To let them do it, I had to have a note on my account and they have to show their ID when they make the deposit. The bank wouldn't permit it any other way.
I would have thought the bank would have been happy to have random strangers deposting money into accounts, but no. Not in Canada.
Incremental improvements in Sharepoint and SQL server are to be expected from Microsoft. In that time MySQL and Postgres exploded in capabilities, while DB/2 and Oracle kept their position as go-to for the top end databases.
Dropping out of their *substantial lead* in mobile phones, failing to produce a worthy successor to XP, failing to produce their next generation filesystem, fighting a dubious battle with Sony for video game consoles, watching Terraserver lose its lead in the marketplace. Losing IE's share to the upstart *Chrome* from a company younger than IE itself, watching MS Office erode to LibreOffice and fail to create a reasonable alternative to Google Docs for collaboration.
Some flops are okay, like RT. There's a handful of vague successes, like their user interface experiments, and some things I like, like OneNote. Some legitimate successful innovation like Azure, and some broad corporate successes like their incremental improvements in security management...
but overall this has been a dark and losing decade for MS.
There are now huge opportunities for them in non-cloud based data management. They have all the parts to do an awesome job at data self-determination control and privacy, but they're not even trying to move in that direction.
Meanwhile I find myself migrating from Windows to Mac because FOSS development tools on MS are becoming too alien to use properly on their platform... and MS made the decision to expire my certifications and end my Technet subscription. I'm running out of reasons to even consider MS for anything.
"There was concentration in decision making in the 80s so a platform could win by convincing 500 individuals who had the authority (as CIOs) to impose through fiat a standard on the centers of gravity of purchasing power."
Apple products were *far* more expensive in the 80's and 90's. And the OS wasn't that good.
OSX was a major change for Apple. It was a stable, modern platform with a future. The pricepoints of PCs dropping was the other major change. Now PCs are so cheap that even if a Mac is double the price, it's still affordable.
Then in the late 90's and 2000s, Microsoft scared away, aquired or killed companies which were developing apps for their platform. And finally, they put an idiot in charge and stopped innovating for more than a decade.
"... selling raw product instead of adding value..."
Mod parent up. Inco is another example of this. There's a pattern of this government and short term thinking. They're messing with the housing market, selling rights to resources and resource extraction companies, crushing scientific debate and discipline.
FTA: "A DFO scientist told the Star of recently trying to access several documents that were previously available in one of the closed libraries. They could not be found."
I think the intent with projects like this is to show that it can be done using technology and know-how available in the place where the problems exist.
Producing limbs for $100's, is *not* going to pay for the labour and consulting for a "Westerner" to do it and sustainably maintain a Western lifestyle.
But there are plenty of people in Sudan who have the motivation and means to apply the method locally. The amazing part in my mind is that using a method like this, Sudan doesn't need to depend on expensive doctors and fabrication facilities in the Western world to produce custom limbs, they can do it themselves and share their results.
"Given these hard biological facts"... not even sure what that means.
It's like the difference between looking at a fax and a laser printed page. Worse actually, since the fax has discrete black dots, whereas the 96-120dpi display renders colour by mixing rgb at a higher horizontal resolution under a fine mesh.
And laptops are often used at less than 2'. Either you're reaching with your shoulders and killing your back, or you're looking down all the time and killing your neck. Horrible ergonomics.
"They had developed this huge army, and we didn't like how they thought"
The U.S. and allies couldn't have reinforced Europe or delivered troops to Japan fast enough to hold back the Soviet army. It seems to me that dropping the bomb was to protect the armies of Western Europe and Japan from having to fight a losing battle against the Soviets.
If the Soviets would have taken the coast of Japan and the coast of France, it would have been a very different world. Japan was practically defeated when the bomb was dropped.
Dropping the bomb stopped the Soviet advancement. I don't think this was a political CYA.
The coins are behaving like a genuine new commodity with some amazing properties.
It's excellent for moving money between countries. It's stunningly good for microtransactions. It's very difficult to control companies which accept it. Those three properties alone give it a real value.
As a transactional currency, you could calculate a fundamental value as the volume of bitcoins in flux over a 45 minute interval. I.e., if I want to spend $10 on an e-book on the other side of the world, it takes 15 minutes for me to buy the coins, 15 minutes to transfer the coins and 15 minutes for the recipient to sell the coins. Those $10 are in the system and staying in the system for that period of time.
For microtransactions, you can buy objects or be paid for objects in tiny fractions of currency. This means you can charge for reading articles or watching programs without all the money going to the credit card companies or having to pay for a monthly subscription. Nothing else does this and it increases the volume of transactions, or currency in the system.
It can't be interfered with easily, so accounts which could normally be frozen could be stashed in Bitcoins and still retrieved anywhere in the world.
That stuff alone gives the coins *real* value. How much of hte $1000 valuation is "real" is unknown, but the rise from $0 to $1 is far more interesting than the rise from $1 to $1000. The fact that somebody might have owned it once at $1 doesn't matter. The coins aren't real and it's not clear what exactly is driving the market for them.
The "accounts" analogy doesn't go very far when you can create and empty a bitcoin wallet with no cost and no penalty. There are "mixing" services which take the bitcoins from multiple sources and redistribute them.
Although the mixing service seems to be analogous to going to a back alley and meeting with a dozen shady guys, all with suitcases full of money and traced serial numbers on their bills, dropping your $100k into a trash bin with all the other guys's $100k, where some guy then takes the bin into a room in the back, shuffles the money around and hopefully gives it back to you.
Tracing back these kinds of laundered coins could be very difficult, but it only seems to mask the person hiding the transaction in plausible deniability. It seems clear they're hiding something, but the law doesn't (fortunately) permit *that* to be enough to prosecute them for anything.
But with anti money laundering measures, pure mixing services are risky, transactions could be traced back through the blockchain until the police ask "so... where *did* this $200 worth of BTC come from if you didn't get it from selling crack on the Silk Road?" which I think would force you to admit to using a mixing service, which may be, or very soon be illegal.
"If Microsoft is forced to reveal in public which patents are being violated and how, it would allow the Linux community to evaluate that information and find prior art where it exists or find ways to make linux not violate the patent (e.g. kernel option to disable the relavent code or rewrite the code to not violate) and generally make it harder for MS)"
It goes a step further. The community *must* circumvent or overturn the patent because the GPL doesn't give the option of distributing patent-encumbured technologies in the code.
You can sue all you like, but you can't make any money from it. The best you can hope for is killing the technology.
This reeks of the same kind of misandrist behavior that we saw with the Adria Richards situation. A situation where 'sexual jokes are fine if your a woman, but if you have a penis, sexual jokes make you evil'.
I agree with your position about Adria Richards, but in her case, the jokes weren't about women, they were about penises and sex. She just assumed they were about women, and for whatever reason, asserted that they were degrading to women.
In this case, the jokes *were* about women, and they weren't some guys in the back of the room talking to eachother, they were two guys on the stage. They were selling an app which encourages voyeurism and harassment. It should have been weeded out by the conference before it reached the stage.
I'm not sure this would even be okay for a porn conference... the voyeur and harassment aspects are... really bad.
Created my account in January 2010, used it for a lot of stuff.
Single sign-on turns into single point of failure... again.
I'm sure as hell not going to use Google, Microsoft, Yahoo, LinkedIn, Facebook or whomever for single sign on. I have enough trouble trying to prevent people from sucking me into Google+ and keeping my Youtube account separate from my Gmail account. LinkedIn and Facebook already want to get into my email to "build my social network" further. None of these are trustworthy companies.
I guess I'm going to have to add a dozen more passwords to my password database.
The government still feels it needs to explain its actions to the media.
Yet it also feels a need to persecute people who expose some of its operations.
I mean, as opposed to just charging them with sedition and publishing it in the state owned papers as such.
You could argue that e.g. Fox calling Snowden a traitor is the same, but you won't be arrested for publicly disagreeing with Fox and calling it crap journalism.
My point is not that I agree with the actions of the U.S. I think they're violating their own constitution and playing a very unethical hand to the international community, but that comparisions of the U.S. to a police state do more to discredit a person's argument than to call people to action.
North Korea and Nazi Germany are/were military dictatorships. In a military dictatorship, there's no pretense of due process. There is one leader and if you cross them, you suffer the consequences. East Germany was very much a police state, but one could argue that it was under the control of the USSR and not that unique an example.
I think categorically denying that the U.S. is a police state is dangerous. Something very unhealthy is happening in the U.S.. People don't even feel free to talk openly about it anymore. Names are being taken down via social media and citizens are being secretly spied upon without due process. The pretense of due process is still there. Guantanamo is considered "different" and the DHS operates in a space which is also "an exception". The government still feels it needs to explain its actions to the media.
Sour and Shirley Kraut might have their own opinions, Bitter Kraut is the gp.
That's just the opinion of a bitter kraut.
Oh well, Slashdot was nice. I guess I'm going back to where I was in 1997. Reading zdnet and hanging out on various newsgroups.
1998 will be the year of Linux on the desktop!
It's how my tenants pay rent in Canada.
To let them do it, I had to have a note on my account and they have to show their ID when they make the deposit. The bank wouldn't permit it any other way.
I would have thought the bank would have been happy to have random strangers deposting money into accounts, but no. Not in Canada.
Not sure what parts aren't true.
Incremental improvements in Sharepoint and SQL server are to be expected from Microsoft. In that time MySQL and Postgres exploded in capabilities, while DB/2 and Oracle kept their position as go-to for the top end databases.
Dropping out of their *substantial lead* in mobile phones, failing to produce a worthy successor to XP, failing to produce their next generation filesystem, fighting a dubious battle with Sony for video game consoles, watching Terraserver lose its lead in the marketplace. Losing IE's share to the upstart *Chrome* from a company younger than IE itself, watching MS Office erode to LibreOffice and fail to create a reasonable alternative to Google Docs for collaboration.
Some flops are okay, like RT. There's a handful of vague successes, like their user interface experiments, and some things I like, like OneNote. Some legitimate successful innovation like Azure, and some broad corporate successes like their incremental improvements in security management...
but overall this has been a dark and losing decade for MS.
There are now huge opportunities for them in non-cloud based data management. They have all the parts to do an awesome job at data self-determination control and privacy, but they're not even trying to move in that direction.
Meanwhile I find myself migrating from Windows to Mac because FOSS development tools on MS are becoming too alien to use properly on their platform... and MS made the decision to expire my certifications and end my Technet subscription. I'm running out of reasons to even consider MS for anything.
"There was concentration in decision making in the 80s so a platform could win by convincing 500 individuals who had the authority (as CIOs) to impose through fiat a standard on the centers of gravity of purchasing power."
Apple products were *far* more expensive in the 80's and 90's. And the OS wasn't that good.
OSX was a major change for Apple. It was a stable, modern platform with a future. The pricepoints of PCs dropping was the other major change. Now PCs are so cheap that even if a Mac is double the price, it's still affordable.
Then in the late 90's and 2000s, Microsoft scared away, aquired or killed companies which were developing apps for their platform. And finally, they put an idiot in charge and stopped innovating for more than a decade.
"... selling raw product instead of adding value..."
Mod parent up. Inco is another example of this. There's a pattern of this government and short term thinking. They're messing with the housing market, selling rights to resources and resource extraction companies, crushing scientific debate and discipline.
FTA: "A DFO scientist told the Star of recently trying to access several documents that were previously available in one of the closed libraries. They could not be found."
Cut off its air supply!
Gates found a better place for his skills.
".....So you're saying you killed your classmates ?"
Jokes like this aren't funny when the dead have names and faces.
I think the intent with projects like this is to show that it can be done using technology and know-how available in the place where the problems exist.
Producing limbs for $100's, is *not* going to pay for the labour and consulting for a "Westerner" to do it and sustainably maintain a Western lifestyle.
But there are plenty of people in Sudan who have the motivation and means to apply the method locally. The amazing part in my mind is that using a method like this, Sudan doesn't need to depend on expensive doctors and fabrication facilities in the Western world to produce custom limbs, they can do it themselves and share their results.
"Given these hard biological facts"... not even sure what that means.
It's like the difference between looking at a fax and a laser printed page. Worse actually, since the fax has discrete black dots, whereas the 96-120dpi display renders colour by mixing rgb at a higher horizontal resolution under a fine mesh.
And laptops are often used at less than 2'. Either you're reaching with your shoulders and killing your back, or you're looking down all the time and killing your neck. Horrible ergonomics.
The U.S. should invade Afghanistan to make homes for nesting eagles.
"They had developed this huge army, and we didn't like how they thought"
The U.S. and allies couldn't have reinforced Europe or delivered troops to Japan fast enough to hold back the Soviet army. It seems to me that dropping the bomb was to protect the armies of Western Europe and Japan from having to fight a losing battle against the Soviets.
If the Soviets would have taken the coast of Japan and the coast of France, it would have been a very different world. Japan was practically defeated when the bomb was dropped.
Dropping the bomb stopped the Soviet advancement. I don't think this was a political CYA.
It's not a scam, but it's not clear what it is.
The coins are behaving like a genuine new commodity with some amazing properties.
It's excellent for moving money between countries. It's stunningly good for microtransactions. It's very difficult to control companies which accept it. Those three properties alone give it a real value.
As a transactional currency, you could calculate a fundamental value as the volume of bitcoins in flux over a 45 minute interval. I.e., if I want to spend $10 on an e-book on the other side of the world, it takes 15 minutes for me to buy the coins, 15 minutes to transfer the coins and 15 minutes for the recipient to sell the coins. Those $10 are in the system and staying in the system for that period of time.
For microtransactions, you can buy objects or be paid for objects in tiny fractions of currency. This means you can charge for reading articles or watching programs without all the money going to the credit card companies or having to pay for a monthly subscription. Nothing else does this and it increases the volume of transactions, or currency in the system.
It can't be interfered with easily, so accounts which could normally be frozen could be stashed in Bitcoins and still retrieved anywhere in the world.
That stuff alone gives the coins *real* value. How much of hte $1000 valuation is "real" is unknown, but the rise from $0 to $1 is far more interesting than the rise from $1 to $1000. The fact that somebody might have owned it once at $1 doesn't matter. The coins aren't real and it's not clear what exactly is driving the market for them.
Those golden parachutes are needed to encourage top talent. A reward for a job well done.
The "accounts" analogy doesn't go very far when you can create and empty a bitcoin wallet with no cost and no penalty. There are "mixing" services which take the bitcoins from multiple sources and redistribute them.
Although the mixing service seems to be analogous to going to a back alley and meeting with a dozen shady guys, all with suitcases full of money and traced serial numbers on their bills, dropping your $100k into a trash bin with all the other guys's $100k, where some guy then takes the bin into a room in the back, shuffles the money around and hopefully gives it back to you.
Tracing back these kinds of laundered coins could be very difficult, but it only seems to mask the person hiding the transaction in plausible deniability. It seems clear they're hiding something, but the law doesn't (fortunately) permit *that* to be enough to prosecute them for anything.
But with anti money laundering measures, pure mixing services are risky, transactions could be traced back through the blockchain until the police ask "so... where *did* this $200 worth of BTC come from if you didn't get it from selling crack on the Silk Road?" which I think would force you to admit to using a mixing service, which may be, or very soon be illegal.
So what plausibly legitimate business takes money from thousands of people and spreads money to thousands of others, while taking a cut for the house? https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=162807.msg1713104#msg1713104
"If Microsoft is forced to reveal in public which patents are being violated and how, it would allow the Linux community to evaluate that information and find prior art where it exists or find ways to make linux not violate the patent (e.g. kernel option to disable the relavent code or rewrite the code to not violate) and generally make it harder for MS)"
It goes a step further. The community *must* circumvent or overturn the patent because the GPL doesn't give the option of distributing patent-encumbured technologies in the code.
You can sue all you like, but you can't make any money from it. The best you can hope for is killing the technology.
Both might work.
The price of liberty is eternal vigilance, and eternal vigilance is expensive.
This needs go go beyond just overruling Bell's actions, there needs to be a serious penalty.
" his brain had unusual features which may have provided certain advantages"
Or... his life revolved around unusual studies which caused his brain to respond by developing the corpos callosum?
I agree with your position about Adria Richards, but in her case, the jokes weren't about women, they were about penises and sex. She just assumed they were about women, and for whatever reason, asserted that they were degrading to women.
In this case, the jokes *were* about women, and they weren't some guys in the back of the room talking to eachother, they were two guys on the stage. They were selling an app which encourages voyeurism and harassment. It should have been weeded out by the conference before it reached the stage.
I'm not sure this would even be okay for a porn conference... the voyeur and harassment aspects are... really bad.
Created my account in January 2010, used it for a lot of stuff.
Single sign-on turns into single point of failure... again.
I'm sure as hell not going to use Google, Microsoft, Yahoo, LinkedIn, Facebook or whomever for single sign on. I have enough trouble trying to prevent people from sucking me into Google+ and keeping my Youtube account separate from my Gmail account. LinkedIn and Facebook already want to get into my email to "build my social network" further. None of these are trustworthy companies.
I guess I'm going to have to add a dozen more passwords to my password database.
The government still feels it needs to explain its actions to the media.
Yet it also feels a need to persecute people who expose some of its operations.
I mean, as opposed to just charging them with sedition and publishing it in the state owned papers as such.
You could argue that e.g. Fox calling Snowden a traitor is the same, but you won't be arrested for publicly disagreeing with Fox and calling it crap journalism.
My point is not that I agree with the actions of the U.S. I think they're violating their own constitution and playing a very unethical hand to the international community, but that comparisions of the U.S. to a police state do more to discredit a person's argument than to call people to action.
North Korea and Nazi Germany are/were military dictatorships. In a military dictatorship, there's no pretense of due process. There is one leader and if you cross them, you suffer the consequences. East Germany was very much a police state, but one could argue that it was under the control of the USSR and not that unique an example.
I think categorically denying that the U.S. is a police state is dangerous. Something very unhealthy is happening in the U.S.. People don't even feel free to talk openly about it anymore. Names are being taken down via social media and citizens are being secretly spied upon without due process. The pretense of due process is still there. Guantanamo is considered "different" and the DHS operates in a space which is also "an exception". The government still feels it needs to explain its actions to the media.