Imagine all the extra excuses insurance companies could fabricate once you let them milk even more of your personal information.
Will governments ever have an incentive to protect our personal information? Until they do, I expect the commercialization of personal information will continue - to the detriment of the consumer.
When are people going to realize that there ain't no such thing as a free lunch, online or otherwise?
I don't care if a visitor let's the world know that he is at or near my house. What I object to is applications tracking *my* movements.
Mobile devices typically allow users to turn this off. On my Android Xperia X10, it's under "Location and Security Settings" and has separate flags for GPS & wireless networks.
You put too much faith in hotel staff and even hotel safes.
No, I do not put too much faith in the hotel staff; that's why I include one of my backup disks *with* my camera bag.
The simple fact is that if I had to carry my laptop in addition to all my camera gear when I'm hiking up a mountain side, I simply wouldn't be able to cover as much ground. I'm not a professional so I can't afford a sherpa to help carry all the gear.
I'm prepared to lose my laptop. I'm not prepared to lose my photos.
Honestly, I can't see the argument for a single bag. I travel with similar equipment and the last thing I want to do is add the weight of a laptop when I'm out photographing. The laptop stays in the hotel or car. What I do carry with the camera is a small USB drive which holds one of my three backups (in case my laptop is stolen.)
Keep in mind that the laptop requires a power adaptor and, internationally, a plug adaptor. If you're like me, you might even include a mouse and other USB cables to charge phones and MP3 players. In other words, you might as well have a dedicated bag.
For bag advice, I strongly recommend that you go to a dedicated site such as dpreview. I've received excellent advice for people there.
What a defective line of reasoning. If he wants people to embrance Firefox at home, his best approach is to make it usable at their office. Those who can't use Firefox at work are going to be much less inclined to use it at home.
I'm unimpressed and disappointed. I've expended great energy over the years encouraging our business to make as many of its damn web applications support Mozilla. It's been a frustrating task but I've been happy to see a general recognition from IT and management that Firefox is a useful office application.
Sorry Duke, Life was a blast back in the day. But, well, you see Duke, while you were in rehab, I got married and settled down. I've got three teenage daughters now and, well.... don't get me wrong - you'll always be a friend Duke - but my wife,see, she won't take kindly if you show up. I afraid I won't be able to play with you anymore.
Good luck Duke.
There is a big difference between plagarizing another students work and working on assignments together. In fact, in some of my courses, the work was explicitly team work.
If you've ever been a grad student, then you must have also marked undergrad labs for your advisor. In this case, you must also remember that it's bleedin' obvious when two students collude. If the assignments were sufficiently identical, the grade was split between the students - very effective.
Since you need to work together in a professional environment, it's only fitting that school help prepare you for cooperative assignments.
The accepted wisdom when I was in school was that the biology students were less collegial because they were all competing against each other to get into medicine.
I don't know if there is any truth to this but, if they weren't working cooperatively with their peers (as we did in Engineeering & Computer Science), then I can imagine that this would lead to a more miserable school experience.
The spam-hose has abruptly gone limp. The flow petered out from one spam every 4 seconds to one every 30 minutes.
My spam dropped from 226000 in the past month to about a dozen per day since these dicks were cut off.
I'm impressed and grateful for the 99.8% improvement.
Could you elaborate on these instructions please? Why is there an Accept line? Without knowing the specifics of the syntax used, this rule looks like it denies nothing.
Also, you wrote "I read..." - can you provide a reference please?
Thanks,
Keith
The shell is my last refuge from GUIs and the damned mouse. I'd rather it be kept simple thank you very much.
Frankly, I can't stand all the GUI shell replacements for xterm for one simple reason: they integrate with the GUI. The GUI portion of these shells respond to key sequences that I prefer to go directly to the shell. If I use bash as my shell, I want alt-f to do what I've programmed it to do with readline key bindings, not invoke some annoying menu item. That way, when I remotely log into other machines, I don't have my local machine interfering. Logging and command history are more appropriately handled with built-in shell commands and tools such as "script" and "screen".
But I've been called a dinosaur before and undoubtably will be again...
I manage the parental control's for my daughter's account (because I screwed up and was honest about her age - what a nuisance!).
I have several complaints about this new system:
I wasn't notified; I had to learn about it from a friend.
The default behaviour is permissive.
Even though my daughter's account is subject to parental controls, its default behaviour is also permissive. (same as #2 but worse)
When I check my daughter's account, the settings are greyed out with a message that they are subject to her parent's control. But, the greyed out image shows the settings still enabled even though I disabled them. Is that accurate and hence a bug or inaccurate and hence misleading?
Generally, I've been pretty pleased with Blizzard. In my opinion, they're a notch above most game manufacturers and *several* notches above EA, the provider of my 3 daughters' favourite game: Sims3 - now that is an appalling piece of crapware with wholly inadequate support.
But Blizzard dropped the ball on this one and I've let them know. If you feel the same way, let them know via their web support interface. It's quite easy.
Setting aside the whole debate over patent trolls, it seems to me that Microsoft hired a particularly incompetant lawyer. This sounds more like misconduct and I'm surprised that the lawyer isn't subject to personal sanctions.
This hypothesis is old and was used as part of the story "Calculating God" written by Robert J. Sawyer in 2000. It's an excellent book which I can heartily recommend. You might also be familiar with his work through the "Hominids" alternate earth trilogy.
A Masters degree is worthless in industry. A PhD is valuable but primarily only if you are staying in academia.
My company pays a miniscule premium to new grads who have masters and it doesn't come close to compensating you for the two years of lost career. Any difference in salary will disappear within a few years anyways.
Practical experience is more valuable.
So, unless you are aiming for an academic position, go out and get a job.
If I'm wiring up a 48port switch, the last thing I want is to try to use factory cables. That will result in a real rats nest in the cable trough (or under the raised flooring).
Our labs here have tens of thousands of hand-made cables; it would be unmaintainable if we relied on fixed lengths. Instead, our cabling is a thing of beauty.
A few weeks ago, I listened to an interview with the Ontario government minister responsible and he stated quite clearly that he wants to change the wording of the law to permit informal carpooling.
The problem is that there was a notorious incident where scum were running an unlicensed bus company and killed five people. See http://www.cbc.ca/news/story/2000/07/19/watchdog000719.html
Until the new legislation is negotiated and pushed through, expect the licensed bus compnanies to insist that the letter of the law be followed.
Just because these documents are technically public record, doesn't mean that they should be available in bulk to data miners. Privacy is a relative term and there are different types of privacy. Right now, with the advent of automatated, borderless, and unaccountable data collection, we need to take steps to protect some semblence of our personal lives from corporate interests.
CDMA relies on GPS for its timing. Every cell tower has a GPS receiver so that it can synchronize its time with other cells (and the RNC at the centre of the cell network). Timing accuracy is a fundamental part of CDMA's hand-off design.
This problem was encountered in China caused by their military. They literally had a truck driving around jamming the GPS signal making for intermittent problems - always the most difficult to investigate.
Imagine all the extra excuses insurance companies could fabricate once you let them milk even more of your personal information. Will governments ever have an incentive to protect our personal information? Until they do, I expect the commercialization of personal information will continue - to the detriment of the consumer. When are people going to realize that there ain't no such thing as a free lunch, online or otherwise?
Mobile devices typically allow users to turn this off. On my Android Xperia X10, it's under "Location and Security Settings" and has separate flags for GPS & wireless networks.
No, I do not put too much faith in the hotel staff; that's why I include one of my backup disks *with* my camera bag.
The simple fact is that if I had to carry my laptop in addition to all my camera gear when I'm hiking up a mountain side, I simply wouldn't be able to cover as much ground. I'm not a professional so I can't afford a sherpa to help carry all the gear.
I'm prepared to lose my laptop. I'm not prepared to lose my photos.
Honestly, I can't see the argument for a single bag. I travel with similar equipment and the last thing I want to do is add the weight of a laptop when I'm out photographing. The laptop stays in the hotel or car. What I do carry with the camera is a small USB drive which holds one of my three backups (in case my laptop is stolen.)
Keep in mind that the laptop requires a power adaptor and, internationally, a plug adaptor. If you're like me, you might even include a mouse and other USB cables to charge phones and MP3 players. In other words, you might as well have a dedicated bag.
For bag advice, I strongly recommend that you go to a dedicated site such as dpreview. I've received excellent advice for people there.
Regards,
Keith
What a defective line of reasoning. If he wants people to embrance Firefox at home, his best approach is to make it usable at their office. Those who can't use Firefox at work are going to be much less inclined to use it at home.
I'm unimpressed and disappointed. I've expended great energy over the years encouraging our business to make as many of its damn web applications support Mozilla. It's been a frustrating task but I've been happy to see a general recognition from IT and management that Firefox is a useful office application.
He's utterly wrong and misguided.
although it should give SkyNet a run for its money.
Sorry Duke, Life was a blast back in the day. But, well, you see Duke, while you were in rehab, I got married and settled down. I've got three teenage daughters now and, well.... don't get me wrong - you'll always be a friend Duke - but my wife,see, she won't take kindly if you show up. I afraid I won't be able to play with you anymore. Good luck Duke.
There is a big difference between plagarizing another students work and working on assignments together. In fact, in some of my courses, the work was explicitly team work. If you've ever been a grad student, then you must have also marked undergrad labs for your advisor. In this case, you must also remember that it's bleedin' obvious when two students collude. If the assignments were sufficiently identical, the grade was split between the students - very effective. Since you need to work together in a professional environment, it's only fitting that school help prepare you for cooperative assignments.
The accepted wisdom when I was in school was that the biology students were less collegial because they were all competing against each other to get into medicine. I don't know if there is any truth to this but, if they weren't working cooperatively with their peers (as we did in Engineeering & Computer Science), then I can imagine that this would lead to a more miserable school experience.
The spam-hose has abruptly gone limp. The flow petered out from one spam every 4 seconds to one every 30 minutes. My spam dropped from 226000 in the past month to about a dozen per day since these dicks were cut off. I'm impressed and grateful for the 99.8% improvement.
Could you elaborate on these instructions please? Why is there an Accept line? Without knowing the specifics of the syntax used, this rule looks like it denies nothing. Also, you wrote "I read ..." - can you provide a reference please?
Thanks,
Keith
We need more curious people. What we do not need is more rude and discouraging people like yourself and, possibly, the professor.
The shell is my last refuge from GUIs and the damned mouse. I'd rather it be kept simple thank you very much.
Frankly, I can't stand all the GUI shell replacements for xterm for one simple reason: they integrate with the GUI. The GUI portion of these shells respond to key sequences that I prefer to go directly to the shell. If I use bash as my shell, I want alt-f to do what I've programmed it to do with readline key bindings, not invoke some annoying menu item. That way, when I remotely log into other machines, I don't have my local machine interfering. Logging and command history are more appropriately handled with built-in shell commands and tools such as "script" and "screen".
But I've been called a dinosaur before and undoubtably will be again...
"incentivized"?! I already had a poor impression of Facebook and its founder. Now I know why. What a twit.
Generally, I've been pretty pleased with Blizzard. In my opinion, they're a notch above most game manufacturers and *several* notches above EA, the provider of my 3 daughters' favourite game: Sims3 - now that is an appalling piece of crapware with wholly inadequate support.
But Blizzard dropped the ball on this one and I've let them know. If you feel the same way, let them know via their web support interface. It's quite easy.
If these are undocumented APIs, then you can bet that they'll be removed or otherwise disabled in the first service pack.
Setting aside the whole debate over patent trolls, it seems to me that Microsoft hired a particularly incompetant lawyer. This sounds more like misconduct and I'm surprised that the lawyer isn't subject to personal sanctions.
This hypothesis is old and was used as part of the story "Calculating God" written by Robert J. Sawyer in 2000. It's an excellent book which I can heartily recommend. You might also be familiar with his work through the "Hominids" alternate earth trilogy.
A Masters degree is worthless in industry. A PhD is valuable but primarily only if you are staying in academia. My company pays a miniscule premium to new grads who have masters and it doesn't come close to compensating you for the two years of lost career. Any difference in salary will disappear within a few years anyways. Practical experience is more valuable. So, unless you are aiming for an academic position, go out and get a job.
If I'm wiring up a 48port switch, the last thing I want is to try to use factory cables. That will result in a real rats nest in the cable trough (or under the raised flooring). Our labs here have tens of thousands of hand-made cables; it would be unmaintainable if we relied on fixed lengths. Instead, our cabling is a thing of beauty.
Simple: then don't do it. If your employer wants you to do it, then they should pay you to do it.
A few weeks ago, I listened to an interview with the Ontario government minister responsible and he stated quite clearly that he wants to change the wording of the law to permit informal carpooling.
The problem is that there was a notorious incident where scum were running an unlicensed bus company and killed five people. See http://www.cbc.ca/news/story/2000/07/19/watchdog000719.html
Until the new legislation is negotiated and pushed through, expect the licensed bus compnanies to insist that the letter of the law be followed.
HD has repeated failed to duplicate my bog-standard Weiser house-keys. I'd like to see somebody do it from 200 feet.
Just because these documents are technically public record, doesn't mean that they should be available in bulk to data miners. Privacy is a relative term and there are different types of privacy. Right now, with the advent of automatated, borderless, and unaccountable data collection, we need to take steps to protect some semblence of our personal lives from corporate interests.
CDMA relies on GPS for its timing. Every cell tower has a GPS receiver so that it can synchronize its time with other cells (and the RNC at the centre of the cell network). Timing accuracy is a fundamental part of CDMA's hand-off design.
This problem was encountered in China caused by their military. They literally had a truck driving around jamming the GPS signal making for intermittent problems - always the most difficult to investigate.