There is going to be more people with degrees per square mile where there are many artsy people, San Fransisco for example. Arts grads get paid less and therefore will probably be more confined, perhaps to coffee shops.;)
Computer engineering and programmers get very good pay and large offices, like at Google. They are going to more spread out, like in Silicon Valley.
I work for a small northern Canada tech company with people with engineering, math, commerce and science degrees, in a small office of about 10 people. Around the office in my city (Yellowknife, Northwest Territories, Canada) has a lot of high school graduate diamond mine workers, oil workers, and engineering companies working for all of our industries and many arts grads without jobs (no surprise). I think measuring people with degrees per square mile is a good idea because our industry workers without degrees are barely in town and few are often living here for long. I think that it makes for innacurate findings.
BTW, sorry for any rambling, bad spelling or grammar, little sleep, apartment burnt down, etc.
I think what would revolutionize the netbook the most is a better OS. Nothing too bulky like Windows, too simple like Xandros or too complicated for entry users like Eebuntu.
A clean and useful Linux operating system that comes pre-installed would be revolutionary for netbooks.
"But although the department's site has the extra step of asking for a mother's maiden name and guarantor's name (presumably, the person who signed the passport photo and application), some implementations of Edentiti used by financial institutions simply check that the passport is valid and details are correct based on date of birth, full name and place of birth."
Sounds a lot like how Sarah Palin's email got hacked to me. Asking security questions has proven to fail when someone wants someone's information.
I see what's going on here. The Mayan were right!
There is going to be more people with degrees per square mile where there are many artsy people, San Fransisco for example. Arts grads get paid less and therefore will probably be more confined, perhaps to coffee shops. ;)
Computer engineering and programmers get very good pay and large offices, like at Google. They are going to more spread out, like in Silicon Valley.
I work for a small northern Canada tech company with people with engineering, math, commerce and science degrees, in a small office of about 10 people. Around the office in my city (Yellowknife, Northwest Territories, Canada) has a lot of high school graduate diamond mine workers, oil workers, and engineering companies working for all of our industries and many arts grads without jobs (no surprise). I think measuring people with degrees per square mile is a good idea because our industry workers without degrees are barely in town and few are often living here for long. I think that it makes for innacurate findings.
BTW, sorry for any rambling, bad spelling or grammar, little sleep, apartment burnt down, etc.
I think what would revolutionize the netbook the most is a better OS. Nothing too bulky like Windows, too simple like Xandros or too complicated for entry users like Eebuntu. A clean and useful Linux operating system that comes pre-installed would be revolutionary for netbooks.
Non graphical web browsers, like Lynx will always be the fastest. Although the content is a little "slim", it loads pages faster.
Sounds a lot like how Sarah Palin's email got hacked to me. Asking security questions has proven to fail when someone wants someone's information.
Sounds a little like our (Canadian) parliament. Pro-rogued for about the same time for the same reason.