Civil war does NOT start with masqueraded foreign troops taking institutions in targeted areas, being set up for fight. I remember very well how after annexation of Crimea people in Eastern Ukraine were urged DAVAI DAVAI, WHAT ARE YOU WAITING FOR?! Then slowly posts on roads were established first of all, and further groups of people speaking St.Peterburg tongue of russian helped taking control over local institutions, with "tourists on vacations" from Russia being leaders of organizing "alternate local governing" and actual military operations. Not quite close to the civil war, see? It is not the civil war, when foreign army gets involved.
Yeah, it was not, in spite of fighting damn hard, and after Putin allowed his puppet to take local throne in exchange to loyalty, it once again is at peaceful home of Russia the Empire.
Take Georgia, Moldova, Ukraine, Chechnya. Baltic states were lost, as life there took off, and currently is at higher standards, than compatriots in native Russia have - one has to be insane to long losing that in his life.
I recall how it all started. Westerners had money, credit cards, and software, that was protected from being stolen. Post-soviet kids didn't, so they had works to do. I was reading those cracker magazines, they have been very educational.
Yep, as we know by now, there are enough of "misguided Russian patriots", spending their vacations by participating in very reasonably coordinated warfare against Ukraine, that itself chose distancing.
Not the only point. Days before this outbreak, I happened to read articles, plain stating, that Ukraine is a country turned by Russia into test battlefield of cyberwar (and other kinds of modern war, as per their definition, BTW). Which was proved once again. Russia flexes its muscles both in operation, in damage, and in getting away with it. The same pattern of pushing the limits where they did their dirty act, yet remain difficult to name and be punished - it repeats all over. This pattern is by now well recognizable. It is the same, as throw chunks of army over the border for couple of "training" days, then withdraw them and get away like there was no war. Direct their "polite" military without identification to "help with voting" at neighboring country.
Their problem, however, is that these patterns are more recognizable, as more instances have been applied. Element of surprise has worn, it is of little secret now, what is Russia Today.
Even if he would honor, such a treaty first of all is designed to tame advances of the other side, that has superior access to the underlying technology. Computing mostly originates in US. Being declined, now he plays again, but the other way round, like it was legal to abuse technology to participate in the elections, held by other countries. Like he wouldn't have to do wrongdoings, he had to do now.
Thanks for confirming my afterthought, that technically light might be sliding on front-wise, even if this is not obvious. Yep, completely passive look is gorgeous, even though my personal abilities to read were hidden in described possibility.
I've got Nook Glowlight Plus with eInk screen, that is backlit - it is fantastic, reading in darkness is most practiced way to read before sleep, covered. Any other active color screen is no match, being tiresome.
You don't need to stick to Windows-like interface. Ubuntu has got a fine one, and is polished distro, that deserves respect for good job done. Ubuntu has introduced exactly positive rationale behind Windows: simplified usability, abstracting to hide unnecessary detail. While still it is Linux/Unix industrial grade control, would you need to go deeper.
You should be in minority, because Win7 UI is maintaining structure and hierarchy (while also providing search helpers), whereas Win10 is much more loose collection of elements, able to navigate mostly trough search requests, that are likely to change their names and compositions a lot with the permanent flow of updates, that address the very interface with ease.
Win10 gathers interface weaknesses of Android and adds unpredictability of the web - you have loose and permanently changing interface, which is UI from the hell.
True, just companies are not destined to be eternally great. Sometimes they are in the right place at the right time, and do the right thing to prosper. Other times they do only in-average, therefore are not in the best league. As to camera design/manufacturing - isn't it, that most, if not all, of them now have very similar genes of Japanese precision R&D, followed by more economic Asian manufacturing? Kodak wasn't in this line by its legacy, while sporadic attempts were falling out of that winning model.
Do failed companies have growing sales and expansion of their products? Kodak is well regarded as emulsion supplier, and expensive it is, the larger format, the more crazier. They well can be not into digital, not discovering their thing in this amalgama of electronic sophistication and variations of the same Double-Gaussian lens world. They do not have to, and even if they tried, not each company has the same fortunes - not a problem itself. You have more film/chemical companies with other successful brands like Ilford or Foma. It is still business. May be growing, even if you refuse to accept that part.
Everybody knows that. Sales of film are rising, as is demand for it, somehow you seem to not obey this. Kodak did not miss photo boat neither, as it is well known to be of essential force, breaking-in popular use of photographic media. Also, I observe tendency of analogue photographic equipment to be grabbed at high prices, either for collection or most-likely: use. It needs film. To handle film is unlike handling smartphone.
I am in Eastern part of Europe, but should be closer in terms of accumulated age and experience - our IT jobs became routine, instead of innovative mission, and are losing associated engineering ethics as a way of proper acting. It is more business and commerce, than engineering in general. Somewhere there still must be islands of break-trough innovation, and hopefully an engineering culture, but more common in our field is worker's work to routinely cover this and that.
Economy OTOH is abysmal in many places, but China and such. That's the hidden cost of the dumb consumer race towards cheapest. As long, as general layout of that remains the same, things gonna stay the same (i.e. be getting worse).
Yep, I had quite some success, having more separate room with my computing equipment in it, to work at. I do understand your concern very well - for me at the moment the problem is in not having clear cut holidays, as my clients are not disappearing for any while, and the model is of help/reaction service. In a result, it is rather exhausting to find yourself in that mode for over decade now, with only occasional short pieces of time grabbed to myself, moving out of here for a brief whiles. It turns even worse with the clients constantly looking into increase of their profits at the expense of IT corner. Started checking for next job.
that job can easily be done from anywhere else in the world for less money
Only assuming there is no specific value of talent and accumulated knowledge. While in reality there should be some, and perhaps quite some. Interaction can help you exchange, but obligatory exchange can waste your focus. There are no simplistic answers, there are benefits and losses in any model.
I bet it is still configurable, like it was last time I was digging how to switch default shell in Win10. It must only be that PowerShell became default that is shown for user in interactive dialogs, and only that fact of default change is bit surprising, as preferences are up to user to decide. If we are talking default in newly deployed system - it's OK, if any update would trigger default - that would mean problem in MS thinking.
Lie. Nobody was renting this, but generic hollywood crap and porn. Blue jeans or chewing gum had more impact than this. Change came up from suppressed nation countries, that appeared to be more vivid and persistent than expected, to surf the wave of perestroika.
Expressed statements are risky, but not that invalid. There well may exist some best-in-class software, being either closed source, not money-free or both. Being available for open platform is open option, real choice. It should be no secret, that not every niche is covered by open-source siblings equally well in every regard. While matters continue to be so, platform is stronger, being covered with another option.
This approach does solve need of delicate storage, if greens were harvested for sale instead. As they are still connected to the infrastructure of their growth, it makes them not only freshest possible when buying, but also incomparably better enduring, than any other storage option.
Civil war does NOT start with masqueraded foreign troops taking institutions in targeted areas, being set up for fight. I remember very well how after annexation of Crimea people in Eastern Ukraine were urged DAVAI DAVAI, WHAT ARE YOU WAITING FOR?! Then slowly posts on roads were established first of all, and further groups of people speaking St.Peterburg tongue of russian helped taking control over local institutions, with "tourists on vacations" from Russia being leaders of organizing "alternate local governing" and actual military operations. Not quite close to the civil war, see? It is not the civil war, when foreign army gets involved.
Yeah, it was not, in spite of fighting damn hard, and after Putin allowed his puppet to take local throne in exchange to loyalty, it once again is at peaceful home of Russia the Empire.
"Not a separate" has bloody dear price.
Chechen–Russian conflict: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...–Russian_conflict
Caucasian War: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
For Pro works, of course, haven't tried Home, but see no big reason to not registry in the very same fashion.
Take Georgia, Moldova, Ukraine, Chechnya. Baltic states were lost, as life there took off, and currently is at higher standards, than compatriots in native Russia have - one has to be insane to long losing that in his life.
highly trained tech-savvy population
I recall how it all started. Westerners had money, credit cards, and software, that was protected from being stolen.
Post-soviet kids didn't, so they had works to do. I was reading those cracker magazines, they have been very educational.
Yep, as we know by now, there are enough of "misguided Russian patriots", spending their vacations by participating in very reasonably coordinated warfare against Ukraine, that itself chose distancing.
point is just to cause damage
Not the only point. Days before this outbreak, I happened to read articles, plain stating, that Ukraine is a country turned by Russia into test battlefield of cyberwar (and other kinds of modern war, as per their definition, BTW). Which was proved once again. Russia flexes its muscles both in operation, in damage, and in getting away with it. The same pattern of pushing the limits where they did their dirty act, yet remain difficult to name and be punished - it repeats all over. This pattern is by now well recognizable. It is the same, as throw chunks of army over the border for couple of "training" days, then withdraw them and get away like there was no war. Direct their "polite" military without identification to "help with voting" at neighboring country.
Their problem, however, is that these patterns are more recognizable, as more instances have been applied. Element of surprise has worn, it is of little secret now, what is Russia Today.
Even if he would honor, such a treaty first of all is designed to tame advances of the other side, that has superior access to the underlying technology. Computing mostly originates in US. Being declined, now he plays again, but the other way round, like it was legal to abuse technology to participate in the elections, held by other countries. Like he wouldn't have to do wrongdoings, he had to do now.
Thanks for confirming my afterthought, that technically light might be sliding on front-wise, even if this is not obvious. Yep, completely passive look is gorgeous, even though my personal abilities to read were hidden in described possibility.
I've got Nook Glowlight Plus with eInk screen, that is backlit - it is fantastic, reading in darkness is most practiced way to read before sleep, covered. Any other active color screen is no match, being tiresome.
Ha ha, Orange Shock it is.
You don't need to stick to Windows-like interface. Ubuntu has got a fine one, and is polished distro, that deserves respect for good job done.
Ubuntu has introduced exactly positive rationale behind Windows: simplified usability, abstracting to hide unnecessary detail.
While still it is Linux/Unix industrial grade control, would you need to go deeper.
You should be in minority, because Win7 UI is maintaining structure and hierarchy (while also providing search helpers), whereas Win10 is much more loose collection of elements, able to navigate mostly trough search requests, that are likely to change their names and compositions a lot with the permanent flow of updates, that address the very interface with ease.
Win10 gathers interface weaknesses of Android and adds unpredictability of the web - you have loose and permanently changing interface, which is UI from the hell.
Was Kodak focusing and gathering competence on consumer or on professional products, before giving up on digital?
True, just companies are not destined to be eternally great. Sometimes they are in the right place at the right time, and do the right thing to prosper. Other times they do only in-average, therefore are not in the best league. As to camera design/manufacturing - isn't it, that most, if not all, of them now have very similar genes of Japanese precision R&D, followed by more economic Asian manufacturing? Kodak wasn't in this line by its legacy, while sporadic attempts were falling out of that winning model.
Do failed companies have growing sales and expansion of their products? Kodak is well regarded as emulsion supplier, and expensive it is, the larger format, the more crazier. They well can be not into digital, not discovering their thing in this amalgama of electronic sophistication and variations of the same Double-Gaussian lens world. They do not have to, and even if they tried, not each company has the same fortunes - not a problem itself. You have more film/chemical companies with other successful brands like Ilford or Foma. It is still business. May be growing, even if you refuse to accept that part.
Everybody knows that. Sales of film are rising, as is demand for it, somehow you seem to not obey this. Kodak did not miss photo boat neither, as it is well known to be of essential force, breaking-in popular use of photographic media. Also, I observe tendency of analogue photographic equipment to be grabbed at high prices, either for collection or most-likely: use. It needs film. To handle film is unlike handling smartphone.
That. So much less of those, needing an organ, as a result of the road accident.
I am in Eastern part of Europe, but should be closer in terms of accumulated age and experience - our IT jobs became routine, instead of innovative mission, and are losing associated engineering ethics as a way of proper acting. It is more business and commerce, than engineering in general. Somewhere there still must be islands of break-trough innovation, and hopefully an engineering culture, but more common in our field is worker's work to routinely cover this and that.
Economy OTOH is abysmal in many places, but China and such. That's the hidden cost of the dumb consumer race towards cheapest. As long, as general layout of that remains the same, things gonna stay the same (i.e. be getting worse).
Yep, I had quite some success, having more separate room with my computing equipment in it, to work at.
I do understand your concern very well - for me at the moment the problem is in not having clear cut holidays, as
my clients are not disappearing for any while, and the model is of help/reaction service. In a result, it is rather
exhausting to find yourself in that mode for over decade now, with only occasional short pieces of time grabbed to myself,
moving out of here for a brief whiles.
It turns even worse with the clients constantly looking into increase of their profits at the expense of IT corner.
Started checking for next job.
that job can easily be done from anywhere else in the world for less money
Only assuming there is no specific value of talent and accumulated knowledge. While in reality there should be some, and perhaps quite some.
Interaction can help you exchange, but obligatory exchange can waste your focus. There are no simplistic answers, there are benefits and losses in any model.
I bet it is still configurable, like it was last time I was digging how to switch default shell in Win10. It must only be that PowerShell became default that is shown for user in interactive dialogs, and only that fact of default change is bit surprising, as preferences are up to user to decide. If we are talking default in newly deployed system - it's OK, if any update would trigger default - that would mean problem in MS thinking.
Lie. Nobody was renting this, but generic hollywood crap and porn. Blue jeans or chewing gum had more impact than this.
Change came up from suppressed nation countries, that appeared to be more vivid and persistent than expected, to surf the wave of perestroika.
Expressed statements are risky, but not that invalid. There well may exist some best-in-class software, being either closed source, not money-free or both. Being available for open platform is open option, real choice. It should be no secret, that not every niche is covered by open-source siblings equally well in every regard. While matters continue to be so, platform is stronger, being covered with another option.
This approach does solve need of delicate storage, if greens were harvested for sale instead. As they are still connected to the infrastructure of their growth, it makes them not only freshest possible when buying, but also incomparably better enduring, than any other storage option.