The statement was "worst case scenario." I replied with an actual pretty bad result, not a judgment on the practice. And of course the worst case scenario would be: breaks down disease barriers between species predicating an extinction event.
Worst case, you introduce a change that gets into the gene pool that makes us more vulnerable to a common disease, shortens lifespan, increases infant mortality, etc. With genetics, the results could be terribly subtle or take decades to reveal themselves.
I noticed late February that prices on a couple different brands of NVMe SSDs had dropped around the same time, and have stayed a little lower since.
Prices are finally starting to move. I'll snag one of those 960s or Samsung 961s if they go a little lower. My SATA SSD is tolerable at current prices.
Responding to top comment to say, the writer is obviously a satirist and this "article" should never have been submitted. Read the writer's other work.
1) need to get it to a state where it compiles with modern, available toolsets 2) have to unlink it from any third party libraries you had to license (what stops most things) 3) remove any third party assets you had to license, like sounds, graphics 4) open your old customers to exploits people can glean from reading the source, which is bad PR
All of which requires a budget with no business case and not even a tax-deductible dollar amount associated with it.
Adobe will never open source it in a million years. It's the most insecure piece of trash and is being EOL'd because new vulnerabilities keep showing up and Adobe isn't making enough money off of it anymore to warrant the team of coders to try to keep up with all the security issues.
I worked with one Indian in my time as a network engineer, and he was a fraud. He lied extensively on his resume and could do very little of what he claimed.
But, take that with a huge grain of salt for the singular data point it is.
Something similar happened to me in college 20 years ago. I reported that they had an insecure network mount, and they gave me a written warning that went on my record, and almost banned me from the computer services entirely -- which would have made writing papers and doing research impossible since I didn't have them at home.
We may have had mutant humans in the past who were effectively "immortal" but they were primitives who died in childbirth or hunting mammoths or they were peasants who starved to death because of the increased calorie requirements. Sad to imagine.
Yes, I still use RSS every day. I initially started using RSS as a way to manage my favorite webcomics. For this purpose, it is still a killer application.
Do you find yourself checking your favorite comic sites every day, or even multiple times a day? With RSS, I don't have to. I add the site feed to FeedDemon in my Comics folder, and I can easily see when a new comic is posted. The only problem is when the site changes their software around, the RSS URL can change and you just stop receiving updates until you fix it.
This works for a lot of things. I use it for low-traffic Reddit subs that I want to see 100% of the posts for without having to visit them individually. Obviously, I use it to monitor news posts for people, games, and projects I follow. I know when updates and patches to games roll out without having to visit the site every day. I have even subscribed to certain Twitter personalities that don't post very frequently.
Another killer application of RSS is deal feeds. I subscribe to a handful of sites like Hot Deals Club, BensBargains, Dealcatcher, etc. I don't read them directly -- I use a feature of FeedDemon called Watches. I can set up keyword triggers and be notified when I receive a feed update with that keyword(s).
Let's say I'm shopping for a new SSD. I create a new watch called "SSD" and I put "SSD" as the keyword. Every time I get a hit, it shows up in my watches under that heading. I basically get informed of any sales on SSDs anywhere. I can even limit the folder so I only get hits from my deal feeds. Otherwise, I just ignore the deal feeds folder and just mark them read every time I refresh my feeds.
FeedDemon literally saves me hours a day I used to spend just going through my bookmarks folder. It also saves me money when I'm shopping for something that I don't need right away.
There's too much going on these days to personally keep up with it all without wasting a significant amount of time browsing and skimming every day. I think Agents are going to be big once they really get going. Alexa and Siri and Cortana are the "rock on a stick" version of real Agents. Once they mature, we'll be better able to monitor the things we're interested in and get summaries of new topics instead of the same shit repeated over and over at every site.
I was born in the 70s. I was never encouraged to get into computers as a hobby or as a career path. It was an unusual choice of hobbies and set me apart from my peers. I am a man.
When I was younger, it was fun. When I was older, I was able to read job listings and salary ranges. There was no gender angle, pro or con.
You don't use gas, water, electric, telephone, or internet connections? Those were all built and regulated with taxes.
Work for a company, ever? That company was built from a civilization that benefited from government and the taxes it uses for those purposes.
Live in a house you didn't build from lumber you cut yourself with an axe you made yourself from a rock and a stick? You benefited from government and taxes other people paid into it in numerous ways.
Ever walk on a road you didn't clear yourself? Taxes. Government.
You're a trolling idiot, or gloriously naive. Governments are hugely wasteful and corrupt, but it's better than anarchy.
There are literally hundreds, if not thousands, of PC resellers who assemble, test, and ship the completed PC to you. You choose what kind of PC you want with the parts you want (usually from a few templates, like Office PC, Gaming PC, etc., with a few choices for upgrades) and you pay a relatively small uptick in price for this service, like 20%. For someone who doesn't want to (or can't because of sausage fingers) assemble their own PC, it's a legitimate choice that many companies and consumers make.
Affirmative Action and society will punish you if your hiring policies *aren't* sexist in a field where women are not 50% of the work force (unless it's a distasteful or dangerous job, then it's fine.)
Yeah, work smarter, not harder. Bleach once a week, toilet duck once a month. Scrub for like 30 seconds once it has sit for like 10 minutes.
Same with the shower. Spray it with that daily shower stuff, takes a minute. Throw a little bleach in there once in a while (not at the same time), then rinse it out. Then a quick 5-minute scrub before your shower once a month is all it takes to maintain it unless you're waffle stomping in there.
We have three tablets for the two of us. One in the kitchen for recipes, and a personal one for us to use around the house.
I often hang out on the couch and listen to music while I read e-comics, browse Reddit or Imgur, or use the tablet to look up IMDB entries. A laptop is just cumbersome and hot in those circumstances. An 8" tablet like my Samsung (1600p, beautiful display) is perfect, easy to read -- easier to read than a 4" phone screen. Laptop too big, phone too small.
Also works fine in the bathroom. Easier to read than a phone.
I have a crappy Nook HD for recipes and music selection in the kitchen -- it's a lot more portable than a laptop, fits everywhere, lasts a week or more on a charge just sitting there, and I don't have to worry about getting anything in a keyboard or using a mouse or crappy touch pad. Laptop too big, phone too small.
I was skeptical about getting a tablet, but for us they've worked out great in these scenarios.
Why doesn't some billionaire or coalition of billionaires fund some mercs to go cripple Al Qaeda and Daesh, unless these terrorist groups are somehow good for their version of the economy?
The statement was "worst case scenario." I replied with an actual pretty bad result, not a judgment on the practice. And of course the worst case scenario would be: breaks down disease barriers between species predicating an extinction event.
Read more critically.
> Worst case, the person dies.
Worst case, you introduce a change that gets into the gene pool that makes us more vulnerable to a common disease, shortens lifespan, increases infant mortality, etc. With genetics, the results could be terribly subtle or take decades to reveal themselves.
I noticed late February that prices on a couple different brands of NVMe SSDs had dropped around the same time, and have stayed a little lower since.
Prices are finally starting to move. I'll snag one of those 960s or Samsung 961s if they go a little lower. My SATA SSD is tolerable at current prices.
Responding to top comment to say, the writer is obviously a satirist and this "article" should never have been submitted. Read the writer's other work.
To open source something you
1) need to get it to a state where it compiles with modern, available toolsets
2) have to unlink it from any third party libraries you had to license (what stops most things)
3) remove any third party assets you had to license, like sounds, graphics
4) open your old customers to exploits people can glean from reading the source, which is bad PR
All of which requires a budget with no business case and not even a tax-deductible dollar amount associated with it.
Enterprises use backup power and power conditioning.
Adobe will never open source it in a million years. It's the most insecure piece of trash and is being EOL'd because new vulnerabilities keep showing up and Adobe isn't making enough money off of it anymore to warrant the team of coders to try to keep up with all the security issues.
I worked with one Indian in my time as a network engineer, and he was a fraud. He lied extensively on his resume and could do very little of what he claimed.
But, take that with a huge grain of salt for the singular data point it is.
Something similar happened to me in college 20 years ago. I reported that they had an insecure network mount, and they gave me a written warning that went on my record, and almost banned me from the computer services entirely -- which would have made writing papers and doing research impossible since I didn't have them at home.
This is why people aren't nice to each other.
We may have had mutant humans in the past who were effectively "immortal" but they were primitives who died in childbirth or hunting mammoths or they were peasants who starved to death because of the increased calorie requirements. Sad to imagine.
Yes, I still use RSS every day. I initially started using RSS as a way to manage my favorite webcomics. For this purpose, it is still a killer application.
Do you find yourself checking your favorite comic sites every day, or even multiple times a day? With RSS, I don't have to. I add the site feed to FeedDemon in my Comics folder, and I can easily see when a new comic is posted. The only problem is when the site changes their software around, the RSS URL can change and you just stop receiving updates until you fix it.
This works for a lot of things. I use it for low-traffic Reddit subs that I want to see 100% of the posts for without having to visit them individually. Obviously, I use it to monitor news posts for people, games, and projects I follow. I know when updates and patches to games roll out without having to visit the site every day. I have even subscribed to certain Twitter personalities that don't post very frequently.
Another killer application of RSS is deal feeds. I subscribe to a handful of sites like Hot Deals Club, BensBargains, Dealcatcher, etc. I don't read them directly -- I use a feature of FeedDemon called Watches. I can set up keyword triggers and be notified when I receive a feed update with that keyword(s).
Let's say I'm shopping for a new SSD. I create a new watch called "SSD" and I put "SSD" as the keyword. Every time I get a hit, it shows up in my watches under that heading. I basically get informed of any sales on SSDs anywhere. I can even limit the folder so I only get hits from my deal feeds. Otherwise, I just ignore the deal feeds folder and just mark them read every time I refresh my feeds.
FeedDemon literally saves me hours a day I used to spend just going through my bookmarks folder. It also saves me money when I'm shopping for something that I don't need right away.
There's too much going on these days to personally keep up with it all without wasting a significant amount of time browsing and skimming every day. I think Agents are going to be big once they really get going. Alexa and Siri and Cortana are the "rock on a stick" version of real Agents. Once they mature, we'll be better able to monitor the things we're interested in and get summaries of new topics instead of the same shit repeated over and over at every site.
I was born in the 70s. I was never encouraged to get into computers as a hobby or as a career path. It was an unusual choice of hobbies and set me apart from my peers. I am a man.
When I was younger, it was fun. When I was older, I was able to read job listings and salary ranges. There was no gender angle, pro or con.
You don't use gas, water, electric, telephone, or internet connections? Those were all built and regulated with taxes.
Work for a company, ever? That company was built from a civilization that benefited from government and the taxes it uses for those purposes.
Live in a house you didn't build from lumber you cut yourself with an axe you made yourself from a rock and a stick? You benefited from government and taxes other people paid into it in numerous ways.
Ever walk on a road you didn't clear yourself? Taxes. Government.
You're a trolling idiot, or gloriously naive. Governments are hugely wasteful and corrupt, but it's better than anarchy.
There are literally hundreds, if not thousands, of PC resellers who assemble, test, and ship the completed PC to you. You choose what kind of PC you want with the parts you want (usually from a few templates, like Office PC, Gaming PC, etc., with a few choices for upgrades) and you pay a relatively small uptick in price for this service, like 20%. For someone who doesn't want to (or can't because of sausage fingers) assemble their own PC, it's a legitimate choice that many companies and consumers make.
You're a poor reader if that's how you interpreted my statement.
It's a company's responsibility to renew their domains *before* they expire.
...the security of thousands of customers. Way to go, TP-Link.
Yeah, you read that wrong.
You only have to scrub the shower once a month if you take a minute to spray it on the regular.
Affirmative Action and society will punish you if your hiring policies *aren't* sexist in a field where women are not 50% of the work force (unless it's a distasteful or dangerous job, then it's fine.)
Yeah, work smarter, not harder. Bleach once a week, toilet duck once a month. Scrub for like 30 seconds once it has sit for like 10 minutes.
Same with the shower. Spray it with that daily shower stuff, takes a minute. Throw a little bleach in there once in a while (not at the same time), then rinse it out. Then a quick 5-minute scrub before your shower once a month is all it takes to maintain it unless you're waffle stomping in there.
A lot of work? You must have children and/or multiple pets. Unless you are actively destroying your house, it's very easy to maintain.
Source: I am a house husband. I do the dishes, I do the laundry, I do the vacuuming. No kids, no pets. It's easy.
I have an alpha wife. She makes bank. It rocks.
I am doing laundry right now.
We have three tablets for the two of us. One in the kitchen for recipes, and a personal one for us to use around the house.
I often hang out on the couch and listen to music while I read e-comics, browse Reddit or Imgur, or use the tablet to look up IMDB entries. A laptop is just cumbersome and hot in those circumstances. An 8" tablet like my Samsung (1600p, beautiful display) is perfect, easy to read -- easier to read than a 4" phone screen. Laptop too big, phone too small.
Also works fine in the bathroom. Easier to read than a phone.
I have a crappy Nook HD for recipes and music selection in the kitchen -- it's a lot more portable than a laptop, fits everywhere, lasts a week or more on a charge just sitting there, and I don't have to worry about getting anything in a keyboard or using a mouse or crappy touch pad. Laptop too big, phone too small.
I was skeptical about getting a tablet, but for us they've worked out great in these scenarios.
Everyone has different needs.
Raise your hand if you had a CNA before the "C" was cisco...
Why doesn't some billionaire or coalition of billionaires fund some mercs to go cripple Al Qaeda and Daesh, unless these terrorist groups are somehow good for their version of the economy?
Does anyone actually find sitting on bar stools comfortable? I never have.