I don't see the problem with this. I got a 23 on my ACT (an acceptable but not great score). I graduated from university Magna Cum Laude.
I've always done terrible on standardized tests but I do very well on regular tests. That's been true all the way back to the fun Iowa Basics tests.
When I was still getting metal fillings my dentist always recommended I eat some eggs to cause a chemical reaction to get rid of the galvanic shocks. I never did and never really had any shock problems. My understanding is after a while there should be enough other foods with the proper chemicals to react with the fillings to make those reactions stop.
I haven't posted to Slashdot much. Looks like I'm in HTML edit mode which should have automatically put line breaks at my line breaks but as you can see it's all one blob. How do I fix this?
Did anybody read the article? Funny I know. Looks like it will work like our company's secure email used internally for PHI. When I get a secure email I get a link to the secure email system. If you're a gmail user, Google will magically make it load like a regular email. If you're running your own email server or are otherwise outside gmail, all you'll have in your system is the link.
Yes you can work around it with a screenshot or copy/paste. But the act of running your own system will not magically make it be in your system unless you do something manually like that. Maybe some wget shenanigans.
I wonder how doing that will play out with various computer usage laws in place in US or elsewhere. Same for that proton mail I saw mentioned in the article. Sure the data's in your system, but if you're told up front that you're not allowed to store it outside of their system, would that be breaking the law? Or how could it play out during e-discovery if one of these manually saved emails is found after the expiration date? So maybe not only could you be "violating" Google's access policy, but would you also "violate" the Google user who sent the message?
After the 2008 and 2012 GOP disasters (with GOP-assimilated McCain and Romney the Robot), I was hoping it would make the Republicans pull their heads out of their asses. Apparently not. Not only did they decide to double down on political stupidity, the Democrats decided to join them even more.
One of my doctors recommended I read The Digital Doctor. Generally it's about "why isn't health IT super awesome like it was supposed to be?!" It covers the focus on getting paid and other changes to practicing medicine.
I did an in-place upgrade soon after it became available. I was impressed with how well it worked. I turned off things like Cortana and I went digging to shut off the notifications tray. Since then I haven't really done any big tinkering with it and it's worked well for my day to day use. I did play with adding a list of MS DNS names to my DNS block list on my router to try to cut down on the stats gathering. No idea how much that has or hasn't helped.
Tech has been humming along in MN for a while. Apparently not based on absolute size. I'm going off what I know about the job market and what types of companies are in the MSP metro area. Minneapolis has quite a bit. There's also a decent tech cluster in the Bloomington, Edina, and Eden Prairie cluster of cities in the suburbs.
The counterpoint is somebody like me who has actually used more fancy features once exposed in the ribbon in Office instead of never being able to find or remember where rarely used things lived in the crazy menus. At the same time I don't do a lot of work in Office. Frequently enough to be annoyed I could never remember where some things were and infrequently enough I never really remembered because of lack of use.
I don't see the problem with this. I got a 23 on my ACT (an acceptable but not great score). I graduated from university Magna Cum Laude. I've always done terrible on standardized tests but I do very well on regular tests. That's been true all the way back to the fun Iowa Basics tests.
When I was still getting metal fillings my dentist always recommended I eat some eggs to cause a chemical reaction to get rid of the galvanic shocks. I never did and never really had any shock problems. My understanding is after a while there should be enough other foods with the proper chemicals to react with the fillings to make those reactions stop.
Oops, responding as me.
Why would adopting additional children be considered bad?
When I posted this, I had blank lines between paragraphs. Looks like they got eaten into one line break.
I see the line breaks now. Thanks.
I haven't posted to Slashdot much. Looks like I'm in HTML edit mode which should have automatically put line breaks at my line breaks but as you can see it's all one blob. How do I fix this?
Did anybody read the article? Funny I know. Looks like it will work like our company's secure email used internally for PHI. When I get a secure email I get a link to the secure email system. If you're a gmail user, Google will magically make it load like a regular email. If you're running your own email server or are otherwise outside gmail, all you'll have in your system is the link.
Yes you can work around it with a screenshot or copy/paste. But the act of running your own system will not magically make it be in your system unless you do something manually like that. Maybe some wget shenanigans.
I wonder how doing that will play out with various computer usage laws in place in US or elsewhere. Same for that proton mail I saw mentioned in the article. Sure the data's in your system, but if you're told up front that you're not allowed to store it outside of their system, would that be breaking the law? Or how could it play out during e-discovery if one of these manually saved emails is found after the expiration date? So maybe not only could you be "violating" Google's access policy, but would you also "violate" the Google user who sent the message?
After the 2008 and 2012 GOP disasters (with GOP-assimilated McCain and Romney the Robot), I was hoping it would make the Republicans pull their heads out of their asses. Apparently not. Not only did they decide to double down on political stupidity, the Democrats decided to join them even more.
I'm hoping this develops into BB pellets at some point. Could make gardening or spreading grass seed a lot more interesting!
One of my doctors recommended I read The Digital Doctor. Generally it's about "why isn't health IT super awesome like it was supposed to be?!" It covers the focus on getting paid and other changes to practicing medicine.
I did an in-place upgrade soon after it became available. I was impressed with how well it worked. I turned off things like Cortana and I went digging to shut off the notifications tray. Since then I haven't really done any big tinkering with it and it's worked well for my day to day use. I did play with adding a list of MS DNS names to my DNS block list on my router to try to cut down on the stats gathering. No idea how much that has or hasn't helped.
Tech has been humming along in MN for a while. Apparently not based on absolute size. I'm going off what I know about the job market and what types of companies are in the MSP metro area. Minneapolis has quite a bit. There's also a decent tech cluster in the Bloomington, Edina, and Eden Prairie cluster of cities in the suburbs.
The counterpoint is somebody like me who has actually used more fancy features once exposed in the ribbon in Office instead of never being able to find or remember where rarely used things lived in the crazy menus. At the same time I don't do a lot of work in Office. Frequently enough to be annoyed I could never remember where some things were and infrequently enough I never really remembered because of lack of use.