EROEI seems immaterial if the country with higher EROEI is still the one supplying the oil - after all, they're the one's taking the economic hit for that loss, not the importing country.
Sorry, I should have been more clear. I agree, third parties should be held accountable for poor security practices. However, if Bob broadcasts Bob's credit card information and Sally uses that information to make purchases without Bob's authorization, Sally is committing a crime. Don't get me wrong, Bob is an idiot, but just because Sally can lawfully receive the information doesn't mean she can lawfully pass it on (otherwise we'd have huge MITM issues with secretaries.)
Exactly. But he was leaping to some crazy conclusion of this logic:
These guys were wardriving + the police are after them = cops are after them because they were wardriving
Which is stupid. The cops are after these guys for misusing the information they obtained, not because they were wardriving. If they had been wardriving, and simply retained the information for their own use the cops never could have found them and never would have needed to. Quite frankly his posts are aggressive and irrational, and I was trying to explain to him why the cops are actually after these guys. From the first sentence in the summary:
stealing credit card data
And if you RTFA you learn that the owner of the Mercedes was only discovered after he was busted performing other forms of fraud.
Using someone else's credit card is criminal. Doesn't matter if they use a megaphone and tell the whole world what it is. The fact the information is obtained through wardriving is simply the method.
Yes. Yes there is. "As far as we can tell, the location is determined by triangulating against the nearest cell-phone towers." - this is how iPods (which don't even have a gps chip) have been able to use maps applications since the first touch came out. So no, apple wouldn't need the GPS system to be on. As disabling location services does not disable cellular functionality, it clearly just disables access to the cell-based location API, not turn the ability off. And listening to cell tower location could even be possible if you put the phone in airplane mode.
No. There is a person who is likely (at some point in the future) to be displaced, and someone who is displaced. What the report said was that in 2010 50 million people would be in positions at risk of being displaced.
That's just keeping with the GP's reasoning, not a statement of fact.
int Random(int max)
{ // implement random number generation later, after we refactor again
if (max > 3)
return 3;
else
throw CantReturnThreeException;
}
Isn't that an algorithm for determining rank, not sorting? Yes, the value it produces could be used as a key for sorting, but it is not a sorting algorithm.
Didn't they something similar about the internet? Made MSN instead? Ended up trying to copy what AOL was doing, and we all know since AOL stocks are worth a fortune these days that must have been a great idea.
Looking at windows phone 7 & the x-box (kinect), the company can execute well, but they really need some vision for future markets to get ahead of the curve. Seriously, 18 months ago WP7 would have crushed android. Now? Nothing.
I'm confused. How on earth do you think Novell is cloning RHEL? They are a significant contributer to linux, 3rd from the top, and non-trivial user ecosystem (they supplied the devs who got alot of the new AMD graphics stuff going, as I recall.) Big contributers to KDE and libre office. If they contribute less then redhat, that would only be because they have less staff (I think... at least the suse part of them does, for sure).
Suse is as different from RHEL as debian is. Yes, they both use rpms. That's about it.
Don't be ridiculous. Farmers are screwed no matter who they sell to.
Corporations? Try to pay as little above costs of production as possible.
Individuals? Increase in rates doesn't nearly compensate increase in effort.
Err... seeing as on android they have a dedicated app (from the same page you linked to) I don't think flash is how they plan to target mobile.
EROEI seems immaterial if the country with higher EROEI is still the one supplying the oil - after all, they're the one's taking the economic hit for that loss, not the importing country.
Wrong.
http://www.eia.doe.gov/pub/oil_gas/petroleum/data_publications/company_level_imports/current/import.html
The USA imports 2.5 as much petroleom from Canada as Saudi Arabia.
Agreed. I threw an extra gig of ram (total: 1.5) into a 2005 compaq lappy, and was incredibly surprised by the snappiness of the platform.
So, until everybody understood what the integral symbol was calculus wasn't math?
Sorry, I should have been more clear. I agree, third parties should be held accountable for poor security practices. However, if Bob broadcasts Bob's credit card information and Sally uses that information to make purchases without Bob's authorization, Sally is committing a crime. Don't get me wrong, Bob is an idiot, but just because Sally can lawfully receive the information doesn't mean she can lawfully pass it on (otherwise we'd have huge MITM issues with secretaries.)
These guys were wardriving + the police are after them = cops are after them because they were wardriving
Which is stupid. The cops are after these guys for misusing the information they obtained, not because they were wardriving. If they had been wardriving, and simply retained the information for their own use the cops never could have found them and never would have needed to. Quite frankly his posts are aggressive and irrational, and I was trying to explain to him why the cops are actually after these guys. From the first sentence in the summary:
stealing credit card data
And if you RTFA you learn that the owner of the Mercedes was only discovered after he was busted performing other forms of fraud.
Using someone else's credit card is criminal. Doesn't matter if they use a megaphone and tell the whole world what it is. The fact the information is obtained through wardriving is simply the method.
To MPA's credit, they have voluntarily retracted their claim. IMSLP will also be working on technical measures to prevent any future attacks.
Seems to already be back up. Site already refers to the outage in the past tense, "The recent IMSLP outage was..."
uptime estimates accurate to within 3%, prior to termination of service.
Yes. Yes there is. "As far as we can tell, the location is determined by triangulating against the nearest cell-phone towers." - this is how iPods (which don't even have a gps chip) have been able to use maps applications since the first touch came out. So no, apple wouldn't need the GPS system to be on. As disabling location services does not disable cellular functionality, it clearly just disables access to the cell-based location API, not turn the ability off. And listening to cell tower location could even be possible if you put the phone in airplane mode.
No. There is a person who is likely (at some point in the future) to be displaced, and someone who is displaced. What the report said was that in 2010 50 million people would be in positions at risk of being displaced.
That's just keeping with the GP's reasoning, not a statement of fact.
int Random(int max)
// implement random number generation later, after we refactor again
{
if (max > 3)
return 3;
else
throw CantReturnThreeException;
}
Canada:
TELUS: $50/gb
Rogers: $30/gb
The tsunami would be on the hook for much more if it had assets to sue for.
Isn't that an algorithm for determining rank, not sorting? Yes, the value it produces could be used as a key for sorting, but it is not a sorting algorithm.
Other than that, awesome.
130W TDB at 2.4 GHz, on the high end. Sadly, that information wasn't in the posted article. http://news.softpedia.com/news/More-Details-About-Intel-s-Upcoming-Xeon-E7-8800-CPU-Line-Emerge-183270.shtml
Didn't they something similar about the internet? Made MSN instead? Ended up trying to copy what AOL was doing, and we all know since AOL stocks are worth a fortune these days that must have been a great idea.
Looking at windows phone 7 & the x-box (kinect), the company can execute well, but they really need some vision for future markets to get ahead of the curve. Seriously, 18 months ago WP7 would have crushed android. Now? Nothing.
People normally don't flamewar over common knowledge, sorry.
You both are pissing away too much money on your mortgage's interest.
I'm confused. How on earth do you think Novell is cloning RHEL? They are a significant contributer to linux, 3rd from the top, and non-trivial user ecosystem (they supplied the devs who got alot of the new AMD graphics stuff going, as I recall.) Big contributers to KDE and libre office. If they contribute less then redhat, that would only be because they have less staff (I think... at least the suse part of them does, for sure).
Suse is as different from RHEL as debian is. Yes, they both use rpms. That's about it.
Hey! I drive a Camry. How does it not compare to a Porsche? It's comfy, gets good mileage, decent speakers and takes me where I want to go.
The comparison you are looking for is "comparing a Porsche to a stick up your..."
(guy who dabbles in android but really envies his iOS dev buddy)
That should be trillion, my bad.