The biggest advantage of Bitcoin is that it's anonymous. The blockchain might identify which wallet had those bitcoins, but there is no way to know who actually controls that wallet.
For me, the biggest advantage is actually that I can spend it anywhere. What I mean is that I don't have a 3rd party telling me that my sale has been declined because they don't like where my transaction is being routed through. With crypto-currency I can send direct to the person I want and no middle man, except the exchange I purchased it from, but that is less of a worry for me, because all I want is for my money to get where I want it to go.
This is her fault. #1 thing you don't do is lie during any kind of background check for the gov. Most of the time they're not looking for if you did anything bad in your past, but whether you're an honest person or not. Lying flags you as dishonest and you will be fired or not-hired in the first place.
Realistically, you have a small point. It's hard to dump large sums. But I can see you probably aren't in the cryptocoin mining community. When I first came up on my huge dump, I had a problem getting rid of them for what I felt it was worth at the time. So... I traded coin-to-coin evenly for every alt-coin that could be sold for cash and was selling. Then dumped for cash on those markets. Granted, my operation was not up to this scale, but at the time, I was making it rain.
Is there something I don't know about the reader software on my computer? Is it leaking info about what books I'm reading?
On the other hand, how does anyone know if I put it in dropbox and share my dropbox folder with someone? Or rename the file or strip any identifying meta-data and just host it on a private website that requires password to view?
There's lots of things that don't make sense to me about how this will actually thwart piracy by striking fear into people's hearts. But then again, I (and we) are probably not the intended target(s) of that fear.
If I were to do business in Japan and moved money in and out of a Japanese account for my business in Japan, does the IRS have the right to tax my business in Japan?
The IRS taxes on US business activity... in US currency. Not sure I agree with the IRS getting involved with something like this especially since I think they really don't understand what they are getting involved in.
The IRS taxes Americans on American income. Bitcoin is income for most people involved. They should pay taxes on it.
The summary "By Algorithm, Not Human Review" implies that the algorithm is somehow evaluating pictures. In fact from TFA it is clear all it is doing is looking for copes of known existing images by hash-code. If it were examining images I would be worried about false positives, but as it just looks for know child porn I cannot see any down-side - this is a good move.
So they store CP and search for CP at the same time? Why is that good?
For projects you claim on your resume, get a letter of recommendation from the company you did the work for or use that company as a reference. They will be able to say "yes, he did work on that."
College is a revolving door and the 5 core members who really tied the group together will graduate and you will be left with people who don't care as much. I saw this happen to ACM while I was at my school before I got involved with some friends forming the "new core," then we graduated and my dept chair emailed me saying "ACM is now dead." So you need to ALWAYS be advertising and finding people who are interested, or you'll have a huge hole in your group. You'll also be trying to find a way to make things go back to how they were and recapture that magic, it won't happen. Don't get discouraged.
You have to include any possible new active people in your "core" as soon as possible. Then you intentionally leave them the room to operate. Creating a culture that passes on this model of passing on responsibilities and power is the single hardest thing. Create traditions. Create expectation that some thing _must_ be done (one of these should be finding a new "core" to keep on going). If you don't do that the group will die. Other option is to not care about it, and just do as you feel like. If the group dies when you leave then it dies. The people coming after yuo can then find their own groups or whatever.
Exactly, my standpoint was that ACM is a professional group and should live on, without having to be resurrected every few years. But cores are important and will be replaced, it's just that while you're a part of the core, and everyone else leaves you will feel like you're the only one who cares and it will get very discouraging to the point where you'll think "what's the point?" If it dies after HE leaves, no big deal, if it dies while he's still there, it can be disheartening.
I know for sure Google, Fedora and Microsoft (I know... but it has perks for the club) have ambassador programs and will provide funding and raffle prizes that can be used for fundraising to keep the club going.
It may be my lack of Google skills, but I can't find any evidence of a Red Hat corporate presence in Ghana. (and both surprised and slightly disappointed to find very few pictures of Ghaneans wearing fedoras instead but I digress...)
I will bite on this.
Something I found in the past is, if there is no presence where you live, contact the company and create the presence there. They will often work with you for loads of promotion that will cost them almost nothing.
Don't forget to contact other major distros and see if they have anything similar or would donate some shirts, dvds, usbs, keychains or ANYTHING to your group to help promote Linux.
Sign your team up for Dreamspark and get Microsoft OSs running as VMs on top of linux so you can know about the issues involved with running MS services in VMs. They also have something like "Microsoft Services for Unix." It's always good to know your "enemy."
This is my experience, I know your club will be slightly more topic focused than an ACM club but these are some issues I had as a leader and member of several computing clubs in my time. I hope it helps.
Scheduling
You have to find a balance in your schedules. One of the main things clubs will suffer from is either having too many meetings and not having enough content to fill them up or having not enough meetings and people forgetting about it, either way, you will lose members because of these two things. This is not just ACM but in the hackerspace I attend in my town that had "organized meetings" that ended up being nothing and sometimes just me sitting there alone wondering if anyone was going to show up for the talk on the calendar, and even the speaker doesn't show up.
Don't get discouraged
You're going to have people showing up looking for answers to homework problems or with general class problems and are looking for some magical device to help them pass their courses. You will also have people showing up looking for free refreshments. You will get people who think joining your club is going to somehow lead to an internship somewhere or that you'll help them in their career. They will all eventually stop coming, you must not take it personal and keep going.
Content
Keep your content on track and don't write checks you can't cash. Working in a group where people are bogged down by coursework already and have little to no time to commit will often bullshit with you and say they're up for a task then not deliver when it matters. So what I mean by this is don't promise anything to the group or outside groups (we had a president do this before and it made us look bad), don't promise help with web pages or anything like that. These things happen like "hey can you help me with [thing]?" then you feeling like a good chance for outreach are like "sure" and you're in trouble and looking like a total jackass now.
Make sure you can get guest speakers to come and talk about something related to projects you're working on. It will be exciting to hear about how maybe someone implements [thing] in the real world and what to look out for when doing real world implementations. You can learn a lot about things like hardening servers and so on by asking a working engineer about dos-and-don'ts in the work force.
Keeping content on track can be hard, you start forgetting what the point of the club is as it turns into a more social event (which isn't bad) but you will lose members and focus very easily and eventually your club will die. So maybe set aside social time after the main meeting content is done, this will allow people to mingle and get some good technical information from your meetings.
Your core will eventually disappear
College is a revolving door and the 5 core members who really tied the group together will graduate and you will be left with people who don't care as much. I saw this happen to ACM while I was at my school before I got involved with some friends forming the "new core," then we graduated and my dept chair emailed me saying "ACM is now dead." So you need to ALWAYS be advertising and finding people who are interested, or you'll have a huge hole in your group. You'll also be trying to find a way to make things go back to how they were and recapture that magic, it won't happen. Don't get discouraged.
Leadership
You are just some guy who likes linux. People are going to look to you as a leader and expect you to have answers. Don't bullshit. My first experience at ACM involved a "Linux seminar" where the president was giving the talk. He didn't know anything about linux. He somehow became the Fedora ambassador at the school (probably because no one else knew about the position) so he decided to try to get us all to install fedora and was trying to show us how to configure it. He never used linux before. He made a real ass of himself and a few friends of mine and myse
They should just setup booths in 7-11s where the clerk can sign you up for facebook when you buy a slurpee.
Side note: I'm not sure about the allure of a website that is an ultra watered down form of social interaction which is 99% self-shot photos and posting really old memes that they just found out about.
I still have an NES, SNES, N64 and Gamecube. I have owned PS2, Xbox, Xbox360 but not anymore. Could there be a particular reason why I keep my Nintendo systems and not my Sony or Microsoft systems? Yes, the games on the PS2, Xbox, Xbox360 are not fun, they will never be "classic" aside from maybe Halo (in my opinion). No one is going to look back and be like "Man, MW2-Extra FPS rage edition was a classic, I want to play that until I die." But they will continue to play Super Mario Bros iterations and The Legend of Zelda saga. That's just half of my 2 cents because I just woke up and saw people semi-flaming my favorite console company of all time. Sorry they don't put out gorey FPS and overly sexy games.
Try reading slashdot one day, without ever reading the comment section. Your perspective on the site will change and it will be less annoying to visit.
It could be a good source of revenue as along as the author is up front about it to the users and the users agree to it. It could be used as a means of donation to projects.
Maybe they could calculate how many shares to submit per month given a certain PPS or PPLNS rate on a pool and crank those out one night then be good to go the rest of the month. It doesn't occur to me that this type of thing has to be a "burn up your computer to make someone some money."
We're right on the cusp of a paradigm shift in mining technology where GPU mining is about to be phased out and power efficient ASIC miners are about to ship (and in some cases already shipping). Not to mention the short lived glory of the FPGA miner. This post seems like slander.
Not to mention the total damage to the environment caused by real mining is lightyears beyond the damage caused by cryptocoin mining. I'm just as much to blame for environmental damage as a bitcoin miner for living in a house with electric heating/cooling and energy inefficient appliances.
Winapp2.com is the official website of Winapp2.ini, an addon for CCleaner, System Ninja, and
BleachBit that adds support for over one thousand additional programs. For more information about the project, its authors, and the website, click on About in the site navigation.
So what this says is that the.ini file is actually intended for use in bleachbit??? This boils down to this situation.
Billy has cool toy.
Mikey plays with Billy's toy.
Jimmy also plays with Billy's toy.
Mikey is mad because Jimmy and Billy have more fun playing with Billy's toy.
Mikey calls Jimmy and says, "stop playing with Jimmy's toy or I'm going to beat you up."
Billy's toy doesn't belong to either of them, but they both get to play with it.
Not sure if I should be more angry that CCleaner pulled this stunt or that bleachbit fell for it.
The most brilliant computer scientists lived in an era without computers and the majority of us grew up without them in our homes but we still were drawn to it in some way. I'm sure your kid is going to get enough exposure to this technology without you cramming it down his throat just because you have a fascination with them. Maybe he won't like computers and want to be an artist or an athlete where he'll have no use for them.
The biggest advantage of Bitcoin is that it's anonymous. The blockchain might identify which wallet had those bitcoins, but there is no way to know who actually controls that wallet.
For me, the biggest advantage is actually that I can spend it anywhere. What I mean is that I don't have a 3rd party telling me that my sale has been declined because they don't like where my transaction is being routed through. With crypto-currency I can send direct to the person I want and no middle man, except the exchange I purchased it from, but that is less of a worry for me, because all I want is for my money to get where I want it to go.
This is her fault. #1 thing you don't do is lie during any kind of background check for the gov. Most of the time they're not looking for if you did anything bad in your past, but whether you're an honest person or not. Lying flags you as dishonest and you will be fired or not-hired in the first place.
Introduction to Probabilistic Automata - Azaria Paz
Anything by Claude Shannon
Information theory and statistics - Sollomon Kullback
Realistically, you have a small point. It's hard to dump large sums. But I can see you probably aren't in the cryptocoin mining community. When I first came up on my huge dump, I had a problem getting rid of them for what I felt it was worth at the time. So... I traded coin-to-coin evenly for every alt-coin that could be sold for cash and was selling. Then dumped for cash on those markets. Granted, my operation was not up to this scale, but at the time, I was making it rain.
Why do they get to patent the Turing test?
Is there something I don't know about the reader software on my computer? Is it leaking info about what books I'm reading?
On the other hand, how does anyone know if I put it in dropbox and share my dropbox folder with someone? Or rename the file or strip any identifying meta-data and just host it on a private website that requires password to view?
There's lots of things that don't make sense to me about how this will actually thwart piracy by striking fear into people's hearts. But then again, I (and we) are probably not the intended target(s) of that fear.
If I were to do business in Japan and moved money in and out of a Japanese account for my business in Japan, does the IRS have the right to tax my business in Japan?
The IRS taxes on US business activity... in US currency. Not sure I agree with the IRS getting involved with something like this especially since I think they really don't understand what they are getting involved in.
The IRS taxes Americans on American income. Bitcoin is income for most people involved. They should pay taxes on it.
I already claim it as income.
The summary "By Algorithm, Not Human Review" implies that the algorithm is somehow evaluating pictures. In fact from TFA it is clear all it is doing is looking for copes of known existing images by hash-code. If it were examining images I would be worried about false positives, but as it just looks for know child porn I cannot see any down-side - this is a good move.
So they store CP and search for CP at the same time? Why is that good?
Is this going to flag baby bath tub photos as porn? Or is there an algorithm to detect penetration or other signs of exploitation?
How does Google get away with storing so much CP? Shouldn't this be handled by some gov entity?
For projects you claim on your resume, get a letter of recommendation from the company you did the work for or use that company as a reference. They will be able to say "yes, he did work on that."
How about another Conan quote?
"Don't you know the Dewey Decimal System?"
Not sure how many people will get that one ;)
God tier 80s child reporting in
Your core will eventually disappear
College is a revolving door and the 5 core members who really tied the group together will graduate and you will be left with people who don't care as much. I saw this happen to ACM while I was at my school before I got involved with some friends forming the "new core," then we graduated and my dept chair emailed me saying "ACM is now dead." So you need to ALWAYS be advertising and finding people who are interested, or you'll have a huge hole in your group. You'll also be trying to find a way to make things go back to how they were and recapture that magic, it won't happen. Don't get discouraged.
You have to include any possible new active people in your "core" as soon as possible. Then you intentionally leave them the room to operate. Creating a culture that passes on this model of passing on responsibilities and power is the single hardest thing. Create traditions. Create expectation that some thing _must_ be done (one of these should be finding a new "core" to keep on going). If you don't do that the group will die. Other option is to not care about it, and just do as you feel like. If the group dies when you leave then it dies. The people coming after yuo can then find their own groups or whatever.
Exactly, my standpoint was that ACM is a professional group and should live on, without having to be resurrected every few years. But cores are important and will be replaced, it's just that while you're a part of the core, and everyone else leaves you will feel like you're the only one who cares and it will get very discouraging to the point where you'll think "what's the point?" If it dies after HE leaves, no big deal, if it dies while he's still there, it can be disheartening.
I know for sure Google, Fedora and Microsoft (I know... but it has perks for the club) have ambassador programs and will provide funding and raffle prizes that can be used for fundraising to keep the club going.
It may be my lack of Google skills, but I can't find any evidence of a Red Hat corporate presence in Ghana. (and both surprised and slightly disappointed to find very few pictures of Ghaneans wearing fedoras instead but I digress...)
I will bite on this.
Something I found in the past is, if there is no presence where you live, contact the company and create the presence there. They will often work with you for loads of promotion that will cost them almost nothing.
Ambassador Programs
http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Ambassadors
http://www.google.com/intl/en/jobs/students/proscho/programs/uscanada/ambassador/ (find your region)
http://www.microsoft.com/de-ch/students/en/getInTouch/MicrosoftOnCampus/Ambassadors/default.aspx#fbid=6Weg8o4CBmr
http://www.apple.com/education/campusreps/
Don't forget to contact other major distros and see if they have anything similar or would donate some shirts, dvds, usbs, keychains or ANYTHING to your group to help promote Linux.
Sign your team up for Dreamspark and get Microsoft OSs running as VMs on top of linux so you can know about the issues involved with running MS services in VMs. They also have something like "Microsoft Services for Unix." It's always good to know your "enemy."
This is my experience, I know your club will be slightly more topic focused than an ACM club but these are some issues I had as a leader and member of several computing clubs in my time. I hope it helps.
Scheduling
You have to find a balance in your schedules. One of the main things clubs will suffer from is either having too many meetings and not having enough content to fill them up or having not enough meetings and people forgetting about it, either way, you will lose members because of these two things. This is not just ACM but in the hackerspace I attend in my town that had "organized meetings" that ended up being nothing and sometimes just me sitting there alone wondering if anyone was going to show up for the talk on the calendar, and even the speaker doesn't show up.
Don't get discouraged
You're going to have people showing up looking for answers to homework problems or with general class problems and are looking for some magical device to help them pass their courses. You will also have people showing up looking for free refreshments. You will get people who think joining your club is going to somehow lead to an internship somewhere or that you'll help them in their career. They will all eventually stop coming, you must not take it personal and keep going.
Content
Keep your content on track and don't write checks you can't cash. Working in a group where people are bogged down by coursework already and have little to no time to commit will often bullshit with you and say they're up for a task then not deliver when it matters. So what I mean by this is don't promise anything to the group or outside groups (we had a president do this before and it made us look bad), don't promise help with web pages or anything like that. These things happen like "hey can you help me with [thing]?" then you feeling like a good chance for outreach are like "sure" and you're in trouble and looking like a total jackass now.
Make sure you can get guest speakers to come and talk about something related to projects you're working on. It will be exciting to hear about how maybe someone implements [thing] in the real world and what to look out for when doing real world implementations. You can learn a lot about things like hardening servers and so on by asking a working engineer about dos-and-don'ts in the work force.
Keeping content on track can be hard, you start forgetting what the point of the club is as it turns into a more social event (which isn't bad) but you will lose members and focus very easily and eventually your club will die. So maybe set aside social time after the main meeting content is done, this will allow people to mingle and get some good technical information from your meetings.
Your core will eventually disappear
College is a revolving door and the 5 core members who really tied the group together will graduate and you will be left with people who don't care as much. I saw this happen to ACM while I was at my school before I got involved with some friends forming the "new core," then we graduated and my dept chair emailed me saying "ACM is now dead." So you need to ALWAYS be advertising and finding people who are interested, or you'll have a huge hole in your group. You'll also be trying to find a way to make things go back to how they were and recapture that magic, it won't happen. Don't get discouraged.
Leadership
You are just some guy who likes linux. People are going to look to you as a leader and expect you to have answers. Don't bullshit. My first experience at ACM involved a "Linux seminar" where the president was giving the talk. He didn't know anything about linux. He somehow became the Fedora ambassador at the school (probably because no one else knew about the position) so he decided to try to get us all to install fedora and was trying to show us how to configure it. He never used linux before. He made a real ass of himself and a few friends of mine and myse
They should just setup booths in 7-11s where the clerk can sign you up for facebook when you buy a slurpee.
Side note: I'm not sure about the allure of a website that is an ultra watered down form of social interaction which is 99% self-shot photos and posting really old memes that they just found out about.
I still have an NES, SNES, N64 and Gamecube. I have owned PS2, Xbox, Xbox360 but not anymore. Could there be a particular reason why I keep my Nintendo systems and not my Sony or Microsoft systems? Yes, the games on the PS2, Xbox, Xbox360 are not fun, they will never be "classic" aside from maybe Halo (in my opinion). No one is going to look back and be like "Man, MW2-Extra FPS rage edition was a classic, I want to play that until I die." But they will continue to play Super Mario Bros iterations and The Legend of Zelda saga. That's just half of my 2 cents because I just woke up and saw people semi-flaming my favorite console company of all time. Sorry they don't put out gorey FPS and overly sexy games.
Try reading slashdot one day, without ever reading the comment section. Your perspective on the site will change and it will be less annoying to visit.
It could be a good source of revenue as along as the author is up front about it to the users and the users agree to it. It could be used as a means of donation to projects.
Maybe they could calculate how many shares to submit per month given a certain PPS or PPLNS rate on a pool and crank those out one night then be good to go the rest of the month. It doesn't occur to me that this type of thing has to be a "burn up your computer to make someone some money."
We're right on the cusp of a paradigm shift in mining technology where GPU mining is about to be phased out and power efficient ASIC miners are about to ship (and in some cases already shipping). Not to mention the short lived glory of the FPGA miner. This post seems like slander.
Not to mention the total damage to the environment caused by real mining is lightyears beyond the damage caused by cryptocoin mining. I'm just as much to blame for environmental damage as a bitcoin miner for living in a house with electric heating/cooling and energy inefficient appliances.
You can't fall in space.
Trolls??? Department of Homeland Security (DHS), Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), Coast Guard (USCG), Customs and Border Protection (CBP), Border Patrol, Secret Service (USSS), National Operations Center (NOC), Homeland Defense, Immigration Customs Enforcement (ICE), Agent, Task Force, Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), Fusion Center, Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA), Secure Border Initiative (SBI), Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), Alcohol Tobacco and Firearms (ATF), U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (CIS), Federal Air Marshal Service (FAMS), Transportation Security Administration (TSA), Air Marshal, Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), National Guard, Red Cross, United Nations (UN), Domestic Security, , Assassination, Attack, Domestic security, Drill, Exercise, Cops, Law enforcement, Authorities, Disaster assistance, Disaster management, DNDO (Domestic Nuclear Detection Office), National preparedness, Mitigation, Prevention, Response, Recovery, Dirty Bomb, Domestic nuclear detection, Emergency management, Emergency response, First responder, Homeland security, Maritime domain awareness (MDA), National preparedness initiative, Militia, Shooting, Shots fired, Evacuation, Deaths, Hostage, Explosion (explosive), Police, Disaster medical assistance team (DMAT), Organized crime, Gangs, National security, State of emergency, Security, Breach, Threat, Standoff, SWAT, Screening, Lockdown, Bomb (squad or threat), Crash, Looting, Riot, Emergency Landing, Pipe bomb, Incident, Facility, HAZMAT & Nuclear, , Hazmat, Nuclear, Chemical Spill, Suspicious package/device, Toxic, National laboratory, Nuclear facility, Nuclear threat, Cloud, Plume, Radiation, Radioactive, Leak, Biological infection (or event), Chemical, Chemical burn, Biological, Epidemic, Hazardous, Hazardous material incident, Industrial spill, Infection, Powder (white), Gas, Spillover, Anthrax, Blister agent, Exposure, Burn, Nerve agent, Ricin, Sarin, North Korea, Health Concern + H1N1, , Outbreak, Contamination, Exposure, Virus, Evacuation, Bacteria, Recall, Ebola, Food Poisoning, Foot and Mouth (FMD), H5N1, Avian, Flu, Salmonella, Small Pox, Plague, Human to human, Human to ANIMAL, Influenza, Center for Disease Control (CDC), Drug Administration (FDA), Public Health, Toxic, Agro Terror, Tuberculosis (TB), Agriculture, Listeria, Symptoms, Mutation, Resistant, Antiviral, Wave, Pandemic, Infection, Water/air borne, Sick, Swine, Pork, Strain, Quarantine, H1N1, Vaccine, Tamiflu, Norvo Virus, Epidemic, World Health Organization (WHO and components), Viral Hemorrhagic Fever, E. Coli, Infrastructure Security, , Infrastructure security, Airport, CIKR (Critical Infrastructure & Key Resources), AMTRAK, Collapse, Computer infrastructure, Communications infrastructure, Telecommunications, Critical infrastructure, National infrastructure, Metro, WMATA, Airplane (and derivatives), Chemical fire, Subway, BART, MARTA, Port Authority, NBIC (National Biosurveillance Integration Center), Transportation security, Grid, Power, Smart, Body scanner, Electric, Failure or outage, Black out, Brown out, Port, Dock, Bridge, Canceled, Delays, Service disruption, Power lines, Southwest Border Violence, , Drug cartel, Violence, Gang, Drug, Narcotics, Cocaine, Marijuana, Heroin, Border, Mexico, Cartel, Southwest, Juarez, Sinaloa, Tijuana, Torreon, Yuma, Tucson, Decapitated, U.S. Consulate, Consular, El Paso, Fort Hancock, San Diego, Ciudad Juarez, Nogales, Sonora, Colombia, Mara salvatrucha, MS13 or MS-13, Drug war, Mexican army, Methamphetamine, Cartel de Golfo, Gulf Cartel, La Familia, Reynose, Nuevo Leon, Narcos, Narco banners (Spanish equivalents), Los Zetas, Shootout, Execution, Gunfight, Trafficking, Kidnap, Calderon, Reyosa, Bust, Tamaulipas, Meth Lab, Drug trade, Illegal immigrants, Smuggling (smugglers), Matamoros, Michoacana, Guzman, Arellano-Felix, Beltran-Leyva, Barrio Azteca, Artistics Assassins, Mexicles, New Federation, Terrorism, , Terrorism, Al Queda (all spellings), Terror, Attack, Iraq, Afghanistan, Iran, Pakistan, Agro, Environmental terrorist, Eco t
What is Winapp2.com?
.ini file is actually intended for use in bleachbit??? This boils down to this situation.
Winapp2.com is the official website of Winapp2.ini, an addon for CCleaner, System Ninja, and BleachBit that adds support for over one thousand additional programs. For more information about the project, its authors, and the website, click on About in the site navigation.
So what this says is that the
Billy has cool toy.
Mikey plays with Billy's toy.
Jimmy also plays with Billy's toy.
Mikey is mad because Jimmy and Billy have more fun playing with Billy's toy.
Mikey calls Jimmy and says, "stop playing with Jimmy's toy or I'm going to beat you up."
Billy's toy doesn't belong to either of them, but they both get to play with it.
Not sure if I should be more angry that CCleaner pulled this stunt or that bleachbit fell for it.
NO TRIFORCE
The most brilliant computer scientists lived in an era without computers and the majority of us grew up without them in our homes but we still were drawn to it in some way. I'm sure your kid is going to get enough exposure to this technology without you cramming it down his throat just because you have a fascination with them. Maybe he won't like computers and want to be an artist or an athlete where he'll have no use for them.