... it actually makes sense to go back to having mobile versions of websites without anything more than absolutely necessary to display the content.
But then who would use the Web 2.0, JavaScript navigated, Flash enabled, "You're our Millionth visitor!" pages which kept the mobile site versions up and running?
I detest advertising and never click on advertisements on websites, but I understand why they are essential. Text-only advertising would be a compromise for mobile websites, but don't expect them to be devoid of it entirely.
I'm of the opinion that my complete lack of empathy is because I learned to pick up on emotional cues, instead of having any of my own while growing up. Maybe I should see how I fare at one of these testing sessions. Might explain a lot.
1. Watch enemy run along flat surface. 2. Wait for them to "leap" to another surface. 3. Fire at them as they move in a totally predictable, totally unchangeable, slow-as-your-nan-on-a-skateboard straight line towards that surface. 4. Revel in all that jib glory 5.... 6. Get a refund.
Apologies for replying to myself, but I realise that you concatenated several words. That's great if you want a 20+ character password, but which user wants that? First name + year of birth: 1R9o8b3. EAsy to remember, shocking to crack.
That's lovely, but your contract will almost certainly make you liable for all traffic going over the connection you signed the contract to lease. Logs or not, it's your credit card paying the bill, and it'd your address the line is leased to.
I started reading these before I got into IT. In fact, I blame them for my interest.
The reality is much different. My boss is a woman, I don't have access to a bulk eraser conveniently small enough to fit on my desk, let alone within a Yellow Pages, and that remote control wheelchair thing ended badly when I realised I'd used the 2.4GHz spectrum for the command codes; Apparently, the local 3G mobile (2100MHz) handshake initiation packet is also the control for "Increase speed 4%, left 40 degrees." That sounds all well and good until you realise I had a 30,000rpm vacuum motor wires to four car batteries...
Whether you can carry them at your destination is entirely different, though.
"Hello, sir. Could I please check your passport and as if you've anything to declare?" "No, all good here!" "Very good. Do you still have your ticket stub?" *Press red mushroom button on floor with foot and wait for armed Police to arrive*
Because toner is bonded by heat (a lot of the substance is a thermoplastic) it produces a gloss finish when cool. Marker pens don't write well on that surface, and even if they do the underlying gloss surface will still reflect light if angled correctly towards the light source.
Some kind of compression algorithm, I think. As long as we know where all of the bits go when the guy is "unpacked" at the other end, there's no reason not to have him shipped in a box the same size as a couple of crates of beer!
I wouldn't like to be the guy who has to explain to the family that their husband / father's "archive was corrupted."
You were right to use the actors' name and not that of the character.
If I recall correctly, this occured when JCVD was spotted trying to take a crap in a urinal. The director walked in and said "WTH man?! That's for peeing!" JCVD replied with "I am confused." and they airbrushed the rest of the set in around him to make it fit the movie.
Don't ask what they were doing filming people peeing, or how they were going to get it into the plot originally.
If this ever comes to the UK (law may not allow it), it'll still be the consumers' fault.
Much like viewing indecent images of children is "creating a market" for child abuse images, obviously listening to music which is improperly licensed is "creating a market" for recording industry infringement!
Obligatory cheesy 1966 Batman:The Movie reference.
29 seconds.
*** Warning! Warning! Political satire imminent! Warning! Warning! ***
America wishes its national debt was $41,000,000,000!
Zing!
This is a prime example of how knee-jerk reactions to problems are a very bad idea.
Another is the rate of infanticide of female children. One child per family made people do some really messed up stuff.
If you've ever seen a tramp stamp on a "larger" lady, you'll know where they got the obfuscation ideas for test CAPTCHAs from.
This was at uni. Degree from the same place that this happened? Quite a coincidence, that...
... it actually makes sense to go back to having mobile versions of websites without anything more than absolutely necessary to display the content.
But then who would use the Web 2.0, JavaScript navigated, Flash enabled, "You're our Millionth visitor!" pages which kept the mobile site versions up and running?
I detest advertising and never click on advertisements on websites, but I understand why they are essential. Text-only advertising would be a compromise for mobile websites, but don't expect them to be devoid of it entirely.
I'm of the opinion that my complete lack of empathy is because I learned to pick up on emotional cues, instead of having any of my own while growing up. Maybe I should see how I fare at one of these testing sessions. Might explain a lot.
Oh I don't know... "We win or we nuke you." "You win!" See? It's a question of degrees.
Incidentally, this is why we don't want Iran to become a nuclear power.
Can I please get a car analogy?
It does work. The beauty is that you already know that the hardware will work with 9.10 too. Feel free to upgrade.
Through GaiKai or OnLive, sure. Keep watching for the release.
Do yourself a massive favour and drop Adobe Acrobat Reader. Get Foxit instead.
1. Watch enemy run along flat surface. ...
2. Wait for them to "leap" to another surface.
3. Fire at them as they move in a totally predictable, totally unchangeable, slow-as-your-nan-on-a-skateboard straight line towards that surface.
4. Revel in all that jib glory
5.
6. Get a refund.
The difference is that the journalists are breaking local laws.
Apologies for replying to myself, but I realise that you concatenated several words. That's great if you want a 20+ character password, but which user wants that? First name + year of birth: 1R9o8b3. EAsy to remember, shocking to crack.
That password would be vulnerable to a standard dictionary attack which included l33t v@r1a7i0nZ.
Interleaving words makes it mmuocrhe htaord bfrourtcee.
(much more hard to brute force)
That's lovely, but your contract will almost certainly make you liable for all traffic going over the connection you signed the contract to lease. Logs or not, it's your credit card paying the bill, and it'd your address the line is leased to.
I started reading these before I got into IT. In fact, I blame them for my interest.
The reality is much different. My boss is a woman, I don't have access to a bulk eraser conveniently small enough to fit on my desk, let alone within a Yellow Pages, and that remote control wheelchair thing ended badly when I realised I'd used the 2.4GHz spectrum for the command codes; Apparently, the local 3G mobile (2100MHz) handshake initiation packet is also the control for "Increase speed 4%, left 40 degrees." That sounds all well and good until you realise I had a 30,000rpm vacuum motor wires to four car batteries...
Whether you can carry them at your destination is entirely different, though.
"Hello, sir. Could I please check your passport and as if you've anything to declare?"
"No, all good here!"
"Very good. Do you still have your ticket stub?" *Press red mushroom button on floor with foot and wait for armed Police to arrive*
Because toner is bonded by heat (a lot of the substance is a thermoplastic) it produces a gloss finish when cool. Marker pens don't write well on that surface, and even if they do the underlying gloss surface will still reflect light if angled correctly towards the light source.
Yo dawg, I heard you like security on your security, so I put some lines in your lines in your lines so you can wait while you wait while you wait!
Which line would take the bottles of liquids off you? The first or second security line?
We could try a car analogy...
Some kind of compression algorithm, I think. As long as we know where all of the bits go when the guy is "unpacked" at the other end, there's no reason not to have him shipped in a box the same size as a couple of crates of beer!
I wouldn't like to be the guy who has to explain to the family that their husband / father's "archive was corrupted."
You were right to use the actors' name and not that of the character.
If I recall correctly, this occured when JCVD was spotted trying to take a crap in a urinal. The director walked in and said "WTH man?! That's for peeing!" JCVD replied with "I am confused." and they airbrushed the rest of the set in around him to make it fit the movie.
Don't ask what they were doing filming people peeing, or how they were going to get it into the plot originally.
If this ever comes to the UK (law may not allow it), it'll still be the consumers' fault.
Much like viewing indecent images of children is "creating a market" for child abuse images, obviously listening to music which is improperly licensed is "creating a market" for recording industry infringement!