So it tries to push a firmware update, and webOS just ignores it - maybe even returning a "I'm finished!" to iTunes. What, you thought Palm would just let anything run the firmware update process?
If memory serves the new "Raven" case (where it rotates the mobo through 90 degrees) has hot swap drive bays - now SATA is ehre and hot swap is for the masses this should hopefully be the standard in future.
Ok, threaten COMPANIES by removing licensing deals if they didn't follow suit. They';ve been convicted twice int he US of abuse of monopoly and, sof far, once in the EU. Oh, twice in Taiwan (or was it Singapore?) etc....
This is an attempt to be seen as the underdog fighting agaisnt the cruel EU. Unfortunately some dumb yanks are falling for it, but that's to be expected.
No, there is always a bike lane: it's called the centire ar lane. If you want to overtake then move over as if you were overtaking a car - if you dont want to do that then you are breaking the law and driving dangerously. You should go to prison.
What this does is remind drivers that you need to give space around the cyclist, and does so where the council cant be bothered to cater for all road users well.
IN the UK "SIM Only" contracts are everywhere, e.g. TMobile Solo. £15 per month for unlimited texts and 350 minutes to any carrier, any time - and remember you dont pay for incoming calls....all on a 30 day rolling contract.
Again, showing the massive advantage of a SIM style market: portability
Simple - has the evidence gathering methods been subject to peer review? well, as they havent been then it cannot meet the standards. See two posts above yours.
Audits are point in time and historical, by their nature. PCI-DSS compliance audits require reviewing security over the year, against the requirements, including the security at the time of the audit.
So no, a proper security audit isnt "on site 1 day, send report on procedures" - an audit looks at:
- are controls designed? If not are there any control gaps? Are there sufficient mitigating controls?
- are those controls operating effectively, or have there been exceptions during the year? If so what is the potential / actual impact of those exceptions?
Unfortunately the GP doesnt appear to understand what an audit is and can do. The clue was your response of "Security is 24/7, audits are point in time" - no matter how long you are on site, the client can drop all controls the day after you leave and you cannot find this out until the next audit.
Except that ECHR, which ratifies the UN UDHC in 99% of areas, HAS been incorporated into all EU member states law. This does make it illegial to discriminate on basis of political expression.
They government also broke the french DPA (no doubt, it is again similar to UK law) by forwarding on the email, which was by default considered private.
Prediction: lawyers have complete field day suing the employer for large, large amounts of money.
Erm - so they lie to you, saying the machine will be perfectly capable of running Feature X, and when it doesn't you think they should only have to give you the money Feature X cost?
Wow. Whats silly again?
They lied to shift hardware. To avoid pissing off Intel. They therefore need to give you WHAT YOU PAID FOR - you paid for a machine that was stated it could run Aero capably, so you should get that. No more No less.
Maybe then corporations won't lie in order to shift old hardware?
Handing over your CC details, and the website accepting them, is consideration and would normally constitute completion of a contract.
this is exactly the same as handing a CC instore, where not all are authorised there and then - it is still consideration for the goods, which is all the is sufficient. duration is not considered in this - otherwise buy now pay later would not give a contract untill the "pay later" part!
All that needs to have happened is for Dell to have accepted "consideration" - in other words, a promise and means to pay, whether now or later. If they did so, which I imagine they did, then there will likley be a contract in force at that point.
55% off would NOT normally be considered unreasonable or an "obviuous" mistake - such as something priced at £0.02 instead of £200
And in "socialist" UK (hah, the US has no idea of the word...) it took 4 months to get an MRI for my constant back pain.
My pain was mechanical and not Ankylising spondylitis (no, i cant spell it) which i have the gene that means I am predisposed to, but it could have been, and I'd have found a lot earlier than you.
Criteria in the UK? constant back pain. thats it.
If it was based on gene testing, they would have found the gene (which is only an indicator, not a g'tee) and I would probably have not got cover - lifelong physio is not something theyd want to pay for.
Wake up US - you're in a bad situation, and the rest of the world is amazed that you can't understand this.
Wow, you're so convinced that private insurance is more efficient? Well, it may be in US, however in almost any other country it isn't. Cf Canada, France, Germany where the actual marginal tax rate, once you take into account the supposed "efficient" private health insurance, is lower than in the US
HMOs have no competition, and have no need to compete.
Belief in christianity above predictive science irrevocably leads to the dark ages, as you deny science and therefore progression. or do you only deny the science you dont like the sound of?
Science creates a predictive model. religion, especially christianity, creates a "ooh, how amazing that that happened" - if you want a very funny example, in warhammer 40k the cult of the maachine god pray to the machine spirit so their machines will work. Exactly like christianity....
So it tries to push a firmware update, and webOS just ignores it - maybe even returning a "I'm finished!" to iTunes. What, you thought Palm would just let anything run the firmware update process?
Bollocks - dial up with local rate or free phone charges.
If memory serves the new "Raven" case (where it rotates the mobo through 90 degrees) has hot swap drive bays - now SATA is ehre and hot swap is for the masses this should hopefully be the standard in future.
Ok, threaten COMPANIES by removing licensing deals if they didn't follow suit.
They';ve been convicted twice int he US of abuse of monopoly and, sof far, once in the EU. Oh, twice in Taiwan (or was it Singapore?) etc....
This is an attempt to be seen as the underdog fighting agaisnt the cruel EU. Unfortunately some dumb yanks are falling for it, but that's to be expected.
Actually it CAN be criminal. Good job the US never bothered ratifying the extradition treaty....
No, there is always a bike lane: it's called the centire ar lane. If you want to overtake then move over as if you were overtaking a car - if you dont want to do that then you are breaking the law and driving dangerously. You should go to prison.
What this does is remind drivers that you need to give space around the cyclist, and does so where the council cant be bothered to cater for all road users well.
Ah, so the fact that roads are for EVERYONE escapes you?
Moron
What this is trying to say is that GIVE GTHE CYCLIST ROOM - do you want their death on your hands? really?
they changed charger a couple years back - similar looking but different pin outs.
Except he didnt publish them, so no element of distribution is relevant.
This seems to fairly straightforwardly drop under the SCOTUS ruling.
IN the UK "SIM Only" contracts are everywhere, e.g. TMobile Solo. £15 per month for unlimited texts and 350 minutes to any carrier, any time - and remember you dont pay for incoming calls....all on a 30 day rolling contract.
Again, showing the massive advantage of a SIM style market: portability
Simple - has the evidence gathering methods been subject to peer review? well, as they havent been then it cannot meet the standards. See two posts above yours.
This isn't an appeal - it is a new trial, as the first one was invalidated due to the incorrect jury instruction.
IAANJNYA (I am an auditor just not YOUR auditor)
Audits are point in time and historical, by their nature. PCI-DSS compliance audits require reviewing security over the year, against the requirements, including the security at the time of the audit.
So no, a proper security audit isnt "on site 1 day, send report on procedures" - an audit looks at:
- are controls designed? If not are there any control gaps? Are there sufficient mitigating controls?
- are those controls operating effectively, or have there been exceptions during the year? If so what is the potential / actual impact of those exceptions?
Unfortunately the GP doesnt appear to understand what an audit is and can do. The clue was your response of "Security is 24/7, audits are point in time" - no matter how long you are on site, the client can drop all controls the day after you leave and you cannot find this out until the next audit.
Except that ECHR, which ratifies the UN UDHC in 99% of areas, HAS been incorporated into all EU member states law. This does make it illegial to discriminate on basis of political expression.
They government also broke the french DPA (no doubt, it is again similar to UK law) by forwarding on the email, which was by default considered private.
Prediction: lawyers have complete field day suing the employer for large, large amounts of money.
You have a 1991 laptop that has a 1680x1050 screen? impressive. was that DSTN or TFT? ;)
you get an extra inch of movement if it's painted red, handy to get your ork boyz out...
oh wait, computers!
Erm - so they lie to you, saying the machine will be perfectly capable of running Feature X, and when it doesn't you think they should only have to give you the money Feature X cost?
Wow. Whats silly again?
They lied to shift hardware. To avoid pissing off Intel. They therefore need to give you WHAT YOU PAID FOR - you paid for a machine that was stated it could run Aero capably, so you should get that. No more No less.
Maybe then corporations won't lie in order to shift old hardware?
Handing over your CC details, and the website accepting them, is consideration and would normally constitute completion of a contract.
this is exactly the same as handing a CC instore, where not all are authorised there and then - it is still consideration for the goods, which is all the is sufficient. duration is not considered in this - otherwise buy now pay later would not give a contract untill the "pay later" part!
All that needs to have happened is for Dell to have accepted "consideration" - in other words, a promise and means to pay, whether now or later. If they did so, which I imagine they did, then there will likley be a contract in force at that point.
55% off would NOT normally be considered unreasonable or an "obviuous" mistake - such as something priced at £0.02 instead of £200
And in "socialist" UK (hah, the US has no idea of the word...) it took 4 months to get an MRI for my constant back pain.
My pain was mechanical and not Ankylising spondylitis (no, i cant spell it) which i have the gene that means I am predisposed to, but it could have been, and I'd have found a lot earlier than you.
Criteria in the UK? constant back pain. thats it.
If it was based on gene testing, they would have found the gene (which is only an indicator, not a g'tee) and I would probably have not got cover - lifelong physio is not something theyd want to pay for.
Wake up US - you're in a bad situation, and the rest of the world is amazed that you can't understand this.
Wow, you're so convinced that private insurance is more efficient? Well, it may be in US, however in almost any other country it isn't. Cf Canada, France, Germany where the actual marginal tax rate, once you take into account the supposed "efficient" private health insurance, is lower than in the US
HMOs have no competition, and have no need to compete.
Amazing how gullible some humans can be,
The bible is internally massively inconsistent, contradictory and even manages to say the world is flat....
is god exists it needs a better editor
Belief in christianity above predictive science irrevocably leads to the dark ages, as you deny science and therefore progression. or do you only deny the science you dont like the sound of?
Science creates a predictive model. religion, especially christianity, creates a "ooh, how amazing that that happened" - if you want a very funny example, in warhammer 40k the cult of the maachine god pray to the machine spirit so their machines will work. Exactly like christianity....
wrong, it only protects COPYRIGHTED works, and COPYRIGHT holders who encrypt their works.
;)
Anything in the public domain is therefore not copyrighted, so feel free to break it
Erm, yes they can. any country can decide to stop respecting any treaty at any time, ever. got that?
however it may not like the consequences...