I switched my iPhone from using Google to DuckDuckGo for web searches because of AMP. So f*****g announced and intrusive. Now they have the arrogance to mess with email? Oh well I donâ(TM)t use gmail anyway because I already find the Google way with email so annoying. I guess enough people just go along with that this crap continues.
I have no idea what "LCS Syndrome" is, and I'm an English speaker from England. I've been reading this story to see if I can find definition. Talk about bad journalism.
Now try reading the OPs comment and imagine somebody a heavy German accent speaking English. That's understandable in comparison mentioning "LCS Syndrome" in passing.
I thought the iPhone only had about a 1/3 market share in the US. Hardly Microsoftâ(TM)s 95+% they had in the heyday of Windows and the browser wars. Come to think of it, how how does Apple Music become the biggest service when itâ(TM)s only available on a minority of devices?
Yes indeed. The problem prior to Vista is that the default setup was all users were admins. For people who actually tried working with limited user accounts, they found most software didn't cope well (poorly written with bad assumptions) and there was no slick or integrated method for privilege escalation like the UAC prompt. Just about every object in Windows NT had ACLs long before Vista came out, it's just they weren't used properly.
It's funny, but these emails have a real air of desperation about them. It's this very air of desperation that puts me off checking them.
That and learning that when I do follow through that it's never anything I'm interested in. Facebook is just so out of touch, and everything they do just discourages me more and more.
Why do people feel the need to continuously broadcast to all and sundry every random and banal moment or thought in their lives? If Facebook could filter this out, and all the sponsored and advertising crap, it might become more valuable again. Meanwhile they just sound desperate.
What are Apple using in house to provide these services? Please tell me they manage all their people with a Windows AD + Exchange!;). I wish they did because then they might make the integration better.
I've flown London to Melbourne a few times, and it's normally an A380 on the London leg, and a B777 on the Melbourne side. The B777 always feels cramped and a step down after the Airbus.
Particularly nice is the economy section upstairs behind business class on Air Malaysia. The window seats have bins on the side that really let you spread out.
We have a baby, and the space at the balkheads downstairs on the A380 leaves you crying when you get on a B777. 26 hours to Melbourne at Easter with an active 18 month old is something I'm dreading, although this time I think it's an A380 followed by B787 (there are no planes out there in my price range that will make this a good journey though!)
They also lived in places with fireplaces and chimneys, didnâ(TM)t have to worry about pipes freezing and bursting behind the walls or in the ceiling, and maybe even had a smaller volume/area to keep warm or doors and walls that isolated separate areas unlike modern open plan living spaces.
It's also a non-issue for macOS, and these things are generally easier than Windows. This story is fairly daft. So Apple change how they do something and it's taking people a little while to figure this out and understand it? So what?
My ten year old MBP runs fine, once I replaced the hard drive with an SSD. Canâ(TM)t be upgraded past El Capitan without hacking, but thatâ(TM)s still getting security patches anyway.
And BTW, in case somebody comes across this via a Google search... this is most commonly resolved by going to Disk Manager and marking a drive offline first. This issue has been annoying and confounding people for years
Really? Youâ(TM)d be the first person who found it easy to find out how to unlock files like â$Extend\$RMMetadata\TXfLogâ(TM) when you canâ(TM)t safely eject an external USB drive.
Try cleaning up a Windows app that installed device drivers and crap in the registry, and whose uninstaller didn't clean-up these up properly. There's no need to get frothy mouthed about Apple when it's easy enough to contrive similar situations on other platforms. This kind of thing probably happens more frequently on other platforms.
It seems to me that a lot of parents these days spend all their time faffing on their phones and have no idea what their kids are doing right under their noses, let alone finding the time to teach them to be considerate of others around them in a confined public space. Iâ(TM)m with the OP on this: phone and data service on planes is a freakinâ(TM) bad idea. We could learn a lot from the Japanese, where for instance itâ(TM)s considered socially unacceptable to talk loudly on your phone on the Tokyo subway.
You should get an iPhone: the iOS version backs up to iCloud. Like they say: it just works:)
My biggest problem with it is that it 1) strips all exif info from photos, and 2) over compresses/down-rezes everything. #1 is inline with it's privacy ethos, but both are annoying when you have friends who use it as the only way to share photos.
Ah yeah sorry, youâ(TM)re right. Briton fucked everyone over when she joined the EEC in the first place and ended Imperial Prefernce for places like NZ. Brexit Britons are too short-sighted to see this.
You misunderstand. After Brexit we will be able to trade freely on a global scale: instead of importing cheap workers and goods from central and eastern Europe, weâ(TM)re going to import vastly cheaper stuff from our former colonies (ironically called the Commonwealth) and places even more impoverished. Wealthy people like Nigel Farage or loony Tories will get wealthier, and the common person whoâ(TM)s already poorer than they were in 2008 is going to be shafted even worse.
Now if only they'd be forced to advertise their upstream speeds too. This tends to be the biggest bottleneck and pain point, and also the hardest information to find. This was one of the reasons I originally went with BT when FTTC was rolled out in my neighbourhood (and I hated myself everyday for being their customer) was because I knew I'd get 20mbs upstream. Compared with other 'fast' providers like Virgin, this is actually very good. Virgin BTW buried this information somehwere on their website, and it transpires, is (was?) a lot slower and also variable... fuck you very much!
Alternatively, could it possibly give a boost to the bricks and mortar shopping experience in those 'junior' markets with the added benefit of a higher tax take for their governments?
I switched my iPhone from using Google to DuckDuckGo for web searches because of AMP. So f*****g announced and intrusive. Now they have the arrogance to mess with email? Oh well I donâ(TM)t use gmail anyway because I already find the Google way with email so annoying. I guess enough people just go along with that this crap continues.
The parliament can dissolve the commission. As can directly elected national governments via the council of ministers.
I have no idea what "LCS Syndrome" is, and I'm an English speaker from England. I've been reading this story to see if I can find definition. Talk about bad journalism.
Now try reading the OPs comment and imagine somebody a heavy German accent speaking English. That's understandable in comparison mentioning "LCS Syndrome" in passing.
I thought the iPhone only had about a 1/3 market share in the US. Hardly Microsoftâ(TM)s 95+% they had in the heyday of Windows and the browser wars. Come to think of it, how how does Apple Music become the biggest service when itâ(TM)s only available on a minority of devices?
Yes indeed. The problem prior to Vista is that the default setup was all users were admins. For people who actually tried working with limited user accounts, they found most software didn't cope well (poorly written with bad assumptions) and there was no slick or integrated method for privilege escalation like the UAC prompt. Just about every object in Windows NT had ACLs long before Vista came out, it's just they weren't used properly.
It's funny, but these emails have a real air of desperation about them. It's this very air of desperation that puts me off checking them.
That and learning that when I do follow through that it's never anything I'm interested in. Facebook is just so out of touch, and everything they do just discourages me more and more.
Why do people feel the need to continuously broadcast to all and sundry every random and banal moment or thought in their lives? If Facebook could filter this out, and all the sponsored and advertising crap, it might become more valuable again. Meanwhile they just sound desperate.
What are Apple using in house to provide these services? Please tell me they manage all their people with a Windows AD + Exchange! ;). I wish they did because then they might make the integration better.
I've flown London to Melbourne a few times, and it's normally an A380 on the London leg, and a B777 on the Melbourne side. The B777 always feels cramped and a step down after the Airbus.
Particularly nice is the economy section upstairs behind business class on Air Malaysia. The window seats have bins on the side that really let you spread out.
We have a baby, and the space at the balkheads downstairs on the A380 leaves you crying when you get on a B777. 26 hours to Melbourne at Easter with an active 18 month old is something I'm dreading, although this time I think it's an A380 followed by B787 (there are no planes out there in my price range that will make this a good journey though!)
London to Perth, non-stop in a Dreamliner, starting this March:
https://www.qantas.com/gb/en/p...
Nope, we ainâ(TM)t gonna do that. /. should fix it on their side.
They also lived in places with fireplaces and chimneys, didnâ(TM)t have to worry about pipes freezing and bursting behind the walls or in the ceiling, and maybe even had a smaller volume/area to keep warm or doors and walls that isolated separate areas unlike modern open plan living spaces.
It's also a non-issue for macOS, and these things are generally easier than Windows. This story is fairly daft. So Apple change how they do something and it's taking people a little while to figure this out and understand it? So what?
My ten year old MBP runs fine, once I replaced the hard drive with an SSD. Canâ(TM)t be upgraded past El Capitan without hacking, but thatâ(TM)s still getting security patches anyway.
And BTW, in case somebody comes across this via a Google search... this is most commonly resolved by going to Disk Manager and marking a drive offline first. This issue has been annoying and confounding people for years
Really? Youâ(TM)d be the first person who found it easy to find out how to unlock files like â$Extend\$RMMetadata\TXfLogâ(TM) when you canâ(TM)t safely eject an external USB drive.
Try cleaning up a Windows app that installed device drivers and crap in the registry, and whose uninstaller didn't clean-up these up properly. There's no need to get frothy mouthed about Apple when it's easy enough to contrive similar situations on other platforms. This kind of thing probably happens more frequently on other platforms.
It seems to me that a lot of parents these days spend all their time faffing on their phones and have no idea what their kids are doing right under their noses, let alone finding the time to teach them to be considerate of others around them in a confined public space. Iâ(TM)m with the OP on this: phone and data service on planes is a freakinâ(TM) bad idea. We could learn a lot from the Japanese, where for instance itâ(TM)s considered socially unacceptable to talk loudly on your phone on the Tokyo subway.
You should get an iPhone: the iOS version backs up to iCloud. Like they say: it just works :)
My biggest problem with it is that it 1) strips all exif info from photos, and 2) over compresses/down-rezes everything. #1 is inline with it's privacy ethos, but both are annoying when you have friends who use it as the only way to share photos.
Really? Have you been to London or Paris?
Burying cables is a political and an economic decision.
Ah yeah sorry, youâ(TM)re right. Briton fucked everyone over when she joined the EEC in the first place and ended Imperial Prefernce for places like NZ. Brexit Britons are too short-sighted to see this.
You misunderstand. After Brexit we will be able to trade freely on a global scale: instead of importing cheap workers and goods from central and eastern Europe, weâ(TM)re going to import vastly cheaper stuff from our former colonies (ironically called the Commonwealth) and places even more impoverished. Wealthy people like Nigel Farage or loony Tories will get wealthier, and the common person whoâ(TM)s already poorer than they were in 2008 is going to be shafted even worse.
Sounds like a waste of money gimic. Will they make the case robustness enough to survive the way airlines and airports treat out baggage?
Now if only they'd be forced to advertise their upstream speeds too. This tends to be the biggest bottleneck and pain point, and also the hardest information to find. This was one of the reasons I originally went with BT when FTTC was rolled out in my neighbourhood (and I hated myself everyday for being their customer) was because I knew I'd get 20mbs upstream. Compared with other 'fast' providers like Virgin, this is actually very good. Virgin BTW buried this information somehwere on their website, and it transpires, is (was?) a lot slower and also variable... fuck you very much!
Alternatively, could it possibly give a boost to the bricks and mortar shopping experience in those 'junior' markets with the added benefit of a higher tax take for their governments?
Didn't work so well with SCSI and Firewire, but hey!
I'd like to see a VM friendly macOS or an update to the minis, for our build farm.