get the line of succession.
If I had known I'd lose my chance to buy full suites ever again, I would have bought CS6. I got extremely lucky to have 5.5 over 5, I guess. If you want to see quirky, try running Photoshop CS2 on 64-bit Windows 10 with high DPI settings (zoom) turned on. The worst part is that it still sort of works, so I haven't been motivated to do anything about it.
You forgot C. They're definitely not in the US already - there is no downside for them.
put his money where his mouth is
Have we banned his mouth? I feel like I would know about this by now.
Re-instate Hillary Clinton as President, now !
That's not how impeachment works. The vote was still real.
Unless there's Firewire passthrough and decent video performance, I think it would be a rough battle for video. I am using CS5.5 successfully on Sierra (though not Premiere). What happens with CS5?
If everybody arranged their personal health insurance personally, no such penalty/discount would exist.
Not quite true - only the sick (or more likely to be sick) would buy insurance.
For a while, laws were passed to require the companies that ran telephone lines (ILECs, in the industry jargon) to provide reasonable and non-discriminatory access for competitive providers (CLECs) to the switching offices where customers' telephone lines were aggregated. The ILECs successfully lobbied to have those requirements struck for non-POTS systems, like FTTP, and then effectively killed their POTS systems to kill the CLECs.
Just like there's only so much room in the broadcast spectrum (traditional TV), there's only so much room for last-mile structured cabling on the poles or under the ground. And there's only so much cost that can be absorbed.
No, I don't think telecoms should be handed money to build out and then be forced to lease it to competitors - but that's already happened. I think that last-mile should be a public utility built and paid for by the public. I'd love to see this being a make-work project by our government, and should have been considered as part of Obama's economic stimulus alongside roads and bridges. And honestly, if Trump were thinking about greatest public good for our taxpayer dollar (actual fiscal conservatism) rather than tax breaks, he would do it too.
You could easily do that with a jQuery-based bookmarklet.
$('.uid a:contains( 769145 )').closest('li').hide();
Just keep adding lines until you have everyone in there.
It's a kludging tool that takes boring APIs and mashes them together like peanut butter and Spam.
Well I don't think Burger King is going to start selling Big Macs just to be technically accurate in any case. It's close enough.
And I'm sure the important thing is that it doesn't rely on any 32-bit macOS APIs.
Windows 10 is just Windows NT with a paint job or two.
Windows ME was the last legacy 9x OS that ran on top of MS-DOS.
When they do, it'll be their idea.
They already put an ARM chip in the latest Macbook Pros and the iMac Pro. They are already testing the waters.
The High Sierra update killed my Final Cut Studio suite's Apps.
Sierra killed Motion first. I might have to buy an ancient iMac for FCP, since I don't do enough video work to buy new software - or worse, subscribe.
Final Cut Pro 7 (the last version before X) is already incompatible with High Sierra, but it's also 32-bit. I'm going to have to keep around a machine with Sierra if I want to keep using this expensive ($999 originally) software package.
"for an extra $20 cents"
Is that Verizon math?
The speed throttling only applies to specific products. If you want a chicken sandwich, you are not throttled. They covered this.
That is seriously subtle. I did not pick up on that.