> No, but you are required to license U.S. copyright in the book to the National Library Service for the Blind and Physically Handicapped.
If I'm compelled to license my book to the NLSBPH, why can't they be compelled to produce the alternative media from my book? Rather than have to take the book down because I don't have the means or care to transcribe it? Substitute me with UC-Berkeley if you please.
Why not use a phone with a removable battery? Then, ditch your battery before you board the plane, and have a new battery waiting for you at your destination. Then, you're not traveling without your phone, you just have the expense of buying and shipping batteries to your destination. Border control can't force you to unlock your phone because you can't even power it on.
This only works until it becomes common enough that border control starts keeping batteries in stock, I suppose...
Well certainly insightful, but I'd suggest that a large portion of the modern left really does care, but is severely misguided in their attempts at caring. Like trusting the politicians that only care about the appearance of caring.
What do you mean illegal? I think the immigration laws at that time consisted of "gravity" -- you're not suggesting the cometary debris disobeyed that law, are you?
100 C has no practical application for most values of real life.
You don't boil water by setting something to 100 C (or 212F for that matter). You turn up the dial to medium-high and wait for bubbles. Or stick it in the microwave for some number of minutes.
0 C also not so practical. My refrigerator's freezer compartment lets me choose on a scale not related to C or F. In any case, it's a temperature below freezing.
Not to say metric is without merit, but it's practical applications are not a good argument for people familiar with imperial units.
Sometimes that is a coin toss when comparing highly educated with highly experienced or two similar candidates.
In cases like this, or where there is plainly not enough information, leave that one blank -- don't vote for either unknown. Unless your ballot stupidly requires you not to leave any races blank (are there such ballots?)
I find pretty much all religion abhorrent. Buddhism however, while still abhorrent for believing in mystical ideas that go against the simplest (and therefore best) definitions of reality, is definitely less abhorrent than the others. I've seen a lot of quotes from the Dalai Lama that I really appreciate and can agree wholeheartedly with.
Seems to me that someone who abhors religion and mysticism would agree wholebrainedly rather than wholeheartedly.
Nice article. The Atlantic glosses over the bit, though, where the syrup cartel *causes* a calamity that threatens their industry, before they wise up.
"The solution isn't to make it even harder to vote, but to get more people to vote!"
It's not that simple though. You don't just want to increase turnout percentages, you want people to know what they're voting for. Stupid votes are worse than no votes.
Why is it you think socialism is the only alternative?
Let's go to your point: get rid of corporations. Does that require socialism? Nope! Corporations aren't the only business entity. Just them (and LLCs and any other similar cases) absolve the owners of personal liability.
Would society be different if we had no businesses where the owners weren't personally liable? You betcha. Could it work out better? Well, I'd suggest we examine that before we make your leap to socialism.
"A dedicated attacker may see the pattern and break in, but it's at least more time consuming for them."
Maybe if by "more time consuming" you mean a negligible amount of time.
goodpassword+sitename might buy you a couple minutes before the attacker has access to your Bank of America account. Do you think you're going to know that account credentials for MySpace were stolen within minutes, so you can go change your BoA account details?
"This is also true of Tasker -- while versatile, it is a resource and battery hog."
I see why you're posting this as Anonymous Coward. Because you clearly don't know what you're talking about.
Tasker is not a battery hog. However, it doesn't prevent you from doing things that hog the battery. Want to keep your screen on and not let the phone sleep while unplugged? Knock yourself out. Want to get a GPS fix every minute? Have at it. Turn on and leave on the LED camera flash while your phone is in your pocket? Why not?
Upset that after doing all that, your battery is up in a few hours? Go cry to mommy.
I'll admit that not everything you can do with Tasker will be obvious that it will significantly affect battery. But -- insert generic warning about something ouchy happening when you play with fire here -- .
Hmm, my first thought that he wanted the drone strike to target the neighbor. Taking out the dog alone might result in the neighbor getting another one.
But that means we have to figure out who it was distributed to, and by whom. I think we can agree that the owners of the targeted Iranian computers were recipients of the distribution, so they get to request the source, right? (Ha!)
But what about anyone else? If the distribution to other people was not authorized the the original distributor (e.g. an Iranian infects Internet-connected computers after his air-gapped nuclear equipment controlling system was infected), I'm not sure they'd have the right to request the source. But I haven't read the GPL in quite some time.
I found this project when looking for a solution to my "keep all photos/videos on USB drive, subset A on one computer, subset B (potentially overlapping with A) on another computer" problem.
It looked like it would work...then I read the fine print. Doesn't work on Windows. D'oh!
Just a side comment, but don't you think it's a little demeaning to dismiss the heartfelt beliefs of major segments of today's human population as "mythology"?
Good idea. Instead of letting a laser make it impossible to see out the windows from glare, we'll make it so a laser makes it impossible to see out the window because it makes it opaque.;)
Sugar avoidance in youth leads to reality avoidance in old age. There's the causation! Maybe.
Maybe even less as well, if we're talking amount of letter in terms of ink/pixels.
Google
Bing
Big "B" is approx. 2 o's worth of letter, i and l are pretty close, so...
Google
oolng
Subtract the common letters to get:
Ge
n
Yep, looks like fewer and less letters to me.
> It isn't that it is too expensive to do the captioning, but rather that it is too expensive to do it without compensation.
I don't think this comment is as insightful as some think it is, but maybe that's just me.
> No, but you are required to license U.S. copyright in the book to the National Library Service for the Blind and Physically Handicapped.
If I'm compelled to license my book to the NLSBPH, why can't they be compelled to produce the alternative media from my book? Rather than have to take the book down because I don't have the means or care to transcribe it? Substitute me with UC-Berkeley if you please.
Why not use a phone with a removable battery? Then, ditch your battery before you board the plane, and have a new battery waiting for you at your destination. Then, you're not traveling without your phone, you just have the expense of buying and shipping batteries to your destination. Border control can't force you to unlock your phone because you can't even power it on.
This only works until it becomes common enough that border control starts keeping batteries in stock, I suppose...
Well certainly insightful, but I'd suggest that a large portion of the modern left really does care, but is severely misguided in their attempts at caring. Like trusting the politicians that only care about the appearance of caring.
Probably worth examining, what counts as a public record? And what can be "off the record"?
https://www.archives.gov/recor...
What do you mean illegal? I think the immigration laws at that time consisted of "gravity" -- you're not suggesting the cometary debris disobeyed that law, are you?
100 C has no practical application for most values of real life.
You don't boil water by setting something to 100 C (or 212F for that matter). You turn up the dial to medium-high and wait for bubbles. Or stick it in the microwave for some number of minutes.
0 C also not so practical. My refrigerator's freezer compartment lets me choose on a scale not related to C or F. In any case, it's a temperature below freezing.
Not to say metric is without merit, but it's practical applications are not a good argument for people familiar with imperial units.
Accelerating to higher speeds is fine and all, but unless you want to zip by the planet, you're going to need to decelerate too.
I wonder whether this is true for any thirty-ish day range, or only true for calendar months?
In cases like this, or where there is plainly not enough information, leave that one blank -- don't vote for either unknown. Unless your ballot stupidly requires you not to leave any races blank (are there such ballots?)
Seems to me that someone who abhors religion and mysticism would agree wholebrainedly rather than wholeheartedly.
Nice article. The Atlantic glosses over the bit, though, where the syrup cartel *causes* a calamity that threatens their industry, before they wise up.
"The solution isn't to make it even harder to vote, but to get more people to vote!"
It's not that simple though. You don't just want to increase turnout percentages, you want people to know what they're voting for. Stupid votes are worse than no votes.
Why is it you think socialism is the only alternative?
Let's go to your point: get rid of corporations. Does that require socialism? Nope! Corporations aren't the only business entity. Just them (and LLCs and any other similar cases) absolve the owners of personal liability.
Would society be different if we had no businesses where the owners weren't personally liable? You betcha. Could it work out better? Well, I'd suggest we examine that before we make your leap to socialism.
Here's a better formula that would buy you time: http://www.securitycatalyst.com/2009/09/magic-formula-for-passwords/
"A dedicated attacker may see the pattern and break in, but it's at least more time consuming for them."
Maybe if by "more time consuming" you mean a negligible amount of time.
goodpassword+sitename might buy you a couple minutes before the attacker has access to your Bank of America account. Do you think you're going to know that account credentials for MySpace were stolen within minutes, so you can go change your BoA account details?
"This is also true of Tasker -- while versatile, it is a resource and battery hog."
I see why you're posting this as Anonymous Coward. Because you clearly don't know what you're talking about.
Tasker is not a battery hog. However, it doesn't prevent you from doing things that hog the battery. Want to keep your screen on and not let the phone sleep while unplugged? Knock yourself out. Want to get a GPS fix every minute? Have at it. Turn on and leave on the LED camera flash while your phone is in your pocket? Why not?
Upset that after doing all that, your battery is up in a few hours? Go cry to mommy.
I'll admit that not everything you can do with Tasker will be obvious that it will significantly affect battery. But -- insert generic warning about something ouchy happening when you play with fire here -- .
Hmm, my first thought that he wanted the drone strike to target the neighbor. Taking out the dog alone might result in the neighbor getting another one.
Right, distributing is the key.
But that means we have to figure out who it was distributed to, and by whom. I think we can agree that the owners of the targeted Iranian computers were recipients of the distribution, so they get to request the source, right? (Ha!)
But what about anyone else? If the distribution to other people was not authorized the the original distributor (e.g. an Iranian infects Internet-connected computers after his air-gapped nuclear equipment controlling system was infected), I'm not sure they'd have the right to request the source. But I haven't read the GPL in quite some time.
I found this project when looking for a solution to my "keep all photos/videos on USB drive, subset A on one computer, subset B (potentially overlapping with A) on another computer" problem.
It looked like it would work...then I read the fine print. Doesn't work on Windows. D'oh!
A good idea in theory, but in practice, a pain in the butt that most people will not want to deal with.
Just a side comment, but don't you think it's a little demeaning to dismiss the heartfelt beliefs of major segments of today's human population as "mythology"?
Good idea. Instead of letting a laser make it impossible to see out the windows from glare, we'll make it so a laser makes it impossible to see out the window because it makes it opaque. ;)