In the US, official results have been deviating from exit polls to a greater extent in every election starting in 2000. Of course, we are told that this just means that exit polling just isn't that good.
Admittedly I don't know how exit polls work in other countries, but when the poll relies solely on people telling the truth as to which party they voted for, they really aren't that great.
She (Rebekah Brooks) isn't Andy Coulson's replacement; Craig Oliver, former controller at BBC Global News, is David Cameron's new communications chief.
Care to add some facts to back up that maligned comment? Because as a Brit living in the UK, I wasn't aware that the News of the World was a top seller, or even one of the top three.
Huh? I've been out of the Windows administration field for a while, granted, but "back in the day", AD used Kerberos for authentication and authorisation by default. Is that not still the case?
F11, as in 'Enter full-screen mode.'
In the US, official results have been deviating from exit polls to a greater extent in every election starting in 2000. Of course, we are told that this just means that exit polling just isn't that good.
Admittedly I don't know how exit polls work in other countries, but when the poll relies solely on people telling the truth as to which party they voted for, they really aren't that great.
So Linux really is more secure than Windows! ;)
You, er, left out a '+' in the above URL. Go figure.
She (Rebekah Brooks) isn't Andy Coulson's replacement; Craig Oliver, former controller at BBC Global News, is David Cameron's new communications chief.
I agree with the rest of your comment though! ;)
Care to add some facts to back up that maligned comment? Because as a Brit living in the UK, I wasn't aware that the News of the World was a top seller, or even one of the top three.
Huh? I've been out of the Windows administration field for a while, granted, but "back in the day", AD used Kerberos for authentication and authorisation by default. Is that not still the case?
Uh, no. We're not talking English spelling here; Automattic as in Automattic, Inc., the company behind http://automatic.com/