RIM? If you don't run your own BES server, the RIM servers (or carrier BES server) have the password stored on them in order to download the mail. If you run your own BES server, it has full control on your domain in order to access mailboxes, and it has internet access to send mail to the RIM servers, where it is cached.
Oh, and RIM is a Canadian company, one of the Five Eyes, so in most respects no different than being American. I would love to see what the EU intends to use for email on phone.
How do you think that any country is any different anyways. The NSA had some of its programs exposed, do you really think there is a country on this planet that doesn't (or wishes they could) do anything that the NSA was doing? The NSA is chartered to protect the interests of the US, just like any other foreign intelligence organization, they will do what they can to accomplish that goal.
Would China be any better to host this stuff in? How about Russia? Japan (close allies of the US)? Korea (also allies)? Heck, any EU country is about as trustworthy, as most of them work very closely with the US through NATO. Guess we are all going to design, fab, code and run our very own cell phones/cell networks to prevent spying. What happens when someone then sets up their own cell tower to capture the unencrypted data stream? Are you going to then trust SSL or whatever encrypts the mail server conversations (over and above the cell network encryption that is being bypassed)?
I guess they don't use BlackBerry either, as they either store passwords on the carrier BES server, or run a BES server that has full access to the domain, and internet access (and forwards all email to the BES servers run by RIM).
Rail guns don't use propellant and have significantly more kinetic energy for the size of gun. When you shoot in a parabolic arc, it comes down at near the same speed as it was fired (minus what is lost to atmospheric drag).
Sure they do, they just aren't in active duty. I stayed a night on the USS New Jersey a couple years ago. The guns appeared from cursory examination to be able to be refitted to fire relatively quickly, though I think the engines would be the bigger problem.
I would agree on the book of Mormon, it is much like the Koran as it is a further book on the bible. Of course it includes period mistransilations as they included the books from the time, not from the future.
You could claim that I was wrong in saying it "includes" the Bible and Torah, as it appears to be more of that they tell the same stories from the same sources, but that is just a matter of being pedantic about include meaning the same as in programming.
LEGO is a trademark, and it is an all capital trademark. LEGO corporation however prefers people not pluralize LEGO, and instead type it as LEGO style bricks.
Trademarks have always applied to a particular field. McDonalds Heating and Air Conditioning isn't going to cross over into McDonalds the fast food restaurant's turf and it's very unlikely the two would be confused for one another.
Unless you are Apple Music which sued Apple Computer and won, then lost their own trademark later when Apple Computer branched into music.
You do realize that the Koran literally contains the Bible which literally contains the Torah right? Islam is to Christianity as Christianity is to Judaism. Mohammed considered himself a profit of god, and also weirdly enough considered Jesus to be a prophet, not the son of god. I always kind of laugh when Christians say things like screw Allah, not realising that Allah = God = Yahweh, they all supposedly worship the same god.
Considering you could say every one of your points in reference to human drivers, I really don't see the difference. Most human drivers lose their mind when there is an inch of snow on the ground. It is the rare drivers that do well in snow. This is true for most of your points. How many human drivers see the drunken idiot stumble in front of them? How many are able to react quick enough to avoid them?
If you don't believe me, go setup a DNS server and try it. You will find that your hosts file will not block any DNS traffic, it will just make the server itself unable to properly resolve the computer.
So, setup a DNS server on another computer with a hosts file pointing your computer to 0.0.0.0 as you state, then use nslookup on your computer and see if it can connect.
It doesn't work, as the DNS service doesn't need to go to hosts to resolve your address in order to respond to you.
As an Verizon customer, I received a text from Verizon saying "you have a 6GB a month plan, respond with yes to upgrade to 10GB for no additional charge". I wonder if this is another price drop to the one that happened to me 3 months ago. The text could have been related to me buying a tablet and changing my plan however, and nothing to do with this particular change.
Perhaps also showing population density differences for some major US cities vs Paris might help illustrate more of the point.
My guess is that most US cities have much higher population densities, which also makes deploying cellular networks more expensive (more towers are needed as each tower can only support a maximum number of people).
Each cell tower can cover 50km (at 3G, I believe 4G has a shorter range), but in cities, they turn the signal strength all the way down and overload the number of cells to cover the number of people.
RIM? If you don't run your own BES server, the RIM servers (or carrier BES server) have the password stored on them in order to download the mail. If you run your own BES server, it has full control on your domain in order to access mailboxes, and it has internet access to send mail to the RIM servers, where it is cached.
Oh, and RIM is a Canadian company, one of the Five Eyes, so in most respects no different than being American. I would love to see what the EU intends to use for email on phone.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/F...
Apple - WA, USA
Google - CA, USA
RIM - Canada
Well, that covers all the major phone OSes.
How do you think that any country is any different anyways. The NSA had some of its programs exposed, do you really think there is a country on this planet that doesn't (or wishes they could) do anything that the NSA was doing? The NSA is chartered to protect the interests of the US, just like any other foreign intelligence organization, they will do what they can to accomplish that goal.
Would China be any better to host this stuff in? How about Russia? Japan (close allies of the US)? Korea (also allies)? Heck, any EU country is about as trustworthy, as most of them work very closely with the US through NATO. Guess we are all going to design, fab, code and run our very own cell phones/cell networks to prevent spying. What happens when someone then sets up their own cell tower to capture the unencrypted data stream? Are you going to then trust SSL or whatever encrypts the mail server conversations (over and above the cell network encryption that is being bypassed)?
https://www.google.com/search?...
I guess they don't use BlackBerry either, as they either store passwords on the carrier BES server, or run a BES server that has full access to the domain, and internet access (and forwards all email to the BES servers run by RIM).
I also thought the period after Controlled looked weird.
Conspiracy to Distribute and Possess with Intent to Distribute a controlled. Substance in violation of 21 U.S. C 846,M
When did mocking your principle (in public) become a crime?
I am assuming it was meant as a joke.
Or they delete your bug report and pretend nothing is wrong until the patch/OS update is released.
It's especially unlikely when they don't exist anymore :)
I was just pointing out that they exist, not that they are useful to the military.
That was grumpy's mistake, you just quoted him.
Rail guns don't use propellant and have significantly more kinetic energy for the size of gun. When you shoot in a parabolic arc, it comes down at near the same speed as it was fired (minus what is lost to atmospheric drag).
That makes me picture the death star, is that wrong?
To be fair, aircraft carriers to carry weapons other than aircraft, they just wouldn't be terribly useful in ship to ship battle.
It would be rather interesting to see a CIWS open up on a ship, I just think it would be pretty much ignored.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C...
Sure they do, they just aren't in active duty. I stayed a night on the USS New Jersey a couple years ago. The guns appeared from cursory examination to be able to be refitted to fire relatively quickly, though I think the engines would be the bigger problem.
Funny, cause you said the same thing as I did.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Q...
Wikipedia also says the same thing.
I would agree on the book of Mormon, it is much like the Koran as it is a further book on the bible. Of course it includes period mistransilations as they included the books from the time, not from the future.
You could claim that I was wrong in saying it "includes" the Bible and Torah, as it appears to be more of that they tell the same stories from the same sources, but that is just a matter of being pedantic about include meaning the same as in programming.
LEGO is a trademark, and it is an all capital trademark. LEGO corporation however prefers people not pluralize LEGO, and instead type it as LEGO style bricks.
Those 1x1 blocks are evil, they slip into the carpet and always seem to catch you right on the heel.
It however is a trademark, which the company has chosen should be all caps.
Did you pull a Band-Aid out of the box of band-aids when you got a boo boo too?
Trademarks have always applied to a particular field. McDonalds Heating and Air Conditioning isn't going to cross over into McDonalds the fast food restaurant's turf and it's very unlikely the two would be confused for one another.
Unless you are Apple Music which sued Apple Computer and won, then lost their own trademark later when Apple Computer branched into music.
You do realize that the Koran literally contains the Bible which literally contains the Torah right? Islam is to Christianity as Christianity is to Judaism. Mohammed considered himself a profit of god, and also weirdly enough considered Jesus to be a prophet, not the son of god. I always kind of laugh when Christians say things like screw Allah, not realising that Allah = God = Yahweh, they all supposedly worship the same god.
Considering you could say every one of your points in reference to human drivers, I really don't see the difference. Most human drivers lose their mind when there is an inch of snow on the ground. It is the rare drivers that do well in snow. This is true for most of your points. How many human drivers see the drunken idiot stumble in front of them? How many are able to react quick enough to avoid them?
If you don't believe me, go setup a DNS server and try it. You will find that your hosts file will not block any DNS traffic, it will just make the server itself unable to properly resolve the computer.
So, setup a DNS server on another computer with a hosts file pointing your computer to 0.0.0.0 as you state, then use nslookup on your computer and see if it can connect.
It doesn't work, as the DNS service doesn't need to go to hosts to resolve your address in order to respond to you.
As an Verizon customer, I received a text from Verizon saying "you have a 6GB a month plan, respond with yes to upgrade to 10GB for no additional charge". I wonder if this is another price drop to the one that happened to me 3 months ago. The text could have been related to me buying a tablet and changing my plan however, and nothing to do with this particular change.
Perhaps also showing population density differences for some major US cities vs Paris might help illustrate more of the point.
My guess is that most US cities have much higher population densities, which also makes deploying cellular networks more expensive (more towers are needed as each tower can only support a maximum number of people).
Each cell tower can cover 50km (at 3G, I believe 4G has a shorter range), but in cities, they turn the signal strength all the way down and overload the number of cells to cover the number of people.
In the US, you could always use Cricket...it runs on Verizon's network, so not much different if you want budget.
https://www.cricketwireless.co...
it looks like $60 for 20GB, I don't know what other plans they have though to compare directly with your plan.
God, APK, you are hilarious.
I did prove you wrong, you are just too dense to grasp it.