Venmo offers flexibility not offered by traditional banks (at least US ones, anyway).
With Venmo, I can ask someone their user name and pay them back for half a meal or six pack within 30 seconds. No bank platform allows for that convenience.
All of my friends and I use Venmo frequently. In addition to scenarios mentioned above, I also use it to pay my portion of utilities and rent to my roommate as well. I'm a late-twenty-something for reference.
Her Android messages were shown in the wrong color on iMessage, which offended some teens to the point of excluding her from conversations. So... I pay a $60/month premium so she can be the right color. Evil!
Stupid of Apple to do that (pointing out the "other"), but I can't believe you caved. Granted, I don't have a daughter (or children), so maybe I'll understand better when and if I get there.
I'm wondering if this will affect known methods used by law enforcement to break into iPhones in high-profile cases (such as the San Bernardino shooting). Anyone have any insight as to whether the underlying encryption has an affect on those attack vectors?
Trying to avoid talking about whether it is a good or bad thing that police can break into iPhones when necessary -- just curious if anyone has any technical insight.
Now my kid is 4, there are frustrating moments but also experiences I would never trade. Best thing is that I now have a great excuse to play with toys again. When I'm at home, I feel younger because of my son.
Isn't it a bit early to be making that claim? You're less than 25% done with your tenure.
I'm willing to bet the "password-rater", however it is implemented, is only interpreting the first character of your password (or none of it) until you take a second action: either interacting with the password field a second time or interacting with the "repeat password" field. This would explain why when the rating changes it always becomes stronger and never weaker. Would be interesting to play with and figure out how it works.
By the time the slave trade was killed in the US, it had already been eliminated in what would have been considered, at the time, to be other "1st world" (industrialized) countries that could have taken advantage of a large number of slaves and competed with the US. You picked that one sentence to criticize, but I think OP's sentiment was really "governments who fight markets, in which there is demand, never win." In the case of the slave trade, the rest of the market and its demand had already been killed.
To be clear, I don't necessarily agree with OP's absolute claim, but I don't think your example is a counterargument to it.
Okay fine, so 4th gen isn't literally faster than 8th gen, but I agree with what OP is getting at... What the graph you posted is best at showing is that Intel CPU performance improvements have been paltry for the past six years.
According to your graph, the new Kaby Lake 7700k is only ~55% faster than my 2nd generation Sandy Bridge 2600k. Which means that between January 2011 and January 2017, Intel performance improvements for like-for-like CPU's has been about 7.5% per year, which is pretty shitty. It's not that 8th gen is going to suck as bad as 7th gen -- it's that both 7th gen and 8th gen suck as bad as everything Intel has released fort the past six years.
What we should do, however, is shame the people who hold such beliefs. For if you're willing to believe one thing without evidence, you're also willing to believe other things uttered by the same voice without evidence.
What you most closely have described is the probability of rolling two additonal 1's on D6's after having already rolled a 1 on the first D6 (which is not the probability of rolling 1 1 1 on 3D6, it's the probability of rolling 1 1 on 2D6.
.167^2 = 0.027889, or 2.8%, which would actually make them over two times as careful.
I also never played with a Rubiks Cube. However, I did play a lot of turn-based RPGs starting around age nine and was fascinated with the underlying mathematics.
I also think these activities played a minor role in both my and your son's ability to get a good score on a standardized test, and have more served as a platform for tooting our respective horns on a public forum on which neither of us know anyone personally.
That's a different CPU than the one in your original comment.
When I search for the CPU in your first comment, the price range on Ebay (used) is $250-350 for completed and sold listings. The same search for the CPU on the box you subsequently linked show it going for $80-100 used. These are two completely different ballparks. In fact, the price of an entire rig built around the cheaper one is less than the cost of more expensive CPU by itself.
Nah, I'm not delusional, I just do research before I open my mouth.
Labor Participation Rate = Employed Population / Population.
That's it. It takes nothing else into account (such as the massive "lump" in our population that is baby boomers all beginning to retire) and is therefor a useless statistic. But who cares? Cite whatever statistic that sounds good.
Collecting "meta-data" (really just data) about the context of people's phone calls is no different than collecting information on what library books people are checking out (which IS protected).
Venmo offers flexibility not offered by traditional banks (at least US ones, anyway).
With Venmo, I can ask someone their user name and pay them back for half a meal or six pack within 30 seconds. No bank platform allows for that convenience.
All of my friends and I use Venmo frequently. In addition to scenarios mentioned above, I also use it to pay my portion of utilities and rent to my roommate as well. I'm a late-twenty-something for reference.
Her Android messages were shown in the wrong color on iMessage, which offended some teens to the point of excluding her from conversations. So... I pay a $60/month premium so she can be the right color. Evil!
Stupid of Apple to do that (pointing out the "other"), but I can't believe you caved. Granted, I don't have a daughter (or children), so maybe I'll understand better when and if I get there.
"A Case For Why Movie-Theater Experience Is Still Worth Your the Effort"
Good job, guys.
I'm wondering if this will affect known methods used by law enforcement to break into iPhones in high-profile cases (such as the San Bernardino shooting). Anyone have any insight as to whether the underlying encryption has an affect on those attack vectors?
Trying to avoid talking about whether it is a good or bad thing that police can break into iPhones when necessary -- just curious if anyone has any technical insight.
Now my kid is 4, there are frustrating moments but also experiences I would never trade. Best thing is that I now have a great excuse to play with toys again. When I'm at home, I feel younger because of my son.
Isn't it a bit early to be making that claim? You're less than 25% done with your tenure.
I'm willing to bet the "password-rater", however it is implemented, is only interpreting the first character of your password (or none of it) until you take a second action: either interacting with the password field a second time or interacting with the "repeat password" field. This would explain why when the rating changes it always becomes stronger and never weaker. Would be interesting to play with and figure out how it works.
I do this. I made up a random word for my mother's maiden name, which I use as my answer to that security question.
By the time the slave trade was killed in the US, it had already been eliminated in what would have been considered, at the time, to be other "1st world" (industrialized) countries that could have taken advantage of a large number of slaves and competed with the US. You picked that one sentence to criticize, but I think OP's sentiment was really "governments who fight markets, in which there is demand, never win." In the case of the slave trade, the rest of the market and its demand had already been killed.
To be clear, I don't necessarily agree with OP's absolute claim, but I don't think your example is a counterargument to it.
Okay fine, so 4th gen isn't literally faster than 8th gen, but I agree with what OP is getting at... What the graph you posted is best at showing is that Intel CPU performance improvements have been paltry for the past six years.
According to your graph, the new Kaby Lake 7700k is only ~55% faster than my 2nd generation Sandy Bridge 2600k. Which means that between January 2011 and January 2017, Intel performance improvements for like-for-like CPU's has been about 7.5% per year, which is pretty shitty. It's not that 8th gen is going to suck as bad as 7th gen -- it's that both 7th gen and 8th gen suck as bad as everything Intel has released fort the past six years.
Well, this certainly hit home for me.
How does this shit get upvoted? It's not a dichotomy.
What was your thought process behind buying this one-of-a-kind record?
Any plans on what do with it? I imagine releasing it to the public would drastically improve your public image.
No, I think he means arresting people, but not immediately announcing the arrest to the news.
No, we cannot introduce thought crime.
What we should do, however, is shame the people who hold such beliefs. For if you're willing to believe one thing without evidence, you're also willing to believe other things uttered by the same voice without evidence.
Every civilization that has insufficiently resisted Islam has fallen to Islam.
This statement literally means nothing. "Everything without sufficient buoyancy sinks." Well, no shit.
That's incorrect.
.167^3 = 0.004657463, or .47%
.167^2 = 0.027889, or 2.8%, which would actually make them over two times as careful.
Likelihood of rolling 1 on a D6: 16.7%
What you most closely have described is the probability of rolling two additonal 1's on D6's after having already rolled a 1 on the first D6 (which is not the probability of rolling 1 1 1 on 3D6, it's the probability of rolling 1 1 on 2D6.
I also aced the math section of the SAT. (2006)
I also never played with a Rubiks Cube. However, I did play a lot of turn-based RPGs starting around age nine and was fascinated with the underlying mathematics.
I also think these activities played a minor role in both my and your son's ability to get a good score on a standardized test, and have more served as a platform for tooting our respective horns on a public forum on which neither of us know anyone personally.
Ugh.... Billion*
Yes, because it makes sense to give away 44 million dollars to save your kids 18 million in taxes. /sarcasm
That's a different CPU than the one in your original comment.
When I search for the CPU in your first comment, the price range on Ebay (used) is $250-350 for completed and sold listings. The same search for the CPU on the box you subsequently linked show it going for $80-100 used. These are two completely different ballparks. In fact, the price of an entire rig built around the cheaper one is less than the cost of more expensive CPU by itself.
Nah, I'm not delusional, I just do research before I open my mouth.
I'm with you. Especially since the CPU used by itself typically runs between 250-350.
GP is either delusional or gets free hand-me-downs from corporate IT.
Is there video showing that the first pass was lower, or are we just trusting this guy's neighbors?
What do you know? A low account ID making an exaggerated claim and providing no evidence to support it.
Think about this, grandpa: maybe society isn't becoming stupid, but instead you're just getting old?
Labor Participation Rate = Employed Population / Population.
That's it. It takes nothing else into account (such as the massive "lump" in our population that is baby boomers all beginning to retire) and is therefor a useless statistic. But who cares? Cite whatever statistic that sounds good.
Collecting "meta-data" (really just data) about the context of people's phone calls is no different than collecting information on what library books people are checking out (which IS protected).
It's a serious invasion of privacy.
Is there a candidate who understands this?