duckduckgo.com has a nice shorthand for single-site searches. !w for wikipedia.. uh, I can't remember any others. https://duckduckgo.com/bang You could set it as default search in URL bar and use the 11.4K bang abbreviations... though for some sites bang autocomplete might better be used in the search box instead. And they have the best site abbreviation as well: https://ddg.gg/
Maybe Uber could then transition to a media delivery and content company while creating unused APIs and passing out free plastic headscratchers at industry events. Uberrrr! Yodeleheehooo...
"The Yahoo Mail Plus premium service has been replaced by Ad Free Mail. If you're still subscribed to your original Yahoo Mail Plus account, here's what to expect when it automatically renews.
Automatic renewal
Once your Yahoo Mail Plus account has been renewed, it will transition to Yahoo Ad Free Mail. You'll still enjoy your email without ads, but at the price you've always paid (new Yahoo Ad Free Mail accounts cost $49.99 / year).
You don't have to do anything. As long as your account with Yahoo is in good standing, you'll continue to renew for $19.99 each year on your anniversary date."
Anyway, I don't think they put signature ads in SMTP mail, and adblock works pretty well for Yahoo free (old basic HTML 4 interface).
I get the occasional "can't log in" on mobile and Apple Mail, but feh... works well enough.
I'm going to assume the editor meant to say "its" and not "it's" because the latter becomes "it is," leading to a weird pigeon English reading of the line. It's funny when Newsweek did it, but not so much here.
Wait a second - do they mean "the creators' far more open platform" or that Viv is a far more open platform? Oy, the difference a single mark makes.
And re: naming, they should have gone with the vowel-less actioner: "Vivr." I'm not sure how any VC could have missed that crucial marketing point!
What you propose is preposterous, impractical and patently ridiculous. It should be blisteringly obvious that your suggestion should be amended to simply have each citizen marked with a tattoo of an identification number on the left forearm of each citizen.
Nothing fancy, but it does have the advantage of being indelible and attractive as well.
Oh, my goodness! I can't even imagine the state of the populace's finger and toenails. Are there long lines and rations to use the services of the state-sponsored manicurists? Is there a National Policy to advise the glorious citizens as to what their nail states should aspire to be?
We must liberate this country of janky fingers, ingrown cuticles and hangnails in all haste!
How hard is it to define the scope at the start, then have all legislation following stay within those parameters?
I think any "lawmaker" that pulls these maneuverings - inserting legislation too far outside the intended scope of the bill - should be subject to censure, fines, and felony charges. The only defense would be to try to convince a bipartisan committee that you had a legitimate reason for injection, apart from bribes, handouts, contributions, kickbacks, and special favors of course.
If there are no penalties and no systems to steer the cows of Capitol Hill effectively, then the abuse will continue to run rampant.
You may want to also consider Windows 10's increasingly heavy reliance on OneDrive (photos, music, backups) and MS cloud services for your phone, computer, tablet and refrigerator. As people are encouraged to use more space and dump more things online, they will quickly approach the new limits, and will hopefully buy more space from the convenient nag prompt that appears at 4.5 GB.
I've had a few free SkyDrive / OneDrive accounts for a while, and have gotten some bonus space via photo sync, reclaimed the extra 15 GB to counter the reduction to 7 GB, etc. So now they might be taking 10 GB away from me, in addition to the "Camera roll bonus" which is another 15 GB? I'm not sure what the final count will be... Possibly 15 GB out of currently 40 GB usable?
I didn't fill up their space, but it was nice knowing that was available to me. Oh, well. The last thing I bought from Microsoft was a force feedback Sidewinder wheel in 2000, so I'm hardly their target customer anyway.
At least I had the foresight to stock up on some free 50GB Box accounts during their various promotions. It's probably also time to figure out how to get OwnCloud running on the NAS, fighting Apache SSL and ports, rewrite rules, NAT, etc. For free, the external cloud services with paltry storage might work for important documents, frequent files, and current projects.
And the Chinese services give away 1TB for free to anyone with an email address. As long as you don't mind the Party admiring your photos and other collections stored there...
To save on initial production outlays, the show's bible is comprised of alternating chapters of the "Beverly Hills 90120" and "21 Jump Street" writers' guides. This is to keep the action "electrified," if I may borrow a description from the always-late Harry S. Plinkett.
The only thing MojoKid (1002251) wrote for this submission was "Check out the demo. It's pretty impressive," while the rest was plagiarized from the "Hothardware" article written by Paul Lilly, who does seems to be breathlessly impressed by an internal demo of an unreviewed application.
I'm going to call this a formatting error and a sad omission of credit, because I refuse to believe that someone would shamelessly lift words that they hadn't written and posit them as their own. Maybe it's the editors' fault. In either case, it's sloppy posting and comes off as skeezy no matter what the excuse might be.
Hell, just submit the rest of the article next time - why bother linking to a source or crediting an original author?
Classic Shell is a brilliant piece of kit for certain, but I can't imagine any business or institution relying on it for all their forward-facing GUI. Typically problems like a broken GUI are something you require the vendor such as Microsoft to repair. So while I agree that Classic Shell deserves to be mentioned in response to most naysayers, it is not reasonable to expect a corporation or institution to install such a lovely and clever hack to tweak every Win 8 box, especially when it doesn't play with Group Policy and "support" is handled by one or two people - even though it is open source.
If you have not yet marveled at the gustatorial misgivings sold to saps and suckers with barely a regard for their lingering effects and the likelihood of robbing a customer not only of coin, but the ability to walk the next day, you should stop in at Mrs. Miggins'.
The repeated consonants or vowels, usually at the start of a sentence or thought, indicate heightened emotion--usually fear, trepidation, worry, or embarassment. The halting flow of the language is representative of those conditions, where the speaker's confidence is not sufficient to continue the strings of phonemes without retrying / restarting the word or phrase several times.
I hope this clears up your questions and possibly takes away some of your anti-stuttering bias. I feel better now too.
- Why? Yes! Because that website said you were going to die at 3pm, didn't it? - Did it? I can't remember. - How could you forget? It clearly stated that you were going to die, today. At precisely 3:00. Unless it was tomorrow. But no, it's today, at 3:00.
Cute - I was thinking something more along the lines of:
"Hello, and welcome to Microsoft Software Security Assurance Enterprise, Small Business, Government, and Education Transparency Center number 6!
You'll notice that there's a beautiful and fluid whiteboard set up over here to the right. These lines represent our data flow between all of our convenient and secure value-adding services to our customers, and these dots with arrows pointing to an unlabeled blue box are transfer nodes, which Microsoft has decided are not applicable to this Transparency Center presentation.
Now, if you'll look directly in front of you, there's a window that you're free to gaze through to observe Microsoft's server operations for a period of 32 minutes. Please don't touch the glass, and thank you for visiting Microsoft Transparency Center, or as we on the the Security Assurance team lovingly refer to it, 'MSTC6.' Please visit us again soon, and don't forget to accept a complimentary Microsoft gift bag including some enticing software discounts!"
duckduckgo.com has a nice shorthand for single-site searches. !w for wikipedia.. uh, I can't remember any others.
https://duckduckgo.com/bang
You could set it as default search in URL bar and use the 11.4K bang abbreviations... though for some sites bang autocomplete might better be used in the search box instead.
And they have the best site abbreviation as well: https://ddg.gg/
Maybe Uber could then transition to a media delivery and content company while creating unused APIs and passing out free plastic headscratchers at industry events. Uberrrr! Yodeleheehooo...
"You don't want a criminal _lawyer_... you want a _criminal_ lawyer."
- Jessie Pinkman
Oh, bother...
http://www.theonion.com/video/...
or
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v...
Watch out for the Special bus!
Opaque, maybe over the screen itself, 24" diameter.
Then we can spend 45 minutes programming the DVR and brag about it.
Not sure about SMS mail, but Yahoo has opened up IMAP for quite a while -- about 5 years or so.
Mail Plus is gone and replace by "Yahoo Ad-Free Mail" which gives:
No text or graphical ads in Yahoo Mail on desktop browsers.
The account will not go inactive.
https://help.yahoo.com/kb/SLN3...
"The Yahoo Mail Plus premium service has been replaced by Ad Free Mail. If you're still subscribed to your original Yahoo Mail Plus account, here's what to expect when it automatically renews.
Automatic renewal
Once your Yahoo Mail Plus account has been renewed, it will transition to Yahoo Ad Free Mail. You'll still enjoy your email without ads, but at the price you've always paid (new Yahoo Ad Free Mail accounts cost $49.99 / year).
You don't have to do anything. As long as your account with Yahoo is in good standing, you'll continue to renew for $19.99 each year on your anniversary date."
Anyway, I don't think they put signature ads in SMTP mail, and adblock works pretty well for Yahoo free (old basic HTML 4 interface).
I get the occasional "can't log in" on mobile and Apple Mail, but feh... works well enough.
*) I just head over to Cowboy Neal's house to play his...
I'm going to assume the editor meant to say "its" and not "it's" because the latter becomes "it is," leading to a weird pigeon English reading of the line. It's funny when Newsweek did it, but not so much here.
Wait a second - do they mean "the creators' far more open platform" or that Viv is a far more open platform? Oy, the difference a single mark makes.
And re: naming, they should have gone with the vowel-less actioner: "Vivr." I'm not sure how any VC could have missed that crucial marketing point!
Wrong.
x86 SSE2 CPUs
https://www.palemoon.org/palem...
x86 SSE CPUs
http://forum.palemoon.org/view...
Both run on XP.
What you propose is preposterous, impractical and patently ridiculous. It should be blisteringly obvious that your suggestion should be amended to simply have each citizen marked with a tattoo of an identification number on the left forearm of each citizen.
Nothing fancy, but it does have the advantage of being indelible and attractive as well.
How many SOMADs will this dataset create? I shudder to contemplate what pure depravities will be distilled from these "interactions."
Depressing or not, that is official Valve art for one of two mascot Valve guys.
"Open your browser:"
http://half-life.wikia.com/wik...
Oh, my goodness! I can't even imagine the state of the populace's finger and toenails. Are there long lines and rations to use the services of the state-sponsored manicurists? Is there a National Policy to advise the glorious citizens as to what their nail states should aspire to be?
We must liberate this country of janky fingers, ingrown cuticles and hangnails in all haste!
God Bless
How hard is it to define the scope at the start, then have all legislation following stay within those parameters?
I think any "lawmaker" that pulls these maneuverings - inserting legislation too far outside the intended scope of the bill - should be subject to censure, fines, and felony charges. The only defense would be to try to convince a bipartisan committee that you had a legitimate reason for injection, apart from bribes, handouts, contributions, kickbacks, and special favors of course.
If there are no penalties and no systems to steer the cows of Capitol Hill effectively, then the abuse will continue to run rampant.
You may want to also consider Windows 10's increasingly heavy reliance on OneDrive (photos, music, backups) and MS cloud services for your phone, computer, tablet and refrigerator. As people are encouraged to use more space and dump more things online, they will quickly approach the new limits, and will hopefully buy more space from the convenient nag prompt that appears at 4.5 GB.
I've had a few free SkyDrive / OneDrive accounts for a while, and have gotten some bonus space via photo sync, reclaimed the extra 15 GB to counter the reduction to 7 GB, etc. So now they might be taking 10 GB away from me, in addition to the "Camera roll bonus" which is another 15 GB? I'm not sure what the final count will be... Possibly 15 GB out of currently 40 GB usable?
I didn't fill up their space, but it was nice knowing that was available to me. Oh, well. The last thing I bought from Microsoft was a force feedback Sidewinder wheel in 2000, so I'm hardly their target customer anyway.
At least I had the foresight to stock up on some free 50GB Box accounts during their various promotions. It's probably also time to figure out how to get OwnCloud running on the NAS, fighting Apache SSL and ports, rewrite rules, NAT, etc. For free, the external cloud services with paltry storage might work for important documents, frequent files, and current projects.
And the Chinese services give away 1TB for free to anyone with an email address. As long as you don't mind the Party admiring your photos and other collections stored there...
First it giveth, then it taketh away - QoTSA
To save on initial production outlays, the show's bible is comprised of alternating chapters of the "Beverly Hills 90120" and "21 Jump Street" writers' guides. This is to keep the action "electrified," if I may borrow a description from the always-late Harry S. Plinkett.
The only thing MojoKid (1002251) wrote for this submission was "Check out the demo. It's pretty impressive," while the rest was plagiarized from the "Hothardware" article written by Paul Lilly, who does seems to be breathlessly impressed by an internal demo of an unreviewed application.
I'm going to call this a formatting error and a sad omission of credit, because I refuse to believe that someone would shamelessly lift words that they hadn't written and posit them as their own. Maybe it's the editors' fault. In either case, it's sloppy posting and comes off as skeezy no matter what the excuse might be.
Hell, just submit the rest of the article next time - why bother linking to a source or crediting an original author?
I don't understand. Is _this_ thing going to deliver my Q-Tips and AAA batteries now? Because if they raise the subscription fees again, I am so done!
Robot Insurance.
http://www.nbc.com/saturday-night-live/video/old-glory-insurance/n10766
For when the metal ones decide to come for you.
Classic Shell is a brilliant piece of kit for certain, but I can't imagine any business or institution relying on it for all their forward-facing GUI. Typically problems like a broken GUI are something you require the vendor such as Microsoft to repair. So while I agree that Classic Shell deserves to be mentioned in response to most naysayers, it is not reasonable to expect a corporation or institution to install such a lovely and clever hack to tweak every Win 8 box, especially when it doesn't play with Group Policy and "support" is handled by one or two people - even though it is open source.
If you have not yet marveled at the gustatorial misgivings sold to saps and suckers with barely a regard for their lingering effects and the likelihood of robbing a customer not only of coin, but the ability to walk the next day, you should stop in at Mrs. Miggins'.
Please reference many years of comics culture and style that GP is emulating.
The repeated consonants or vowels, usually at the start of a sentence or thought, indicate heightened emotion--usually fear, trepidation, worry, or embarassment. The halting flow of the language is representative of those conditions, where the speaker's confidence is not sufficient to continue the strings of phonemes without retrying / restarting the word or phrase several times.
I hope this clears up your questions and possibly takes away some of your anti-stuttering bias. I feel better now too.
- Why? Yes! Because that website said you were going to die at 3pm, didn't it?
- Did it? I can't remember.
- How could you forget? It clearly stated that you were going to die, today. At precisely 3:00. Unless it was tomorrow. But no, it's today, at 3:00.
http://howlonghaveyougot.com/
Some phones are meant to have a weedy vibrate setting.
https://www.nomachine.com/
Supports Windows, Linux, OS X, Android, and they claim iOS soon.
Cute - I was thinking something more along the lines of:
"Hello, and welcome to Microsoft Software Security Assurance Enterprise, Small Business, Government, and Education Transparency Center number 6!
You'll notice that there's a beautiful and fluid whiteboard set up over here to the right. These lines represent our data flow between all of our convenient and secure value-adding services to our customers, and these dots with arrows pointing to an unlabeled blue box are transfer nodes, which Microsoft has decided are not applicable to this Transparency Center presentation.
Now, if you'll look directly in front of you, there's a window that you're free to gaze through to observe Microsoft's server operations for a period of 32 minutes. Please don't touch the glass, and thank you for visiting Microsoft Transparency Center, or as we on the the Security Assurance team lovingly refer to it, 'MSTC6.' Please visit us again soon, and don't forget to accept a complimentary Microsoft gift bag including some enticing software discounts!"