Chevrolet is making the Bolt so they can keep making the Suburban, Corvette, etc. Same reason BMW is making their electric vehicles, so they can keep making the M series.
Without the regulations and incentives that cause legacy automakers to produce "compliance" cars, Tesla would not exist at all.
If you need root privileges to run a package manager, then the installed packages are only root writeable. If they would be owned by an ordinary user you would not need root privileges.
I understand that. The same principles apply in Windows. It's as if you weren't even reading what I wrote.
Reboots are completely unnecessary, if the system is done right. Unless you want to load a new kernel, or rare cases a new device driver, there is no reason at all.
I understand that you're a big Linux fan and you think Windows is the worst thing to ever grace humanity, but I was talking about the reason for needing reboots in Windows, since that's what the parent was talking about.
It's also interesting that after an installation there's actually a need to have system privileges for all updates.
Why is that interesting? Every Linux package manager I've ever used uses root privileges to update app packages. Complex permission schemes are possible in both Windows and Linux. People don't use them in either because they are not worth the trouble.
Of course app updates should require higher privileges than user level
No, they shouldn't. Apps that are installed in the user's profile only need user's permissions to update.
But given that it's Microsoft then you'd need a reboot too.
The need for reboots has nothing to do with permissions.
Probably. Or you could sign the libraries and executables. This is a common type of vulnerability that shouldn't happen, but does, due to laziness, but it is also relatively easy to fix. The summary's claim of a "massive code rewrite" being needed is sensationalist BS.
...how would one explain the fact that *all* mainstream media basically regurgitated the government's position in previous [unfortunate and unnecessary] wars?
The United States is an oligarchy and those media conglomerates that promoted the war have financial ties to the military/industrial complex.
They probably use federation to log into their gmail accounts; something like Shibboleth or ADFS or CAS. When the power went down, their federation server went down with it, which locked everyone out of their email accounts. At my work we use Office 365 and ADFS to do federated logins. We've generally don't have extended outages, so this hasn't been a problem, but some schools with more flaky architecture have elected to place backups of their AD domain/LDAP/SAML infrastructure in the cloud to prevent these types of outages.
Even most Western European countries are only as wealthy as say, Mississippi or Alabama in the U.S.
Really?
Which ones make up that majority?
The EU average GDP per capita appears to be right around Southern "shithole" state territory, but that average is dragged down by Eastern European countries, not Western European countries.
Here is a quick list I looked up. This is GDP per capita.
Even a 25% increase in payroll would put them out of business.
Nonsense. Payroll is only minority portion of their total overhead. A 25% increase in payroll would raising total overhead costs by around 10%. They would simply raise the price of their products to cover the additional overhead and easily maintain their profit margins.
I worked at McDonald's when minimum wage was $5.25 and saw their internal cost sheets, which included calculated labor costs. A typical food item cost more in product than labor to make. At that time, the slice of cheese on a cheeseburger was $0.20, which was about three times the labor cost.
If you're pirating MLB, NHL, or NBA games, it's because you're too cheap to pay for them.
MLB does the same thing though. I'm a Dodger fan and a cord cutter. I can't stream Dodger games because I am in their media market.
My only choice is to pay ~$60-$100 a month for some Cable/Satellite/Streaming TV service. Since I don't watch TV (Canceled my DirecTV service eight years ago), this is a non-starter.
People who want to get rid of government generally imagine themselves as being more successful once that government is gone
I think some of them might imagine themselves in a world immediately post-government, where all of the benefits of civilization are still in place but none of the restrictions apply.
With it not being in the subsequent beta release and no other previous releases, I'm guessing it's a back door intended for Q/A purposes that was accidentally left in the code.
Oh Please. You know NO ONE in that demographic. You have no idea what you're talking about.
I live in CA and do know many people in this demographic and would love it if you would elaborate on what exactly this person doesn't know.
In the rest of the country, you simply don't need that sort of thing nearly as badly because you aren't nearly as desperate to have both members of a household working.
CA is an extremely large and economically diverse state. My CA congressional district is consistently ranked as one of the poorest in the nation and the cost of living comparable to your average Podunk area in the Midwest.
And I love how you assume each of these households has two breadwinners. Talk about having no idea what you're talking about.
Which, I can tell you from direct experience, is still too much to the bean counters. For most educational institutions, there are very few serious regulatory incentives to spend adequate resources on security.
It is my understanding that CR gets reliability data by surveying actual owners. But there are virtually no Model 3 owners right now, so that's out of the the question.
They buy the cars they test on the retail market to make sure manufacturers don't game the system by giving them a special model, so testing one is also out of the question right now.
The last thing Republicans want is e-verify. Republican's secretly love our broken system. It makes their labor easier to exploit and keeps down wages. Mandatory e-verify would destroy the agricultural industry as is it.
Not that that would be a bad thing.
The local farmers where I am were all in for Trump, putting giant billboard-sized Trump signs in all of their fields. Now they are crying fowl because of labor shortages.
Chevrolet is making the Bolt so they can keep making the Suburban, Corvette, etc.
Same reason BMW is making their electric vehicles, so they can keep making the M series.
Without the regulations and incentives that cause legacy automakers to produce "compliance" cars, Tesla would not exist at all.
If you need root privileges to run a package manager, then the installed packages are only root writeable.
If they would be owned by an ordinary user you would not need root privileges.
I understand that. The same principles apply in Windows. It's as if you weren't even reading what I wrote.
Reboots are completely unnecessary, if the system is done right. Unless you want to load a new kernel, or rare cases a new device driver, there is no reason at all.
I understand that you're a big Linux fan and you think Windows is the worst thing to ever grace humanity, but I was talking about the reason for needing reboots in Windows, since that's what the parent was talking about.
It's also interesting that after an installation there's actually a need to have system privileges for all updates.
Why is that interesting? Every Linux package manager I've ever used uses root privileges to update app packages. Complex permission schemes are possible in both Windows and Linux. People don't use them in either because they are not worth the trouble.
Of course app updates should require higher privileges than user level
No, they shouldn't. Apps that are installed in the user's profile only need user's permissions to update.
But given that it's Microsoft then you'd need a reboot too.
The need for reboots has nothing to do with permissions.
Thanks for the info.
In this particular case it's one executable using another, not a DLL being called.
Probably. Or you could sign the libraries and executables. This is a common type of vulnerability that shouldn't happen, but does, due to laziness, but it is also relatively easy to fix. The summary's claim of a "massive code rewrite" being needed is sensationalist BS.
Zing!!
...how would one explain the fact that *all* mainstream media basically regurgitated the government's position in previous [unfortunate and unnecessary] wars?
The United States is an oligarchy and those media conglomerates that promoted the war have financial ties to the military/industrial complex.
In socialist BC, canada. Our power is a government run company. Takes a lot of the safety issues away from cheapskate corporations.
And yet the rates are still cheap. Imagine that!
mises.org, the Austrian economics advocacy group? Sure.
They probably use federation to log into their gmail accounts; something like Shibboleth or ADFS or CAS. When the power went down, their federation server went down with it, which locked everyone out of their email accounts. At my work we use Office 365 and ADFS to do federated logins. We've generally don't have extended outages, so this hasn't been a problem, but some schools with more flaky architecture have elected to place backups of their AD domain/LDAP/SAML infrastructure in the cloud to prevent these types of outages.
Game crash in Windows:
- full system lockup
- hard reboot
1996 called. They want their Microsoft dig back...and if you still have it, that Sublime CD you borrowed.
Even most Western European countries are only as wealthy as say, Mississippi or Alabama in the U.S.
Really?
Which ones make up that majority?
The EU average GDP per capita appears to be right around Southern "shithole" state territory, but that average is dragged down by Eastern European countries, not Western European countries.
Here is a quick list I looked up. This is GDP per capita.
Norway - $52111
Germany - $45552
France- $42013
Britain (UK) - $41603
Italy - $34284
Alabama - $37,402
EU Average - $35632
Mississippi - $32,102
Spain - $31450
Of course, income distribution and the fact that every European countries guarantees or subsidizes health care also affects the quality of life.
Sources:
https://tradingeconomics.com/countries
https://www.opendatanetwork.com/entity/0400000US01-0400000US28/Alabama-Mississippi/economy.gdp.per_capita_gdp?year=2016
Even a 25% increase in payroll would put them out of business.
Nonsense. Payroll is only minority portion of their total overhead. A 25% increase in payroll would raising total overhead costs by around 10%. They would simply raise the price of their products to cover the additional overhead and easily maintain their profit margins.
I worked at McDonald's when minimum wage was $5.25 and saw their internal cost sheets, which included calculated labor costs. A typical food item cost more in product than labor to make. At that time, the slice of cheese on a cheeseburger was $0.20, which was about three times the labor cost.
$50 an hour would be a challenge.
The repeal of Net Neutrality will work great. Just like Trickle Down Theory. Abtrinance is a great way to prevent youth getting pregnant
Do we have others?
For profit prisons are the free market in action.
Tax cuts increase revenue.
Sorry to hear about your bad luck.
We have about 300 HP ProBooks (6460/6470/G1/G2) in the hands of users here at work. They have had a very low failure rate.
If you're pirating MLB, NHL, or NBA games, it's because you're too cheap to pay for them.
MLB does the same thing though. I'm a Dodger fan and a cord cutter. I can't stream Dodger games because I am in their media market.
My only choice is to pay ~$60-$100 a month for some Cable/Satellite/Streaming TV service. Since I don't watch TV (Canceled my DirecTV service eight years ago), this is a non-starter.
People who want to get rid of government generally imagine themselves as being more successful once that government is gone
I think some of them might imagine themselves in a world immediately post-government, where all of the benefits of civilization are still in place but none of the restrictions apply.
Correction?: I see one comment claiming it works in 13.2 and a couple claiming that it only works in 13.1
With it not being in the subsequent beta release and no other previous releases, I'm guessing it's a back door intended for Q/A purposes that was accidentally left in the code.
Because on a large scale Macs are more expensive up front to purchase and cost more in labor to maintain.
Oh Please. You know NO ONE in that demographic. You have no idea what you're talking about.
I live in CA and do know many people in this demographic and would love it if you would elaborate on what exactly this person doesn't know.
In the rest of the country, you simply don't need that sort of thing nearly as badly because you aren't nearly as desperate to have both members of a household working.
CA is an extremely large and economically diverse state. My CA congressional district is consistently ranked as one of the poorest in the nation and the cost of living comparable to your average Podunk area in the Midwest.
And I love how you assume each of these households has two breadwinners. Talk about having no idea what you're talking about.
Which, I can tell you from direct experience, is still too much to the bean counters. For most educational institutions, there are very few serious regulatory incentives to spend adequate resources on security.
It is my understanding that CR gets reliability data by surveying actual owners. But there are virtually no Model 3 owners right now, so that's out of the the question.
They buy the cars they test on the retail market to make sure manufacturers don't game the system by giving them a special model, so testing one is also out of the question right now.
Do you Know how much CO2 has been emitted in China in Order to produce your solar cells and batteries ???
Over the lifetime, it ends up being far less than a internal combustion powered vehicle. Oil company propaganda is (literally) bad for your health.
either wall funding or mandatory e-Verify
The last thing Republicans want is e-verify. Republican's secretly love our broken system. It makes their labor easier to exploit and keeps down wages. Mandatory e-verify would destroy the agricultural industry as is it.
Not that that would be a bad thing.
The local farmers where I am were all in for Trump, putting giant billboard-sized Trump signs in all of their fields. Now they are crying fowl because of labor shortages.