There's no lock in. Throwing your pictures and slips of paper you've written on down a well doesn't lock you into that well. You can go away anytime you like, but you're gonna have to expend some real effort to take all that crap you threw in that hole with you.
that's because the articles author (http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/technology/2008/04/alex-phams-bio.html) covers consumer electronics and video games. She may be a "business reporter", but I wouldn't trust her on an investment decision that reeks of this much risk.
Yes, but that sensationalist media has been the norm for decades and decades on Wall st and in financial markets. The markets have gone through their normal business cycles in spite of that. Recently, the part of the cycle that goes out of recession into recovery has been absent.
Recession doesn't mean that every individual feels the pain. I'm like you in that I don't feel any real trouble from the current economic conditions yet, but I'm not foolish enough to think its all rosy and the economy is just peachy.
From the videos I've seen, if you had a suit on, you would probably be let through no questions asked. And if you stood there with your sign, maybe told some people what you were protesting, and not yell at the cops, You would most likely be left alone.
If the media started giving this event a lot more coverage, it would turn into over hyped ridiculousness. That is what they do. Once a story gets moved to the front, the fervor to get the scoop on the other media outlets causes it to blow out of proportion. Sadly the current media operations do not allow decent media coverage of meaningful events. It only reinforces the behavior of yelling louder than everyone else and judging people in absentia.
Newegg is just a place to buy stuff. They aren't in the business of manufacturing PC components. If the markets shift to tablets and portables from traditional desktop PCs, Newegg will just carry more of those for sale. I like Newegg and build my own rigs, but we need to get over this weird brand loyalism that is causing battle lines to be drawn up all over the tech world. It's just a store, no need to cry if they can't keep up with trends.
MS gave them money in exchange for non-voting stock at a time they really needed money. I see no problem with using the term bailout for this. It is quite likely without this help bailing out the boat, it would have sank.
This is a discussion. You can't just point back to your own comments and say "No" to someone's arguments. Go get all the gold you can. Don't worry about everyone else. That's just more gold for you. Maybe the reason you really want to convert the masses to be gold bugs is that that is the only way to try and start a collapse of fiat currency? (please don't tell me about how long fiat currencies have been collapsing already)
Let's say I have something for sale and you would like to purchase it. You can tell me all about the intrinsic value of gold, but if I have no interest in gold. You will not be using it as money to buy anything from me. Whatever you use for money, must be considered to be of value to both parties of a transaction. Today fiat currency generally has value to both parties of a transaction. You could surely find many people that would accept gold as money. You could also find someone somewhere that would take a payment of cattle or beef for a product or service. Don't get too caught up in this money vs. wealth issue. If you can use things that you posses as a form of payment to obtain other things that you need, you're fine. Pick your horse and place your bets.
So you are avoiding a company because a judgement requires them to pay for patents to a company you don't like. This happens all the time. To each their own.
You seem to be describing some sort of ideal ethical world. We are referring to Facebook. If their TOS allow it, I can object to being censored and use the complaint system to censor others. This is all based on the rules Facebook has setup in their playground. We have no fundamental rights to speech, privacy, or anything else on Facebook's servers. They are the final arbiter of what you can and cannot do there. If people don't like their rules, they need to find another playground.
Thanks for the link. It's good to see that as much as Sarah Palin has tried to destroy the reputation of Alaskans both of my Senators (Begich and Murkowski) voted against.
I really shouldn't get involved in this, but I think someone needs to help get the parents points across. He is claiming that after clicking a Google image search result, the INSTALLER of MacDefender was automatically downloaded and run. Presumably, this is due to some javascript that was on the page that the Google link led to. In order for the installer to actually, you know, install MacDefender, an admin password is needed.
Bottom line, the user MUST explicitly enter the admin password to install this MacDefender program. Safari seems to allow the installer to popup and prompt for that password just by going to a compromised page's URL. A user that doesn't know better, or gets scared by the installer screen, might enter the admin password and continue the infection. If there were better controls in Safari to prevent executing of downloaded files users wouldn't be tested by this password prompt. Simple solution, add a flag to allow/disallow automatic execution of downloaded files in Safari. Default this flag to disallow.
Posting under his real name doesn't give any additional accountability. If I were reading reviews how would I know that the reviews are under real names or not? The only reason for his real name would be for a rebuttal from the service provider (doctor, dentist, etc.) which could get nasty quick.
Online reviews need to be treated like random comments you hear from someone in passing on the street. Someone who's name you don't know and will probably never see again. Ignore the comments that are unreasonable or come from crazies. and if hundreds of comments are 4 star or higher, you might want to think twice about that guy who wrote the 1 star review.
Get an electric space heater and run that all winter. Hmm... I guess I have no idea what the normal heating fuel is in BC, but I use natural gas in Alaska and running electric heat for a couple months would put the electric bill through the roof.
Granted smoking anything is bad for your lungs in the long term, but the point is that if someone wants to do something in their home that is mildly dangerous to their lungs and essentially benign to the neighborhood around them why force them to abstain?
Nanny state's are annoying. I can forgive the intentions when laws are enacted to protect people from others, e.g. public smoking bans, or cell phones and driving laws, but some guy smoking in his house should not be stopped.
BTW, when did BC even begin to care about pot growing? It been a while since I was down that way, but I was under the impression it was pretty much tolerated. Am I thinking of Vancouver only?
There's a good chance a lot of the 3.5 million books in this library are not available as eBooks and therefore a Kindle is not a perfect replacement yet. For personal use with readily available material, however, a Kindle is an awesome device.
But the whole point is not to try and get people to perform complex algorithms faster. Those are best handled by a computer. People should be dealing more with the logic and reasoning needed to determine said algorithm and then getting a computer to calculate their algorithm.
For example, there are various methods/algorithms for approximating the area under a curve that a computer can use to rapidly and fairly accurately calculate that area. In My Calculus class last millenium, we spent a few days on these algorithms and then a huge amount of time on symbolic integration and the fundamental theorem of calculus. Much more useful information to know. A true integration also has the added benefit of getting the exact area under a curve and not an approximation.
I'm not saying anything to the validity of the chart in question, but the heading to said chart specifically says deficit in trillions. So it isn't $1.5, it is $1.5 trillion, again per that chart.
As far as I can tell it's related to the hardware version of the PS3 that you have. I have been able to stream NetFlix with the older "fat" models, but some posters above mention the "thin" models not working. What PS3 model do you have?
There's no lock in. Throwing your pictures and slips of paper you've written on down a well doesn't lock you into that well. You can go away anytime you like, but you're gonna have to expend some real effort to take all that crap you threw in that hole with you.
Why would they need to open anything up. The value of whats being delivered doesn't effect the wear on the roads. They would just have to weigh it.
that's because the articles author (http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/technology/2008/04/alex-phams-bio.html) covers consumer electronics and video games. She may be a "business reporter", but I wouldn't trust her on an investment decision that reeks of this much risk.
Yes, but that sensationalist media has been the norm for decades and decades on Wall st and in financial markets. The markets have gone through their normal business cycles in spite of that. Recently, the part of the cycle that goes out of recession into recovery has been absent.
Recession doesn't mean that every individual feels the pain. I'm like you in that I don't feel any real trouble from the current economic conditions yet, but I'm not foolish enough to think its all rosy and the economy is just peachy.
From the videos I've seen, if you had a suit on, you would probably be let through no questions asked. And if you stood there with your sign, maybe told some people what you were protesting, and not yell at the cops, You would most likely be left alone.
If the media started giving this event a lot more coverage, it would turn into over hyped ridiculousness. That is what they do. Once a story gets moved to the front, the fervor to get the scoop on the other media outlets causes it to blow out of proportion. Sadly the current media operations do not allow decent media coverage of meaningful events. It only reinforces the behavior of yelling louder than everyone else and judging people in absentia.
Newegg is just a place to buy stuff. They aren't in the business of manufacturing PC components. If the markets shift to tablets and portables from traditional desktop PCs, Newegg will just carry more of those for sale. I like Newegg and build my own rigs, but we need to get over this weird brand loyalism that is causing battle lines to be drawn up all over the tech world. It's just a store, no need to cry if they can't keep up with trends.
MS gave them money in exchange for non-voting stock at a time they really needed money. I see no problem with using the term bailout for this. It is quite likely without this help bailing out the boat, it would have sank.
The whales are doing this on their own.
This is a discussion. You can't just point back to your own comments and say "No" to someone's arguments. Go get all the gold you can. Don't worry about everyone else. That's just more gold for you. Maybe the reason you really want to convert the masses to be gold bugs is that that is the only way to try and start a collapse of fiat currency? (please don't tell me about how long fiat currencies have been collapsing already)
Let's say I have something for sale and you would like to purchase it. You can tell me all about the intrinsic value of gold, but if I have no interest in gold. You will not be using it as money to buy anything from me. Whatever you use for money, must be considered to be of value to both parties of a transaction. Today fiat currency generally has value to both parties of a transaction. You could surely find many people that would accept gold as money. You could also find someone somewhere that would take a payment of cattle or beef for a product or service. Don't get too caught up in this money vs. wealth issue. If you can use things that you posses as a form of payment to obtain other things that you need, you're fine. Pick your horse and place your bets.
So you are avoiding a company because a judgement requires them to pay for patents to a company you don't like. This happens all the time. To each their own.
You seem to be describing some sort of ideal ethical world. We are referring to Facebook. If their TOS allow it, I can object to being censored and use the complaint system to censor others. This is all based on the rules Facebook has setup in their playground. We have no fundamental rights to speech, privacy, or anything else on Facebook's servers. They are the final arbiter of what you can and cannot do there. If people don't like their rules, they need to find another playground.
Thanks for the link. It's good to see that as much as Sarah Palin has tried to destroy the reputation of Alaskans both of my Senators (Begich and Murkowski) voted against.
I really shouldn't get involved in this, but I think someone needs to help get the parents points across. He is claiming that after clicking a Google image search result, the INSTALLER of MacDefender was automatically downloaded and run. Presumably, this is due to some javascript that was on the page that the Google link led to. In order for the installer to actually, you know, install MacDefender, an admin password is needed.
Bottom line, the user MUST explicitly enter the admin password to install this MacDefender program. Safari seems to allow the installer to popup and prompt for that password just by going to a compromised page's URL. A user that doesn't know better, or gets scared by the installer screen, might enter the admin password and continue the infection. If there were better controls in Safari to prevent executing of downloaded files users wouldn't be tested by this password prompt. Simple solution, add a flag to allow/disallow automatic execution of downloaded files in Safari. Default this flag to disallow.
Posting under his real name doesn't give any additional accountability. If I were reading reviews how would I know that the reviews are under real names or not? The only reason for his real name would be for a rebuttal from the service provider (doctor, dentist, etc.) which could get nasty quick.
Online reviews need to be treated like random comments you hear from someone in passing on the street. Someone who's name you don't know and will probably never see again. Ignore the comments that are unreasonable or come from crazies. and if hundreds of comments are 4 star or higher, you might want to think twice about that guy who wrote the 1 star review.
Get an electric space heater and run that all winter. Hmm... I guess I have no idea what the normal heating fuel is in BC, but I use natural gas in Alaska and running electric heat for a couple months would put the electric bill through the roof.
Granted smoking anything is bad for your lungs in the long term, but the point is that if someone wants to do something in their home that is mildly dangerous to their lungs and essentially benign to the neighborhood around them why force them to abstain?
Nanny state's are annoying. I can forgive the intentions when laws are enacted to protect people from others, e.g. public smoking bans, or cell phones and driving laws, but some guy smoking in his house should not be stopped.
BTW, when did BC even begin to care about pot growing? It been a while since I was down that way, but I was under the impression it was pretty much tolerated. Am I thinking of Vancouver only?
There's a good chance a lot of the 3.5 million books in this library are not available as eBooks and therefore a Kindle is not a perfect replacement yet. For personal use with readily available material, however, a Kindle is an awesome device.
But the whole point is not to try and get people to perform complex algorithms faster. Those are best handled by a computer. People should be dealing more with the logic and reasoning needed to determine said algorithm and then getting a computer to calculate their algorithm.
For example, there are various methods/algorithms for approximating the area under a curve that a computer can use to rapidly and fairly accurately calculate that area. In My Calculus class last millenium, we spent a few days on these algorithms and then a huge amount of time on symbolic integration and the fundamental theorem of calculus. Much more useful information to know. A true integration also has the added benefit of getting the exact area under a curve and not an approximation.
That may be staying on the right side of tax law, but it really sounds like actively trying to keep a tax edge over B&M stores to me.
You know it is possible that the parent has no sales tax obligation. Some of us live in states and localities that don't levy any sales tax.
I'm not saying anything to the validity of the chart in question, but the heading to said chart specifically says deficit in trillions. So it isn't $1.5, it is $1.5 trillion, again per that chart.
I believe Atheists still have souls, they just don't care what happens to them.
Fixed that for you.
As far as I can tell it's related to the hardware version of the PS3 that you have. I have been able to stream NetFlix with the older "fat" models, but some posters above mention the "thin" models not working. What PS3 model do you have?
How can you have concerns with downloading updates fro ifucksexygirls.com
on a serious note, I could see DHS seizing the 3 .com domains in that list just because of this plugin.