Your second and third sentences are factually inaccurate. Carbs from many vegetables are not only allowed, but recommended (I admit I haven't seen a recent revision of the plan, so I can't say "required" anymore). Within certain specified limits.
As I recall, fruits start to come back in after the first 2 weeks.
I might agree with the first sentence, though.
Re:Responding professionally to bad customer reque
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DSL Installation Fail
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"All those moments will be lost in time, like tears in rain."
Why don't all of the like-minded Slashdotters gather their friends, everyone pitch in a few bucks, and collectively buy off a congressman or a senator?
I decided to read a couple of articles about the situation after reading the parent post. That's led me to believe that IT admins everywhere should be supporting this guy wholeheartedly. When you get down to the point of it, this is a guy getting shafted as a result of sticking to the documented policy.
I realize that it's a long-running joke around here that people don't RTFA. RTFA.
A decently competent IT department should be able to come up with several different ideas that would, if implemented, be a tenable solution to this issue without impacting the medical staff's workflow. The response you got from the grandparent post is probably the result of a mind that has been blown by the story. There are a number of things fundamentally wrong with whatever process that allowed the situation to even be possible.
"Moms and dads and people who don't normally care" probably *still* don't care. Trek is a brand. If you're not into the brand, the fact that someone retooled it isn't going to matter.
How many people are going to see this film, just because it's titled "Star Trek"? Plenty.
Conversely, there are a bunch of people who won't see it because it's "Star Trek".
If you didn't care before, you probably still don't.
If you were averse before, you probably still are.
I would have said this may be Windows XP to Vista's ME. Which is to say, ME had an extremely short life, and most people skipped it.
XP was the most direct successor to ME, not 2000. Cairo was NT4. By most accounts, 2000 actually worked comparatively well out of the box.
I would also go so far as to say some people had no choice but to move to XP when they found that new games wouldn't install at all under 98, and required a little hacking to install under 2000. Not a problem with the game, but the installers doing a version check.
Look up the Lautenberg Amendment of 1996, I believe.
No, they keep claiming $40 per paycheck. Most people are paid every other week. Which maths out to $1040 annually.
Sorry, you are mistaken. Have a look. Since the split, Mobility is responsible for all of the consumer electronics.
Your second and third sentences are factually inaccurate. Carbs from many vegetables are not only allowed, but recommended (I admit I haven't seen a recent revision of the plan, so I can't say "required" anymore). Within certain specified limits.
As I recall, fruits start to come back in after the first 2 weeks.
I might agree with the first sentence, though.
"All those moments will be lost in time, like tears in rain."
It has been said that a good thing is capable of selling itself.
Would you have the government outlaw libraries, then?
It's the same issue.
How is your statement related to the price of tea in China?
How can I DUI? I don't have my car keys.
Why don't all of the like-minded Slashdotters gather their friends, everyone pitch in a few bucks, and collectively buy off a congressman or a senator?
It works for everyone else...
I thought it was Kurt Russell.
http://blindsearch.fejus.com/
A point, followed by a counterpoint, followed by a rebuttal, countered by a request for citations, and actual citations given.
You, sir, have won Slashdot. Congratulations.
Why should things be any different? As I recall it, the standard excuse for the last 8 years was, "It's Clinton's fault."
I decided to read a couple of articles about the situation after reading the parent post. That's led me to believe that IT admins everywhere should be supporting this guy wholeheartedly. When you get down to the point of it, this is a guy getting shafted as a result of sticking to the documented policy.
I realize that it's a long-running joke around here that people don't RTFA. RTFA.
Proper firewalls do more than simply block ports.
I suspect that your intent is sarcasm, but some would agree on those points.
A decently competent IT department should be able to come up with several different ideas that would, if implemented, be a tenable solution to this issue without impacting the medical staff's workflow. The response you got from the grandparent post is probably the result of a mind that has been blown by the story. There are a number of things fundamentally wrong with whatever process that allowed the situation to even be possible.
"Moms and dads and people who don't normally care" probably *still* don't care. Trek is a brand. If you're not into the brand, the fact that someone retooled it isn't going to matter.
How many people are going to see this film, just because it's titled "Star Trek"? Plenty.
Conversely, there are a bunch of people who won't see it because it's "Star Trek".
If you didn't care before, you probably still don't.
If you were averse before, you probably still are.
It's unfortunate that no one modded this "interesting".
Says you.
Windows 2000 was the OS Slashdot decided they would like.
There was a good reason.
I would have said this may be Windows XP to Vista's ME. Which is to say, ME had an extremely short life, and most people skipped it.
XP was the most direct successor to ME, not 2000. Cairo was NT4. By most accounts, 2000 actually worked comparatively well out of the box.
I would also go so far as to say some people had no choice but to move to XP when they found that new games wouldn't install at all under 98, and required a little hacking to install under 2000. Not a problem with the game, but the installers doing a version check.
You would be surprised at how many low-income homes have cable.