My question is why are they not having information that "violate their privacy, or no longer relevant to public interest" removed at the source. Why manipulate search results if the original is removed...
Well I disagree with them also... Yes if the primary brake line snaps all you have is the parking brake but because of the way the controls are designed to lock the brake lever which is required for it's primary purpose to keep the brakes engaged when parked they are dangerous to use at speed some designs more than others and we should not be giving the illusion that they are an emergency brake... They are a parking break that will work if the hydraulics go out and hopefully you won't have to use them for anything but parking certainly emergency is not a primary use.
The way those cable systems are put together it would be very easy to cause the brakes to lock this is not what you want in an emergency. You have to understand the locking of lever as you engage it makes it exceedingly dangerous whether you have ever successfully used it is irrelevant. The handle cable brakes with the button that stops the locking action makes is much safer but they don't all have that. I've successfully stopped a car by rubbing a curb that doesn't make it safe or even wise.
Wild ass guess that 75% of the drivers in the US cannot drive a standard transmission and never use the emergency brake.
Only if your polling driver under 30-35 because standard transmissions where fairly popular not that many years ago, you are probably right about the parking break unless they have standard transmission they probably will never use it.
If your manual says it's an emergency brake then I disagree with the manufacture too, at no point should a cable lock system on the brakes be considered an emergency brake it's a parking break.
A cable that locks the brakes is not an emergency brake as a matter of fact if you are moving and engage it you are likely to cause an emergency. Why does everyone insist on calling the parking brake an emergency brake.
Like I said they will need to consistently deliver quality content, wired doesn't deliver enough for it to be worth it to me to turn off my add blocker or pay a subscription. Yes, wired and others will find their service isn't compelling enough to warrant $52/year.
News papers get $0.50 a day or more and people continue to buy, I don't think $52 a year is outrageous for a service I would actually use and enjoy. That being said, it also means that any business ready to adopt a subscription model will need to consistently deliver quality content. $4 a month for wired or $7.99 for hulu wired will need to step it up a lot before they get me to turn off the ad blocker or subscribe.
I have the Bunn Velocity it may be expensive and not be programmable but damn it makes a good pot of coffee at just the right temperature every time and only takes about 90 seconds to brew 12 cups
I would pay 150 for a good plumbed Bunn coffee maker just not a Mr. Coffee with wifi that I can program to run but cannot fill itself so that feature is worthless.
Taking away any objections to removing the lines... the idea that this would cause people to slow down any longer than it would take them to get used to no lines is silly. There are plenty of large stretches of minor highway through out the midwest that do not have lines and there are still people still doing 90 - 100 mph on them when the speed limit is 60 - 65 mph.
In this case it would be up to the installer to verify that it is loading a valid library. The problem is if somehow a certain named and versioned dll can be downloaded to the same folder you execute the installer from it can execute arbitrary code when the installer initializes it using the elevated privileges you granted the installer.
So in order to implement this side-loading you would to first need take advantage of another vulnerability to get that library in the right place.
In order to protect against this they could simply not include the execution folder in the search path and validate the library in a manner other than just the name and version which can be faked.
If someone where to try and exploit this chances are they would attempt to run their code in the background while leaving the rest of the library untouched so the installer would complete without tipping off the user. This means something as simple as a file size could validate there wasn't a bunch of extra code present, although there are better methods for validating a library.
Or, to start out, just bury your landing module in a couple meters of sand. Not once have we dug a hole on another planet/moon of any consequence. If your first dry run is on Mars itself, you're probably going find out you have missed something.
Didn't we already bury a rover on mars... Oh wait we crashed it into mars, my bad.
It said they net less than $29k a year on average that is close to what you would net at a $16 or $17/hr 40 hour a week job w/no overtime depending on deductions of course...
I imagine they are getting more than just a predictive keyboard there are probably licensable patents as well services they can sell to more than just windows users.
If I where running Microsoft with the way windows mobile is perceived now I would be looking to get as many services, apps, and patents as possible that could be licensed in every other mobile OS and mobiles apps.
I imagine they would need to do something to stop it from offering it to incompatible hardware since the gwx keeps offering it to me even though my stuffs not compatible.
I'm surprised I've not seen anyone mention that this is the reason they are capping accounts, they can manage high speed transfers but have to many subscribers to be able to maintain the traffic. In order to create a smoke screen for their failure to provide the product they already sold you they start capping accounts hoping not everyone will try to use it all at once.
"News for Nerds" means you will likely be graded harshly for duplicate posts and summaries that are poorly drafted. Nerds are difficult at best to please. The word news itself implies something new and this crowd makes new for a living. It sounds like you will have a lot of work.
Cell phones and internet didn't exist in the way they do now not even when my oldest son was in school, the youngest on the other hand has no idea what it's like to live in a world where you aren't connected to the internet able to look up anything you want any time or any where and carry it all around with you in your pocket. I've seen him and his friends text each other while they were in the same room as apposed to actually speaking.
He texts and facebooks from his cell phone constantly even when at school or work....
I was in the 6th grade when this happened and the students were broke up younger students together and the older student in another area all watching the launch. after the explosion the older students all sat there and watched while some of them that wanted to leave went to the auditorium and kept the younger student occupied while most of staff was so stunned they couldn't function.
On sept 11 I was in college {yes I was in college until I was 30 and would still like to go back} and I saw a large group of people in the commons area including the professor for my next class I had no idea what had been happening and my professors only response was class is canceled. We all pretty much stayed there all day watching the big TV in the commons, students and professors.
as the token skinny guy that sits in the office and only does fifteen minutes of low impact exercise intended to keep my back in good shape.
Here are the rules I follow... Drink water, stay away from soda or any other drink that has corn syrup it really hard to tell how much of this you are taking in so limit it. Stay away from artificial sweeteners and diet soda like they are the plague. take a slightly larger portion of meat at meal time, eat the higher protein foods first that way if you are full and leave anything on the plate you will not have filled up on carbs,
If for some reason you find a post that is well thought out, could probably fool someone of less than average intelligence, and has no basis in fact what so ever. It was probably my brother who likes to troll the people that believe in this stuff. He may have also messed up a few wiki articles so that the facts are only slightly incorrect.
It's not that there has been nothing good... just not a lot that's new. The labels own libraries of copyright material and just keep churning it out with a new spin. Playing the same thing on a keyboard with a different effect over and over doesn't make it new or good and can make something you used like very old and tired.
My question is why are they not having information that "violate their privacy, or no longer relevant to public interest" removed at the source. Why manipulate search results if the original is removed...
Well I disagree with them also... Yes if the primary brake line snaps all you have is the parking brake but because of the way the controls are designed to lock the brake lever which is required for it's primary purpose to keep the brakes engaged when parked they are dangerous to use at speed some designs more than others and we should not be giving the illusion that they are an emergency brake... They are a parking break that will work if the hydraulics go out and hopefully you won't have to use them for anything but parking certainly emergency is not a primary use.
The way those cable systems are put together it would be very easy to cause the brakes to lock this is not what you want in an emergency. You have to understand the locking of lever as you engage it makes it exceedingly dangerous whether you have ever successfully used it is irrelevant. The handle cable brakes with the button that stops the locking action makes is much safer but they don't all have that. I've successfully stopped a car by rubbing a curb that doesn't make it safe or even wise.
Wild ass guess that 75% of the drivers in the US cannot drive a standard transmission and never use the emergency brake.
Only if your polling driver under 30-35 because standard transmissions where fairly popular not that many years ago, you are probably right about the parking break unless they have standard transmission they probably will never use it.
If your manual says it's an emergency brake then I disagree with the manufacture too, at no point should a cable lock system on the brakes be considered an emergency brake it's a parking break.
A cable that locks the brakes is not an emergency brake as a matter of fact if you are moving and engage it you are likely to cause an emergency. Why does everyone insist on calling the parking brake an emergency brake.
Like I said they will need to consistently deliver quality content, wired doesn't deliver enough for it to be worth it to me to turn off my add blocker or pay a subscription. Yes, wired and others will find their service isn't compelling enough to warrant $52/year.
News papers get $0.50 a day or more and people continue to buy, I don't think $52 a year is outrageous for a service I would actually use and enjoy. That being said, it also means that any business ready to adopt a subscription model will need to consistently deliver quality content. $4 a month for wired or $7.99 for hulu wired will need to step it up a lot before they get me to turn off the ad blocker or subscribe.
I have the Bunn Velocity it may be expensive and not be programmable but damn it makes a good pot of coffee at just the right temperature every time and only takes about 90 seconds to brew 12 cups
I would pay 150 for a good plumbed Bunn coffee maker just not a Mr. Coffee with wifi that I can program to run but cannot fill itself so that feature is worthless.
Taking away any objections to removing the lines... the idea that this would cause people to slow down any longer than it would take them to get used to no lines is silly. There are plenty of large stretches of minor highway through out the midwest that do not have lines and there are still people still doing 90 - 100 mph on them when the speed limit is 60 - 65 mph.
I imagine that since anyone posting on youtube could also make a torrent of that content that functionality exists.
There is plenty of indie content distributed via torrent by the creators not to mention things like linux distros with official torrents.
In this case it would be up to the installer to verify that it is loading a valid library. The problem is if somehow a certain named and versioned dll can be downloaded to the same folder you execute the installer from it can execute arbitrary code when the installer initializes it using the elevated privileges you granted the installer.
So in order to implement this side-loading you would to first need take advantage of another vulnerability to get that library in the right place.
In order to protect against this they could simply not include the execution folder in the search path and validate the library in a manner other than just the name and version which can be faked.
If someone where to try and exploit this chances are they would attempt to run their code in the background while leaving the rest of the library untouched so the installer would complete without tipping off the user. This means something as simple as a file size could validate there wasn't a bunch of extra code present, although there are better methods for validating a library.
Or, to start out, just bury your landing module in a couple meters of sand.
Not once have we dug a hole on another planet/moon of any consequence. If your first dry run is on Mars itself, you're probably going find out you have missed something.
Didn't we already bury a rover on mars... Oh wait we crashed it into mars, my bad.
It said they net less than $29k a year on average that is close to what you would net at a $16 or $17/hr 40 hour a week job w/no overtime depending on deductions of course...
You had to say meat because blubbering blubber sounds redundant.
I imagine they are getting more than just a predictive keyboard there are probably licensable patents as well services they can sell to more than just windows users.
If I where running Microsoft with the way windows mobile is perceived now I would be looking to get as many services, apps, and patents as possible that could be licensed in every other mobile OS and mobiles apps.
I imagine they would need to do something to stop it from offering it to incompatible hardware since the gwx keeps offering it to me even though my stuffs not compatible.
Microsoft is forcing people to update
I wasn't aware that MS was forcing the update to win 10 only that it was offering it in an annoying manner that only the initiated can get rid of.
I'm surprised I've not seen anyone mention that this is the reason they are capping accounts, they can manage high speed transfers but have to many subscribers to be able to maintain the traffic. In order to create a smoke screen for their failure to provide the product they already sold you they start capping accounts hoping not everyone will try to use it all at once.
"News for Nerds" means you will likely be graded harshly for duplicate posts and summaries that are poorly drafted. Nerds are difficult at best to please. The word news itself implies something new and this crowd makes new for a living. It sounds like you will have a lot of work.
Cell phones and internet didn't exist in the way they do now not even when my oldest son was in school, the youngest on the other hand has no idea what it's like to live in a world where you aren't connected to the internet able to look up anything you want any time or any where and carry it all around with you in your pocket. I've seen him and his friends text each other while they were in the same room as apposed to actually speaking.
He texts and facebooks from his cell phone constantly even when at school or work....
I was in the 6th grade when this happened and the students were broke up younger students together and the older student in another area all watching the launch. after the explosion the older students all sat there and watched while some of them that wanted to leave went to the auditorium and kept the younger student occupied while most of staff was so stunned they couldn't function.
On sept 11 I was in college {yes I was in college until I was 30 and would still like to go back} and I saw a large group of people in the commons area including the professor for my next class I had no idea what had been happening and my professors only response was class is canceled. We all pretty much stayed there all day watching the big TV in the commons, students and professors.
as the token skinny guy that sits in the office and only does fifteen minutes of low impact exercise intended to keep my back in good shape.
Here are the rules I follow... Drink water, stay away from soda or any other drink that has corn syrup it really hard to tell how much of this you are taking in so limit it. Stay away from artificial sweeteners and diet soda like they are the plague. take a slightly larger portion of meat at meal time, eat the higher protein foods first that way if you are full and leave anything on the plate you will not have filled up on carbs,
If for some reason you find a post that is well thought out, could probably fool someone of less than average intelligence, and has no basis in fact what so ever. It was probably my brother who likes to troll the people that believe in this stuff. He may have also messed up a few wiki articles so that the facts are only slightly incorrect.
It's not that there has been nothing good... just not a lot that's new. The labels own libraries of copyright material and just keep churning it out with a new spin. Playing the same thing on a keyboard with a different effect over and over doesn't make it new or good and can make something you used like very old and tired.