Here is a copy of the new privacy policy. From what I now the new policy takes effect on May 15. eBay asks new site users to provide their addresses and phone numbers but does not sell such information to outside parties.
The new policy makes clear, however, that eBay or its subsidiaries could merge with or be acquired by another business entity. Should such a combination occur, you should expect that eBay would share some or all of your information in order to continue to provide "service".
I think that consumers should have the option of wether to buy these features or not. As the article said: Until now, no matter how cynical the software manufacturer's part of the annual upgrade dance, it took two to Tango, and those who didn't want to upgrade anymore could just step off the dance floor. This means that basically they are saying Forgot you! Users never requested a sharp reduction in the functionality of their machines, no notice was given that the machines would be downgraded in this way, and the users, who must of necessity tie to the TV logs to use the device, had no way of avoiding the damage that was done!
well, Just because you have something that is very good at one job, doesn't mean it's bad for another.
BSD is a desktop OS and has been here since there were desktop-sized machines that could run it. The same is true of any OS "server" that can drive a combination of things while setting in a box that is built in or nearby. I have to say though that I agree with you. BSD is very nice.
It seems that this theory has been tried out before. From what I know this did not work. The company was Crypto punks. This company was a pioneer in crypto in the early 90's. Anyway they told people that people could do transactions with them using crypto credits. I don't now what happened to this company. It was mentioned in the book Crypto . Does anyone know what happened??
I agree. Since its a International space station, every country has an equal share in it and all decisions should be done equally. Russia has stepped out of line!
Any idea why they want it. I mean, if its for our 'safety' then okay. But if its just so we have no privacy, then i dont think so! sounds to me like something like big brother!
reporters are always looking for good stories. with all this take about spam and such, its no wonder that a story like this occurs. I mean people do want to know the 'faces' behind all the spam. I like to thing of it like something like the Scarlet of Pimpernel.
The question really is what you will put in your course. I mean there is plenty of info on computers and such. The hard part I think will be what to put and what to not to put in. My question is will you take about Crypto? If you are, here are 2 great books: Crypto by Steven Levy and Codebreakers by David Kahn. You might of seen the book review of Crypto on Slashdot but I dont think Codebreakers has been featured in a Slashdot book review.
It seems to me that the only reason AMD is doing this is because AMD is riding an unprecedented wave of success in the processor market. AMD has made enormous strides and each set of quarterly results seems to herald a new record in terms of overall sales and net
income.
I saw the movie a few days ago and I thought it was pretty good. As you said it does have some hollywood yarn. Here is what I know that actually happened: The russians in the chemical works of Stalingrad had set up a sniper school under the leadership of Vasily Zaitsev, a onetime shepard that had perfected his shooting in the urals hunting deer. In one 10-day peroid Vasily had killed 40 germans, making his fame soar. The germans reacted by sending SS Colonel Heinz Thorwald, the head of their own sniper school. In real life VAsily was hunting for the german, not the opposite. Anyway they followed him for many days until they finally found him. Here Danilov, the political officer, came with. Danilov found him and jumped up only to be wounded by the german. So Kulikov, a fellow sniper, raised a helmet over the wall. The german fired, and Kulikov faked a scream in agony. The german thinking he had killed Vasily, jumped out of his postion, Vasily, who was waiting for such a moment fired and killed him. Vasily killed 242 germans before he was blinded by a land mine.
I always was sure Microsoft was in some murky waters. I mean Microsoft has been so far winning in its monoply case. I think this is done with the help of someone on the inside. They help microsoft, Microsoft helps them. As the article said: Which just happens is that they have picked up the gig. The two companies have supplanted Microsoft (and anything else American) and will be producing a secure, home-grown system that the German military can be confident. So long Microsoft. The revolution has begun!
From what I know about Goddards, there were no big headlines, and the man who changed the world that day - Robert Hutchings Goddard - was greeted with far more skepticism than praise when he launched his 101/2-pound rocket. But Goddard was certain that someday, rockets based on his designs would take people to the moon, and even to Mars. People taunted him. Little did he know!
Maybe Goddards launch was true, but the Appolo missions were fake. If you look in some of the pictures you can see string and what looks like some cable wire!
This is a very complex issue. First of all you get into the topic of a Country's rules and enforcement on the web. That in itself is very complex. I think each site should comply with that of the country's rules if it has any specific business in that country. For example: Some site breaks some obscure decency law in some tiny village somewhere in a particular country. Most likely the country will take the side of that village for breaking a law that is even the most obscure. That certin country's government will take the side of the village because they want the support of the people. This is very important in Europe especially. Now the government takes the side of the village and complains to the site. This gets the site in hot water. If nothing happens there, then the country's government complains to the government of where the site is based in(most likely the U.S.) Thus all this complainig causes a international scandal that may get everyone involved in hot water.
Diplomacy is the art of letting people have your way
Well the question is wether An online voting system provides a standardized database architecture that integrates editorial and production processes? The
voting system has a survey database to store multiple surveys and a server to serve the surveys over a network (e.g., the
Internet) to readers. Each survey consists of one or more questions and multiple answer options per question
I noticed some suttle differances yesterday. If you searched on Wednesday for "Oops," hoping to find the Britney Spears song I noticed some suttle differences yesterday. For example if you searched for "Oops... I did it again!", you would find the song. But there are now only two or three different versions of the song, where in the past there might have been dozens. There are still many copies of "Oops... I Farted Again," the Weird Al Yankovic parody of the song.
From the article: but that it's now online for you to watch (only if
you want to). Please be advised there is some coarse language (well what
some people may consider coarse) in it, if we'd have to rate it, we'd say it's
PG-13. Hope you enjoy it! if you don't, please email us and hurt our feelings.
From the article: A new Sims Online version of the game is being planned for launch in February that would require the purchase of software to be played through the Web site EA.com.
The Series being developed is a live-action sitcom about a normal family, called the McNallys, that move into Sim City, said Danny Bilson, VP of intellectual properties for EA, and executive producer and writer of the planned show.
The '50s-style program would have a host named Bill Simmons. Every week a new character created by a real-life consumer at Sims Online would be introduced along with the creator, who would be flown in. The family and host will migrate online, interacting with real players at EA.com.
Here is a copy of the new privacy policy. From what I now the new policy takes effect on May 15. eBay asks new site users to provide their addresses and phone numbers but does not sell such information to outside parties. The new policy makes clear, however, that eBay or its subsidiaries could merge with or be acquired by another business entity. Should such a combination occur, you should expect that eBay would share some or all of your information in order to continue to provide "service".
I think that consumers should have the option of wether to buy these features or not. As the article said: Until now, no matter how cynical the software manufacturer's part of the annual upgrade dance, it took two to Tango, and those who didn't want to upgrade anymore could just step off the dance floor. This means that basically they are saying Forgot you! Users never requested a sharp reduction in the functionality of their machines, no notice was given that the machines would be downgraded in this way, and the users, who must of necessity tie to the TV logs to use the device, had no way of avoiding the damage that was done!
well, Just because you have something that is very good at one job, doesn't mean it's bad for another. BSD is a desktop OS and has been here since there were desktop-sized machines that could run it. The same is true of any OS "server" that can drive a combination of things while setting in a box that is built in or nearby. I have to say though that I agree with you. BSD is very nice.
It seems that this theory has been tried out before. From what I know this did not work. The company was Crypto punks. This company was a pioneer in crypto in the early 90's. Anyway they told people that people could do transactions with them using crypto credits. I don't now what happened to this company. It was mentioned in the book Crypto . Does anyone know what happened??
I agree. Since its a International space station, every country has an equal share in it and all decisions should be done equally. Russia has stepped out of line!
Thanks. I must of missed that while reading the article. Thanks again for clarifing
Any idea why they want it. I mean, if its for our 'safety' then okay. But if its just so we have no privacy, then i dont think so! sounds to me like something like big brother!
I know a certin federal agencie (NSA) which will be putting these cray computers on their wishlist!
reporters are always looking for good stories. with all this take about spam and such, its no wonder that a story like this occurs. I mean people do want to know the 'faces' behind all the spam. I like to thing of it like something like the Scarlet of Pimpernel.
The question really is what you will put in your course. I mean there is plenty of info on computers and such. The hard part I think will be what to put and what to not to put in. My question is will you take about Crypto? If you are, here are 2 great books: Crypto by Steven Levy and Codebreakers by David Kahn. You might of seen the book review of Crypto on Slashdot but I dont think Codebreakers has been featured in a Slashdot book review.
It seems to me that the only reason AMD is doing this is because AMD is riding an unprecedented wave of success in the processor market. AMD has made enormous strides and each set of quarterly results seems to herald a new record in terms of overall sales and net income.
Beautiful scenes, Crappy actors. Good script, bad use of grapics. The question is, to be or not to be!
I saw the movie a few days ago and I thought it was pretty good. As you said it does have some hollywood yarn. Here is what I know that actually happened: The russians in the chemical works of Stalingrad had set up a sniper school under the leadership of Vasily Zaitsev, a onetime shepard that had perfected his shooting in the urals hunting deer. In one 10-day peroid Vasily had killed 40 germans, making his fame soar. The germans reacted by sending SS Colonel Heinz Thorwald, the head of their own sniper school. In real life VAsily was hunting for the german, not the opposite. Anyway they followed him for many days until they finally found him. Here Danilov, the political officer, came with. Danilov found him and jumped up only to be wounded by the german. So Kulikov, a fellow sniper, raised a helmet over the wall. The german fired, and Kulikov faked a scream in agony. The german thinking he had killed Vasily, jumped out of his postion, Vasily, who was waiting for such a moment fired and killed him. Vasily killed 242 germans before he was blinded by a land mine.
I was thinking more along the lines of popcorn kernals. I can see it now: "Look ma, its raining popcorn!"
I always was sure Microsoft was in some murky waters. I mean Microsoft has been so far winning in its monoply case. I think this is done with the help of someone on the inside. They help microsoft, Microsoft helps them. As the article said: Which just happens is that they have picked up the gig. The two companies have supplanted Microsoft (and anything else American) and will be producing a secure, home-grown system that the German military can be confident. So long Microsoft. The revolution has begun!
Thank God we wont have to eat all that "spam" up now.
Sorry! I was not aware that those features were stated in the Article! Diplomacy is the art of letting people have your way
From what I know about Goddards, there were no big headlines, and the man who changed the world that day - Robert Hutchings Goddard - was greeted with far more skepticism than praise when he launched his 101/2-pound rocket. But Goddard was certain that someday, rockets based on his designs would take people to the moon, and even to Mars. People taunted him. Little did he know!
Maybe Goddards launch was true, but the Appolo missions were fake. If you look in some of the pictures you can see string and what looks like some cable wire!
This is a very complex issue. First of all you get into the topic of a Country's rules and enforcement on the web. That in itself is very complex. I think each site should comply with that of the country's rules if it has any specific business in that country. For example: Some site breaks some obscure decency law in some tiny village somewhere in a particular country. Most likely the country will take the side of that village for breaking a law that is even the most obscure. That certin country's government will take the side of the village because they want the support of the people. This is very important in Europe especially. Now the government takes the side of the village and complains to the site. This gets the site in hot water. If nothing happens there, then the country's government complains to the government of where the site is based in(most likely the U.S.) Thus all this complainig causes a international scandal that may get everyone involved in hot water.
Diplomacy is the art of letting people have your way
Well the question is wether An online voting system provides a standardized database architecture that integrates editorial and production processes? The voting system has a survey database to store multiple surveys and a server to serve the surveys over a network (e.g., the Internet) to readers. Each survey consists of one or more questions and multiple answer options per question
I noticed some suttle differances yesterday. If you searched on Wednesday for "Oops," hoping to find the Britney Spears song I noticed some suttle differences yesterday. For example if you searched for "Oops ... I did it again!", you would find the song. But there are now only two or three different versions of the song, where in the past there might have been dozens. There are still many copies of "Oops ... I Farted Again," the Weird Al Yankovic parody of the song.
I guess it was Galileo's dream to continue.
From the article: but that it's now online for you to watch (only if you want to). Please be advised there is some coarse language (well what some people may consider coarse) in it, if we'd have to rate it, we'd say it's PG-13. Hope you enjoy it! if you don't, please email us and hurt our feelings.
From the article: A new Sims Online version of the game is being planned for launch in February that would require the purchase of software to be played through the Web site EA.com. The Series being developed is a live-action sitcom about a normal family, called the McNallys, that move into Sim City, said Danny Bilson, VP of intellectual properties for EA, and executive producer and writer of the planned show. The '50s-style program would have a host named Bill Simmons. Every week a new character created by a real-life consumer at Sims Online would be introduced along with the creator, who would be flown in. The family and host will migrate online, interacting with real players at EA.com.