Here in Kansas City, they like concentrating high powered cell towers on top of old folk's retirement "condominiums." Down the street, the top of such a building looks like an old AT&T radar repeater station, but with high powered cell phone antennas. I compared the antennas with the pictures of an online vendor and it seems each one of those 27 antennas are rated for 1500 watts each. Pretty effective for stomping on the noise floor.
Interesting physics you've got there, relating power and bandwidth. You know radio is one of the places where the proper definition of bandwidth is applicable?
We actually did the math back when we built modems in engineering school:
Is this the idea? Help consolidate the market, so you have only 2-3 major distros to sue eventually for patent infringement?
There's always going to be change. That's why I recommend grabbing the small script to generate your own Linux distribution. With the only investment being a DNS registration for your new site, run the distro build script, watch it generate user forums with its AI to help build your wiki site, wait for Microsoft to send the forms, sign them, and wait for the multimillion dollar check.
I can confirm Vonage's sleazy retention game. You forgot the very thick accent of the person that you eventually reach after an hour's worth of pushbutton and wait hell. Not to mention the poor bitrate of their offshored support location. I had to get the message across by putting the bills in dispute with my credit card company. Vonage does NOT want to have complaints on their merchant accounts. The day after they discovered they couldn't bill me, I got a call the NEXT day by someone who spoke ENGLISH very well. I had to argue with that guy for 15 minutes why it took 9 MONTHS to cancel my account with a credit stop. My account was promptly cancelled and I was more than refunded the difference.
I'm currently happy with my VoIP from Packet8. The one time in the last year I had to call them, I got someone who spoke English and took care of my needs right away. Just like Vonage, I never had a problem with bandwidth. But its nice talking to a local. Those are the things that could save Vonage, but it may be too late. Vonage used to be a good company before they outsourced their baby.
No. A reasonable resolution would be compensation for time and money to respond to a poor case with awful "evidence" and absolutely no detective work. $3,000 for the defense perhaps?
since the head of the FCC is a former AT&T lobbying professional, I'm sure they will be able to see the evil in Google's willingness to compete and provide better services. Poor AT&T keeps facing new competitors every year. Its a tough playing field when other people keep bringing out new and better services. The FCC needs to put an end to Google's ideas and bring us back to the old telephone and online pricing models.
You can be sure the tobacco industry is funding this research. Its survival among any large company to fund research. No matter how innocent a product is made, such as tennis shoes, there's always some negative image. Research is the key to make *some* good to outweigh the bad. There's grants and scholarships to universities in exchange for IP rights. They are granting HUGE amounts to contractors in the sciences to come up with anything seemingly useful.
If the tobacco companies ignore research, marijuana might end up being the medicinal drug. And that's going to be a hard cash cow for a currently legal business to milk.
...but...but...if you are the local telephone provider, isn't it a basic legal requirement to provide basic access to everyone? Fiber sounds like whole new animal than basic service.
I'm not from there, but isn't their cable service in the area? Do the cable service offer BASIC TELEPHONE SERVICE AT NO EXTRA CHARGE? If not, then Verizon is violating the law.
Wait until the descendants of Johnny Appleseed goes on the Crusades and start wiping out non-apples. You'll see nothing but red apples on the zion horizon.
Why call the lawyers? I'm going through the paper and WRITING the employers. My current drafts are rather rough and abrasive, but I expect the tone and clarity to improve over the weeks. I'd imagine some HR managers who are fed up with the system might take the bait. The former HR manager at my company got fired for openly venting about these complaints and admitting part of the problem.
and does it include every CPU and GPU core, toaster, and cell phone?
Where the telephone companies are just small groups of the Skull and Bones Order.
Here in Kansas City, they like concentrating high powered cell towers on top of old folk's retirement "condominiums." Down the street, the top of such a building looks like an old AT&T radar repeater station, but with high powered cell phone antennas. I compared the antennas with the pictures of an online vendor and it seems each one of those 27 antennas are rated for 1500 watts each. Pretty effective for stomping on the noise floor.
Interesting physics you've got there, relating power and bandwidth. You know radio is one of the places where the proper definition of bandwidth is applicable?
l ey_theorem
We actually did the math back when we built modems in engineering school:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shannon%E2%80%93Hart
Notice the article conveniently omitted any technical details, like how many WATTS are transmitted.
If your tower is talking to hundreds or thousands of phones, the transmit power has to go up or the bandwidth will go down.
Is this the idea? Help consolidate the market, so you have only 2-3 major distros to sue eventually for patent infringement?
There's always going to be change. That's why I recommend grabbing the small script to generate your own Linux distribution. With the only investment being a DNS registration for your new site, run the distro build script, watch it generate user forums with its AI to help build your wiki site, wait for Microsoft to send the forms, sign them, and wait for the multimillion dollar check.
Profit!
telnet is for weenies.
netcat is for men.
In plain English with a little bit of background.
.from the view of a rifle scope.
Microsoft made the business decision to watch this standard grow . .
I can confirm Vonage's sleazy retention game. You forgot the very thick accent of the person that you eventually reach after an hour's worth of pushbutton and wait hell. Not to mention the poor bitrate of their offshored support location. I had to get the message across by putting the bills in dispute with my credit card company. Vonage does NOT want to have complaints on their merchant accounts. The day after they discovered they couldn't bill me, I got a call the NEXT day by someone who spoke ENGLISH very well. I had to argue with that guy for 15 minutes why it took 9 MONTHS to cancel my account with a credit stop. My account was promptly cancelled and I was more than refunded the difference.
I'm currently happy with my VoIP from Packet8. The one time in the last year I had to call them, I got someone who spoke English and took care of my needs right away. Just like Vonage, I never had a problem with bandwidth. But its nice talking to a local. Those are the things that could save Vonage, but it may be too late. Vonage used to be a good company before they outsourced their baby.
Sometimes I wonder if people even know what Linux is, let alone the GPL
That's GNU3/Linux. Please get it right.
No. A reasonable resolution would be compensation for time and money to respond to a poor case with awful "evidence" and absolutely no detective work. $3,000 for the defense perhaps?
since the head of the FCC is a former AT&T lobbying professional, I'm sure they will be able to see the evil in Google's willingness to compete and provide better services. Poor AT&T keeps facing new competitors every year. Its a tough playing field when other people keep bringing out new and better services. The FCC needs to put an end to Google's ideas and bring us back to the old telephone and online pricing models.
The gnome desktop for years has been hiding processes that h0rk the cpu.
You can be sure the tobacco industry is funding this research. Its survival among any large company to fund research. No matter how innocent a product is made, such as tennis shoes, there's always some negative image. Research is the key to make *some* good to outweigh the bad. There's grants and scholarships to universities in exchange for IP rights. They are granting HUGE amounts to contractors in the sciences to come up with anything seemingly useful.
If the tobacco companies ignore research, marijuana might end up being the medicinal drug. And that's going to be a hard cash cow for a currently legal business to milk.
A $45 six pack of Coke?
/ 5469
http://www.dailykos.com/storyonly/2006/11/4/18128
http://sam.zoy.org/pwntcha/
I want it for the Blu-Ray too. They make great laser pointers. Not sure what I'd do with rest of the hardware.
...but...but...if you are the local telephone provider, isn't it a basic legal requirement to provide basic access to everyone? Fiber sounds like whole new animal than basic service.
Where are the lawyers arguing this?
I'm not from there, but isn't their cable service in the area? Do the cable service offer BASIC TELEPHONE SERVICE AT NO EXTRA CHARGE? If not, then Verizon is violating the law.
And don't forget to create a new obscure encryption just like CSS and ACSS. Surely no one will be able to find the key to a hologram!
So all that's needed is a 4 digit number to bypass the freeze ?
Hopefully, its not the same four digit WEP number on my wireless router or luggage.
So -- was the code really stolen?
They should have used Bill Gates' precident: removing code from a dumpster. That went unchallenged for years and now that method is not enforceable.
"The glorious MEEPT would like to bring all the divided factions of linux into one big divided faction.
http://slashdot.org/~MEEPT!!/
I love these Apple "lovers".
Wait until the descendants of Johnny Appleseed goes on the Crusades and start wiping out non-apples. You'll see nothing but red apples on the zion horizon.
Call them up and express your displeasure...
Complaints work! but...
Why call the lawyers? I'm going through the paper and WRITING the employers. My current drafts are rather rough and abrasive, but I expect the tone and clarity to improve over the weeks. I'd imagine some HR managers who are fed up with the system might take the bait. The former HR manager at my company got fired for openly venting about these complaints and admitting part of the problem.