These things are hard to look at, but they must be seen.
I'm nitpicking, but something about this sentence compels me to do so. I think that is better phrased "These things are hard to look at, but they must be able to be seen".
You know, I wondered if there could be more to this story, like the concern was not the actual threat so much at the intent behind it. (Like, it wasn't any concerns over the "magic" angle, but that the threat was rooted in an actual desire to cause harm. Then I read this in your comment:
...the disciplinary actions this year were in-school suspensions for... bringing his favorite book to school... depicting a pregnant woman in an illustration...
Yup, that tells me everything right there. They are nuts. Remind me never to go anywhere near this school system, ever.
You are half right. The "normal" channel-based content comes in on its own wavelength, yes. However "on-demand" and other interactive content comes in on IP (using MoCA provided by the router), and as I understand it that IP channel comes from the same bandwidth pool as whatever your Ethernet and wireless connections are using too.
Another option for those few rare cases would be to allow yearly averaging and only require paying
overtime if the average for the year is over 40. That would make for a nice christmas bonus.
Interesting concept, however I'd tweak it in two ways: 1. You would probably want to do it on a rolling year basis (i.e., annually on your hire date) to smooth out the cash outflow a bit, and 2. Make it mandatory to do when someone leaves as a YTD calcluation. I've seen enough places that want to cheat you out of a bonus because you left/were laid off a couple weeks before the payout day, even though the work you did to earn that bonus was already done over the last weeks/months/year.
This is true, but perhaps TFS is suggesting manufacturers should make it a standard practice to walk you through securing the camera by default, rather than try to make it "plug and play", which results in, well, websites with 73,000 unsecured cameras.
Or failing that, do what we used to do before 911 was implemented in our town: Call the operator, tell them who you want (police, fire, ambulance) and that it is an emergency. Not quite as effective since it lacks the central control 911 has, but it generally works. (And in some areas the operator may have the back-end number for 911 and can transfer you to that, which could also work.)
either pay part of the cost or take PTO to attend if it isn't after-hours
Ugh. You know, I understand the desire of an employer to try to "protect their investment" as it were, even though I generally hate it, as it seems like they try way, way too hard. The employment relationship is already lopsided enough as it is. It is almost to the point that it feels like they don't really want to pay for it, they just want to pretend they do to look good.
That said, one thing I cannot stand is the idea of trying to force someone to do training on their own time (or take PTO). For classes (conferences are a bit different, but can be similar), they are typically scheduled right smack dab in standard working hours. Its obvious they were set up with the expectation that employers are footing the bill (for both the class and the time).
Companies give precious little PTO as it is already (I think it should be around twice as much as what is typical these days, or at least go back to separate sick and vacation time and raise those banks a bit higher), and many aren't willing to negotiate on it if you want more in lieu of higher salary. Plus they tend to act like taking unpaid time is a cardinal sin or something they really should consider firing you for, not just a situation of you'd like/need a little more time off than their standard policy allows for. So yeah, some sort of cost sharing/prorated reimbursement? Not a fan, but at least I get it... charging PTO? Oh hell no...
"If you do not have media, you should use the power button to restart your computer during the startup process three times. This should start the Windows Recovery Environment. "
Oh yeah, THAT's gotta be good for the hardware. Definite improvement over F8. Thanks Microsoft...
The timing of this amuses me, given what I recently saw on Yahoo. They've updated their privacy policy to say they ignore DNT. But since marketing types have to spin everything, they bill it as:
Yeah, but that's what SoylentNews is doing for today.
You may have been "Woosh!"ed here... doesn't two-factor auth usually send the verification code to your phone?
Only the dress uniform.
The AC probably works for Verizon.
(Sorry, had to...)
These things are hard to look at, but they must be seen.
I'm nitpicking, but something about this sentence compels me to do so. I think that is better phrased "These things are hard to look at, but they must be able to be seen".
Hmmm... the child porn argument, more or less.
You know, I wondered if there could be more to this story, like the concern was not the actual threat so much at the intent behind it. (Like, it wasn't any concerns over the "magic" angle, but that the threat was rooted in an actual desire to cause harm. Then I read this in your comment:
...the disciplinary actions this year were in-school suspensions for... bringing his favorite book to school... depicting a pregnant woman in an illustration...
Yup, that tells me everything right there. They are nuts. Remind me never to go anywhere near this school system, ever.
Er, helicopter. I just woke up. :P
Helicoper.
You are half right. The "normal" channel-based content comes in on its own wavelength, yes. However "on-demand" and other interactive content comes in on IP (using MoCA provided by the router), and as I understand it that IP channel comes from the same bandwidth pool as whatever your Ethernet and wireless connections are using too.
Confirming that. TowelRoot is what I used when the KitKat upgrade came out for my S3.
Another option for those few rare cases would be to allow yearly averaging and only require paying overtime if the average for the year is over 40. That would make for a nice christmas bonus.
Interesting concept, however I'd tweak it in two ways: 1. You would probably want to do it on a rolling year basis (i.e., annually on your hire date) to smooth out the cash outflow a bit, and 2. Make it mandatory to do when someone leaves as a YTD calcluation. I've seen enough places that want to cheat you out of a bonus because you left/were laid off a couple weeks before the payout day, even though the work you did to earn that bonus was already done over the last weeks/months/year.
This is true, but perhaps TFS is suggesting manufacturers should make it a standard practice to walk you through securing the camera by default, rather than try to make it "plug and play", which results in, well, websites with 73,000 unsecured cameras.
Or failing that, do what we used to do before 911 was implemented in our town: Call the operator, tell them who you want (police, fire, ambulance) and that it is an emergency. Not quite as effective since it lacks the central control 911 has, but it generally works. (And in some areas the operator may have the back-end number for 911 and can transfer you to that, which could also work.)
Is there any other OS that uses a "cadence" release plan? Called unstable, testing and stable, maybe?
No, FreeBSD calls them -CURRENT, -STABLE, and -RELEASE, but you were close.
Their primary marketing slogan is: "Shut the fuck up and give us your money"
I thought it was "keep giving us your money until we say it is enough".
either pay part of the cost or take PTO to attend if it isn't after-hours
Ugh. You know, I understand the desire of an employer to try to "protect their investment" as it were, even though I generally hate it, as it seems like they try way, way too hard. The employment relationship is already lopsided enough as it is. It is almost to the point that it feels like they don't really want to pay for it, they just want to pretend they do to look good.
That said, one thing I cannot stand is the idea of trying to force someone to do training on their own time (or take PTO). For classes (conferences are a bit different, but can be similar), they are typically scheduled right smack dab in standard working hours. Its obvious they were set up with the expectation that employers are footing the bill (for both the class and the time).
Companies give precious little PTO as it is already (I think it should be around twice as much as what is typical these days, or at least go back to separate sick and vacation time and raise those banks a bit higher), and many aren't willing to negotiate on it if you want more in lieu of higher salary. Plus they tend to act like taking unpaid time is a cardinal sin or something they really should consider firing you for, not just a situation of you'd like/need a little more time off than their standard policy allows for. So yeah, some sort of cost sharing/prorated reimbursement? Not a fan, but at least I get it... charging PTO? Oh hell no...
Please, like any one of those persons would lower themselves to use anything less than first class.
"If you do not have media, you should use the power button to restart your computer during the startup process three times. This should start the Windows Recovery Environment. "
Oh yeah, THAT's gotta be good for the hardware. Definite improvement over F8. Thanks Microsoft...
Penis size is pretty useless as a biometric. It changes depending on the site being accessed.
Doubly so on this one, where everyone claims theirs is a foot long.
The Web Developer toolbar extension exposes a lot of different options to control image loading. It might have what you need.
Indeed. And squirrel gravy is awesome. Haven't had it in like 25 years though... :(
The timing of this amuses me, given what I recently saw on Yahoo. They've updated their privacy policy to say they ignore DNT. But since marketing types have to spin everything, they bill it as:
Thank you Yahoo for caring about my experience! :P
Worst idea ever.
Blasphemy!
At least I know mozilla with any luck won't piss all over a simple UI.
I'm sorry, have you seen Chromefox 29?