Strange how you qualified your statement so specifically.
Yes, lots of banks offer "student" accounts with no monthly fee for young people, but it only lasts until a certain point.
Meanwhile, the rest of us have to keep a minimum balance over a certain amount to get the monthly fee waived. More and more Americans can't maintain an average balance at that point, thanks to the growing wealth inequality in the country.
So, not sure if you're trying to create a strawman or what. Or was this an anti-immigrant rant, since that seems to be the popular thing recently?
Using.htaccess is bad practice anyway. Besides the security implications, it's also inefficient to check every folder for the file when it is browsed.
Better to redirect to a different webserver for 404s that can lookup the URL for broken links and send you back to the right URL, then create hundreds or thousands of.htaccess files.
You can upgrade for free. I've done it for several people in the last year.
They don't advertise it broadly because they do not want small companies to migrate to Windows Home edition to save money on upgrading, but you can upgrade Home edition for free using the installer.
I have not read the paper in detail but I assume they add sodium to the "organic electrolyte" around the sodium electrode to supply the reaction and so long as they replenish the sodium in the electrolyte fast enough then the electrode itself won't lose mass.
You're consuming a sodium atom, so it's not free energy. The sodium will need to be replaced in the system in fairly large quantities, but we have a few huge salty water sources that could provide it.
You realize you just accused someone of being a thief and a vagrant as a response to someone making a strong opinion on a legal responsibility of a business being avoided?
And then you explain how your business avoided modernizing and leapt right onto a single payment platform without making an effort to grow into a system that could easily handle all methods of payment easily. You even seem proud of this which is really odd.
Your position is even stranger since many small businesses refuse credit cards to avoid the transaction fees you say are cheaper than the "accounting costs" of cash.
Anyone interested in the IPFS model should read Troy Hunt's explanation earlier this month on how he brought down costs on his popular websites (Have I Been Pwned, Pwned Passwords, etc.).
The list of Apple achievements is vastly exaggerated as well and reads like an Applefan made it.
Many manufacturers had designs in prototype that looked similar to Apple's first iPhone design. This was shown in the Apple vs Samsung court proceedings, but the LG Prada phone has the distinction of being the first phone to have the now standard capacitive touchscreen focused design.
It also had auto-rotate and apps-on-a-Home-page design. It didn't have an on-screen keyboard at launch because the designers worried the capacitive touchscreen did not have the resolution to handle it. Earlier hand-held devices have had on-screen touch keyboards, such as those made by Palm and Nokia, so Apple was not the first there either.
"Lists that scroll as though with momentum" is simply scroll acceleration which has been a part of nearly every major OS since at least 1996.
The idea of Pinch Zoom and object manipulation has been around since 1983 and integrated into many devices since.
So, the list generated by the submitter from the article isn't accurate nor is most of the list in the article either. If you don't specifically compared Apple, Google and Samsung, most of the accomplishments disappeared entirely.
If you boil off all accomplishments that appeared in earlier designs from other hand-held devices, you really only have one actual accomplishment that had never been done (Public transit in Maps) and it was from the web platform behind the phone, not the phone itself.
I understand the average fanboy wants to compare their favorite against others to make themselves feel better about their decisions, but if most of these fans had a decent computer science history lesson they'd see most of these devices are a conflagration of many ideas from all kinds of sources and nothing actually novel in themselves.
The only thing I find amazing in all of this is the fact such a large set of devices are running open-source code now (Android), which will become even more amazing when more devices have firmware built on Oreo or later (Project Treble).
Sadly, this is not a movement I think Apple will ever join.
I don't think most people realize how hard it is to move a piece of software forward while supporting dozens of antiquated platforms.
At some point, a professional should upgrade themselves. I'm sure Adobe will leave an older version available for those who don't update (if only so they can continue to get the monthly revenue).
Where do you get your DNS information for your resolvers? From your ISP? From Google? Why do you trust those people more than Cloudflare? Why do you think this ONLY works with Cloudflare?
The DNS over HTTPs allows you to connect to any server capable of DNS relay through HTTPs. That means you can setup your mobile browser to use YOUR OWN DNS RESOLVERS in your house and it cannot be intercepted (because it's being encrypted) nor will those reading the traffic KNOW you are getting DNS over the HTTPS (because it's being encrypted over a regularly used protocol, ei. HTTPS).
The only issue the "security researchers" have with these new technologies is the fact by default it's using Cloudflare. But for this system to work, there has to be a default setup. Who should they pick?
Meanwhile, you can easily change the default yourself if you can find or setup an DNS over HTTPS relay.
[quote]Premiere Pro is not well-optimized for macOS, but the difference between the two MacBook Pro models is notable. [/quote]
Article about the latest model has thermal issues and they randomly take a swipe at the software used in testing. Yet, isn't the issue going to be a problem for all software?
Sites like these can't help but be bias. Triggers me when writers let it leak out like that.
I had my account broken into on T-Mobile. It's far too easy for people to break in since all you need is the phone number and some personal information.
They need to let you choose your own login account names and some security questions.
Just way too lax helping you keep your account secure.
Strange how you qualified your statement so specifically.
Yes, lots of banks offer "student" accounts with no monthly fee for young people, but it only lasts until a certain point.
Meanwhile, the rest of us have to keep a minimum balance over a certain amount to get the monthly fee waived. More and more Americans can't maintain an average balance at that point, thanks to the growing wealth inequality in the country.
So, not sure if you're trying to create a strawman or what. Or was this an anti-immigrant rant, since that seems to be the popular thing recently?
How about you not develop for stuff not widely available? You know, like using standards and not creating another IE6 scenario.
Or more importantly, Firefox.
Using .htaccess is bad practice anyway. Besides the security implications, it's also inefficient to check every folder for the file when it is browsed.
Better to redirect to a different webserver for 404s that can lookup the URL for broken links and send you back to the right URL, then create hundreds or thousands of .htaccess files.
You can upgrade for free. I've done it for several people in the last year.
They don't advertise it broadly because they do not want small companies to migrate to Windows Home edition to save money on upgrading, but you can upgrade Home edition for free using the installer.
https://www.microsoft.com/en-u...
If it doesn't accept your serial number in Windows 7, then you can just reverse the upgrade back.
I have not read the paper in detail but I assume they add sodium to the "organic electrolyte" around the sodium electrode to supply the reaction and so long as they replenish the sodium in the electrolyte fast enough then the electrode itself won't lose mass.
You're consuming a sodium atom, so it's not free energy. The sodium will need to be replaced in the system in fairly large quantities, but we have a few huge salty water sources that could provide it.
You realize you just accused someone of being a thief and a vagrant as a response to someone making a strong opinion on a legal responsibility of a business being avoided?
And then you explain how your business avoided modernizing and leapt right onto a single payment platform without making an effort to grow into a system that could easily handle all methods of payment easily. You even seem proud of this which is really odd.
Your position is even stranger since many small businesses refuse credit cards to avoid the transaction fees you say are cheaper than the "accounting costs" of cash.
So, I'm curious of what type of business is this?
ZOMG!! Your link doesn't work anymore! DID THEY GET TO IT?!
Did the guberment take it down?
THIS IS AN OUTRAGEE!! WE DEMAND THE TOOTH!
Amazon has the ability to subscribe to channels, which are each the individual some of the streaming services you mention.
So, at least one person is starting to aggregate all the spread out stream offerings into a NEW MIDDLEMAN.
So what exactly did he buy?
I feel like this guy jumps on any bandwagon he sees as popular and then tries to capitalize as much as possible from it.
Or year-end profits of short-sellers. Apple and Amazon's shares are at all-time highs this year.
Anyone interested in the IPFS model should read Troy Hunt's explanation earlier this month on how he brought down costs on his popular websites (Have I Been Pwned, Pwned Passwords, etc.).
https://www.troyhunt.com/serve...
The list of Apple achievements is vastly exaggerated as well and reads like an Applefan made it.
Many manufacturers had designs in prototype that looked similar to Apple's first iPhone design. This was shown in the Apple vs Samsung court proceedings, but the LG Prada phone has the distinction of being the first phone to have the now standard capacitive touchscreen focused design.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
It also had auto-rotate and apps-on-a-Home-page design. It didn't have an on-screen keyboard at launch because the designers worried the capacitive touchscreen did not have the resolution to handle it. Earlier hand-held devices have had on-screen touch keyboards, such as those made by Palm and Nokia, so Apple was not the first there either.
"Lists that scroll as though with momentum" is simply scroll acceleration which has been a part of nearly every major OS since at least 1996.
The idea of Pinch Zoom and object manipulation has been around since 1983 and integrated into many devices since.
https://youtu.be/d4DUIeXSEpk?t...
So, the list generated by the submitter from the article isn't accurate nor is most of the list in the article either. If you don't specifically compared Apple, Google and Samsung, most of the accomplishments disappeared entirely.
If you boil off all accomplishments that appeared in earlier designs from other hand-held devices, you really only have one actual accomplishment that had never been done (Public transit in Maps) and it was from the web platform behind the phone, not the phone itself.
I understand the average fanboy wants to compare their favorite against others to make themselves feel better about their decisions, but if most of these fans had a decent computer science history lesson they'd see most of these devices are a conflagration of many ideas from all kinds of sources and nothing actually novel in themselves.
The only thing I find amazing in all of this is the fact such a large set of devices are running open-source code now (Android), which will become even more amazing when more devices have firmware built on Oreo or later (Project Treble).
Sadly, this is not a movement I think Apple will ever join.
I don't think most people realize how hard it is to move a piece of software forward while supporting dozens of antiquated platforms.
At some point, a professional should upgrade themselves. I'm sure Adobe will leave an older version available for those who don't update (if only so they can continue to get the monthly revenue).
Steve Forbes is worth a little over $500 million.
George Soros, favorite whipping boy of Alt-right wackos, is worth a little over $8 Billion.
Michael Bloomberg, three term mayor of New York City after 9/11 who swapped political parties to win the election, is worth over $50 billion.
Where do you get your DNS information for your resolvers? From your ISP? From Google? Why do you trust those people more than Cloudflare? Why do you think this ONLY works with Cloudflare?
The DNS over HTTPs allows you to connect to any server capable of DNS relay through HTTPs. That means you can setup your mobile browser to use YOUR OWN DNS RESOLVERS in your house and it cannot be intercepted (because it's being encrypted) nor will those reading the traffic KNOW you are getting DNS over the HTTPS (because it's being encrypted over a regularly used protocol, ei. HTTPS).
The only issue the "security researchers" have with these new technologies is the fact by default it's using Cloudflare. But for this system to work, there has to be a default setup. Who should they pick?
Meanwhile, you can easily change the default yourself if you can find or setup an DNS over HTTPS relay.
[quote]Premiere Pro is not well-optimized for macOS, but the difference between the two MacBook Pro models is notable. [/quote]
Article about the latest model has thermal issues and they randomly take a swipe at the software used in testing. Yet, isn't the issue going to be a problem for all software?
Sites like these can't help but be bias. Triggers me when writers let it leak out like that.
If you watch the video and take the demonstration as genuine, clicking the link somehow shares the content of a different email message.
That's kind of a leap for even a plugin vulnerability with the remote execution turned off.
Mind you, this could all be bull. He could have staged it by hiding the pass phrase sentence mentioned in a hash in the link from the second email.
We won't know until someone confirms.
Why is this modded funny? I think this guy is dead serious. Read his other comments. They guy is a wack job.
#takeyourmeds
"The first thing I noticed on my first Mac was that drag & drop actually worked!"
What? Seriously, this is like the dumbest thing I have ever seen someone saying favorably for a Mac.
I own a Mac for development and it's like using an OS from 14 years ago. Dated, dumb-down and designed for shaved apes.
I had my account broken into on T-Mobile. It's far too easy for people to break in since all you need is the phone number and some personal information.
They need to let you choose your own login account names and some security questions.
Just way too lax helping you keep your account secure.
Republicans are in control of all three branches of government. Why isn't Hillary being prosecuted for these so called felonies?
I wish I had mod points, haven't laughed that hard in weeks.
It's not Google's content, it's the user's content.
Google's Youtube acts as a common carrier for other's content. For them to restrict based on another user's choice of device is unethical.