Speaking of extra steps, what's the point of the terminals that ask the user to verify the amount?
The display on the terminal is coming from your bank. It is the amount that you are actually being charged. The display on the cash register is showing whatever the shop wants it to show, and may not necessarily equate with what they are requesting from the bank.
Snapchat, a rapidly growing messaging service, recently spurned an all-cash acquisition offer from Facebook for close to $3 billion or more, according to people with a vested interest in the company's valuation.
Rarely. If the movie is any good, it can take years if ever to show up on Netflix streaming. Plenty of movies just aren't there.
If the studios offered legal ways to stream their most popular new releases, it would affect their loss of revenues from piracy, which would lose them political leverage. How will they get the next successor to the DCMA passed then?
using a software robot that directs search engines not to access the pages.
Don't tell me the Tories have perfected software robot technology. We'd better hope its not the powerful txt variant, or it will be the clearest sign yet that the reptilian shapeshifters have been successful in conquering our planet's political sphere.
Blockbuster in the US must be different than the rest of the world. I was reading TFS, thinking who in their right minds would have "fond memories" of the McDonalds of video rental stores, which consisted of one wall of new releases (half of which was dedicated to the top ten), and another wall of top ten titles from the past couple of years. Then a rack in the middle with a few other titles that seem popular enough to keep around. If you wanted indie films, the local mom and pop video store was the place to go. Unfortunately, they were the first to suffer due to downloads, as the unwashed masses all want the latest blockbusters that the mom and pop doesn't have the bulk buying power to be able to invest in a large enough quantity of to ensure they always have some copies on the shelves over the short term that it will remain popular.
I don't think they've ever "targeted the Nexus device" within two weeks of it becoming available, so I don't think it is fair to claim that "This is not the case this go round".
One day, when Intel, ARM, Nvidia and peripheral manufacturers all close down their R&D departments and become pure factories churning out the same thing year after year. Until then, there is a need to keep Linux development active.
Psychological addiction is all in your head. You can get addicted to absolutely anything (including non-chemical things like gambling), and you can wake up one morning and quit cold turkey. The real danger from alcohol is the physical addiction. Alcohol is one of the few drugs that can be life threatening if a serious alcoholic suddenly can't get any. As long as the replacement drug is not physically addictive, then it is a big improvement.
There were no dupes, and all TFS's had perfect spelling and grammar.
Actually, that's the real one. If you're seeing dupes, misspellings and poor grammar, and the articles seem to be a bit behind other sites, then it is probably a rushed retyping of the original.
The main difference here is that a typical ICE powered car has the fuel tank only at the rear of the car. The Tesla and other electric cars have batteries spread across the entire underside of the car, so more opportunity for impact that punctures through the shielding.
Or one day you wake up and realise that testing 100% is a waste of your company's money and exposing it to a much greater cost from the security holes in the ancient browsers you are keeping people on to "save on support costs from untested upgrades".
The company answer is to "just use your personal machine.
If that's an official company answer, then go home, use your machine for the 5 minutes it takes, and come back, on company time and make sure you claim for the travel expenses.
there is no demand (and thus, no financial incentive) for anyone except the Korean government to implement SEED
Except that Firefox, Chrome and Safari already support SEED in their TLS implementations. IE doesn't, because it suits Microsoft to block the migration path away from proprietary ActiveX controls to a standards based RFC4162/RFC4269 solution.
I'd be inclined to wonder if the issue isn't the cypher itself; but maldesigned websites that won't talk to anything except IE with the expected ActiveX plugin.
Yes, that is the problem. Basically there were at least two companies competing for rolling out the SEED cipher to Korean banks after their government announced that all Korean internet commerce was to use their self-developed crypto algorithm. One (or more) of those companies went the standards route, and negotiated to get the SEED cipher added to the SSL/TLS standards in cooperation with KISA, the Korean standards body. Another company went the ActiveX route, taking advantage of the fact that at the time (around 2002 or so) IE represented at least 98% of the browser market in South Korea. The ActiveX control implemented security at the application level, so didn't need to wait for standards bodies to give approval, and they also offered signing of transactions, which is missing from SSL/TLS implementations in web browsers. So because they were faster to market, and offered additional features, they won out. So now South Korea is stuck with a proprietary implementation that forces them to stay with a browser that the rest of the world is rejecting en-mass. On the positive side, the SEED algorithm did eventually get added to the set of standard TLS algorithms, so a migration path is possible.
The "western presence in Indonesia" does nothing to stop human trafficking. The Australian human traficking agreement is about Australia trafficking refugees that turn up on their shores to Indonesia where they can be mistreated without so much scrutiny, in exchange for aid money.
When my son was 3, he would have no problems with subtraction problems or even simple division when expressed in real world terms like sharing a bag of sweets. Put some math equations in front of him, and he'd be understandably stumped. The wording on these questions could be clearer, but for young children, this type of real world problem really does help them get started understanding mathematical concepts.
I think I've figured this one out. The answer to this problem is that Bob was mistaken about losing an apple.
First, Bob gave three apples to Mary. You can ask Alice about this, as she was there too. Mary gave one of her apples to Johnny. Later Bob ate two apples. He couldn't remember how many apples he'd given to Mary, so he checked how many she had. She had two, which meant there should be another one somewhere. But he didn't have any with him, so figured he must have lost one.
The theoretical max always used to be considered 20kHz (as another user pointed out, for adults the limit is more like 16kHz - I've measured my own limit at about 15kHz, with significant drop off starting at around 12kHz, but I may have above average hearing loss). The 22.05kHz theoretical max for CDs was supposed to leave some room for anti-alias filters.
Exactly. GCHQ moves to dismiss your case on grounds which it cannot specify for reasons of national security. Game Over.
The display on the terminal is coming from your bank. It is the amount that you are actually being charged. The display on the cash register is showing whatever the shop wants it to show, and may not necessarily equate with what they are requesting from the bank.
I'd be very surprised if the criminals couldn't get their hands on the equipment. It is widely available and not particularly expensive.
Vulture capitalists would never turn down 3 billion dollars. They may be vultures, but they know very well when to cash out.
Snapchat, a rapidly growing messaging service, recently spurned an all-cash acquisition offer from Facebook for close to $3 billion or more, according to people with a vested interest in the company's valuation.
If the studios offered legal ways to stream their most popular new releases, it would affect their loss of revenues from piracy, which would lose them political leverage. How will they get the next successor to the DCMA passed then?
Don't tell me the Tories have perfected software robot technology. We'd better hope its not the powerful txt variant, or it will be the clearest sign yet that the reptilian shapeshifters have been successful in conquering our planet's political sphere.
Blockbuster in the US must be different than the rest of the world. I was reading TFS, thinking who in their right minds would have "fond memories" of the McDonalds of video rental stores, which consisted of one wall of new releases (half of which was dedicated to the top ten), and another wall of top ten titles from the past couple of years. Then a rack in the middle with a few other titles that seem popular enough to keep around. If you wanted indie films, the local mom and pop video store was the place to go. Unfortunately, they were the first to suffer due to downloads, as the unwashed masses all want the latest blockbusters that the mom and pop doesn't have the bulk buying power to be able to invest in a large enough quantity of to ensure they always have some copies on the shelves over the short term that it will remain popular.
Is that a challenge?
I don't think they've ever "targeted the Nexus device" within two weeks of it becoming available, so I don't think it is fair to claim that "This is not the case this go round".
One day, when Intel, ARM, Nvidia and peripheral manufacturers all close down their R&D departments and become pure factories churning out the same thing year after year. Until then, there is a need to keep Linux development active.
Psychological addiction is all in your head. You can get addicted to absolutely anything (including non-chemical things like gambling), and you can wake up one morning and quit cold turkey. The real danger from alcohol is the physical addiction. Alcohol is one of the few drugs that can be life threatening if a serious alcoholic suddenly can't get any. As long as the replacement drug is not physically addictive, then it is a big improvement.
Actually, that's the real one. If you're seeing dupes, misspellings and poor grammar, and the articles seem to be a bit behind other sites, then it is probably a rushed retyping of the original.
The main difference here is that a typical ICE powered car has the fuel tank only at the rear of the car. The Tesla and other electric cars have batteries spread across the entire underside of the car, so more opportunity for impact that punctures through the shielding.
To be replaced with "I'm telling the teacher on you! You touched my hand with your elbow!"
Or one day you wake up and realise that testing 100% is a waste of your company's money and exposing it to a much greater cost from the security holes in the ancient browsers you are keeping people on to "save on support costs from untested upgrades".
If that's an official company answer, then go home, use your machine for the 5 minutes it takes, and come back, on company time and make sure you claim for the travel expenses.
In what sort of dystopian society do the robots manning the supermarket checkout need to be equipped with knives?
Except that Firefox, Chrome and Safari already support SEED in their TLS implementations. IE doesn't, because it suits Microsoft to block the migration path away from proprietary ActiveX controls to a standards based RFC4162/RFC4269 solution.
Yes, that is the problem. Basically there were at least two companies competing for rolling out the SEED cipher to Korean banks after their government announced that all Korean internet commerce was to use their self-developed crypto algorithm. One (or more) of those companies went the standards route, and negotiated to get the SEED cipher added to the SSL/TLS standards in cooperation with KISA, the Korean standards body. Another company went the ActiveX route, taking advantage of the fact that at the time (around 2002 or so) IE represented at least 98% of the browser market in South Korea. The ActiveX control implemented security at the application level, so didn't need to wait for standards bodies to give approval, and they also offered signing of transactions, which is missing from SSL/TLS implementations in web browsers. So because they were faster to market, and offered additional features, they won out. So now South Korea is stuck with a proprietary implementation that forces them to stay with a browser that the rest of the world is rejecting en-mass. On the positive side, the SEED algorithm did eventually get added to the set of standard TLS algorithms, so a migration path is possible.
The "western presence in Indonesia" does nothing to stop human trafficking. The Australian human traficking agreement is about Australia trafficking refugees that turn up on their shores to Indonesia where they can be mistreated without so much scrutiny, in exchange for aid money.
When my son was 3, he would have no problems with subtraction problems or even simple division when expressed in real world terms like sharing a bag of sweets. Put some math equations in front of him, and he'd be understandably stumped. The wording on these questions could be clearer, but for young children, this type of real world problem really does help them get started understanding mathematical concepts.
I think I've figured this one out. The answer to this problem is that Bob was mistaken about losing an apple.
First, Bob gave three apples to Mary. You can ask Alice about this, as she was there too. Mary gave one of her apples to Johnny. Later Bob ate two apples. He couldn't remember how many apples he'd given to Mary, so he checked how many she had. She had two, which meant there should be another one somewhere. But he didn't have any with him, so figured he must have lost one.
No version of iOS has ever supported that many models.
The theoretical max always used to be considered 20kHz (as another user pointed out, for adults the limit is more like 16kHz - I've measured my own limit at about 15kHz, with significant drop off starting at around 12kHz, but I may have above average hearing loss). The 22.05kHz theoretical max for CDs was supposed to leave some room for anti-alias filters.