That hasn't failed a single time in the hundreds of times I've used it since March. Sad that the UI is such a mess that you have to resort to manually installing the updates one by one, but at least it works.
Microsoft has not been pushing 10 hard. If they were, then they would allow XP and Vista users to upgrade. They're so embarrassed by 10 that they're not allowing us to upgrade. My personal desktop at work is an i7 with 64 GB running Vista that is blocked from upgrading to 10.
And are most likely to not work. I bought eight different USB to lightning cables from amazon.com to test for work, and none of them worked. Even the Amazon Basics I bought later didn't work well. The connector isn't thick enough so you have to put something under it when plugged into an iPhone to get it to make a connection. Even then, if you disturb it even a little, it will usually disconnect.
We ended-up buying a bunch of cables from Apple even though they cost a lot more. Of course they're all fraying the insulation, which is why we looked into buying another brand in the first place.
Even that doesn't always work. The last expensive item I bought from Amazon was a Panasonic microwave. It's terrible, but there were no bad reviews on amazon.com. After getting frustrated with it, I did a google search for the model and found a ton of negative reviews. I obviously wouldn't have bought it if amazon.com hadn't censored the negative reviews.
I got frustrated and bought a $300 commercial Sharp R-21LCFS from a local restaurant supply store. I wanted a high quality microwave and was willing to pay extra since I had two quit in the previous six months. I checked amazon.com, and it had 4.5 stars. It quit in less than a month. I returned it, and the manager of the store said more often than not they're returned. If true, then why did they keep selling them?
I disagree. You can't just talk about total salary. You also need to consider the number of hours worked since programmers are usually required to work a lot more hours than anyone else. I make more than twice as much as my project manager who is also on salary, but she only works 35 hours a week since she has to leave early to pick up her kids. I usually work over three times that many hours a week, so I'm making less per hour. I don't think it's wrong for me to think I need to be paid more.
We've heard that claim before. When, for example, a cotton gin could replace a year of work every single hour it runs, people panicked. Instead of that being a problem, it freed-up people to do more productive jobs.
But the longer you measure, and we haven't been measuring that long, you statistically expect new highs. That's just how the math works. You need wide-spread and decades-long measurements to make a conclusion.
We started requiring a YubiKey USB key, and hours worked by people from home dropped over 20%! YubiKey claims to be FIPS compliant which is what our SSAE 16 requirements require. Security is important, but blocking people working extra hours is a huge cost.
Or likable. Why would you pick an actress for the main part that is such a horrible person that it shines through on screen? I understand trying to be edgy by picking someone gender-ambiguous and unpleasant, but not for the main character!
I helped two of my neighbors with their taxes a couple of years ago that are pilots for a regional Delta affiliate, and I can confirm the pay is low. Both made around $24k a year. They didn't have to work that much since Delta is severely limited by SEATAC's terrible design that limits capacity (which is supposed to be helped by an upgrade in 2020), but that's still not much money to live off of in the Seattle area.
Plus at least among my friends, nearly all of them that have an Internet connection fast enough to stream video already have Netflix. There's simply not that much room for growth.
I don't have a problem with journalctl and binary logs since they're more efficient and easier to filter by unit. My problem is when you have log messages that don't make it to the journal. That makes it much hard to troubleshoot problems.
Even after they've had accounts for decades! I opened my first account with them (well, a bank they bought-out) 47 years ago, but even I'm considering moving to a new bank. In the their branch a block from my office, they treat me like a king since I have a portfolio-level account (their highest level, used to be called Premier). They've even sent someone twice to my home on a Saturday to help with an issue. I get tons of free stuff including a large safe deposit box for work that they don't charge me for and also notarizing documents for work.
I'm almost frustrated enough with them to consider quitting them even with the free perks. They opened a MasterCard account without my permission, and I only found-out about it when bogus charges were sold to a collection agency in Olympia, WA. I only had an ATM card on purpose. That took almost a year to get fixed. They thought I would be happy with them since they hired a lawyer at their cost to help, but I would have rather them not issue a credit card without my permission in the first place.
Besides, who has time to go to three movies a month?
What's wrong with Gary Busey? He's a national treasure.
And CNN said it was a can of gas in an apartment.
Considering he didn't offer any evidence of the attempt, I think you're correct this is a hoax.
With PowerShell:
Get-WUInstall -AcceptAll -KBArticleID KB
That hasn't failed a single time in the hundreds of times I've used it since March. Sad that the UI is such a mess that you have to resort to manually installing the updates one by one, but at least it works.
Microsoft has not been pushing 10 hard. If they were, then they would allow XP and Vista users to upgrade. They're so embarrassed by 10 that they're not allowing us to upgrade. My personal desktop at work is an i7 with 64 GB running Vista that is blocked from upgrading to 10.
She never said that.
And are most likely to not work. I bought eight different USB to lightning cables from amazon.com to test for work, and none of them worked. Even the Amazon Basics I bought later didn't work well. The connector isn't thick enough so you have to put something under it when plugged into an iPhone to get it to make a connection. Even then, if you disturb it even a little, it will usually disconnect.
We ended-up buying a bunch of cables from Apple even though they cost a lot more. Of course they're all fraying the insulation, which is why we looked into buying another brand in the first place.
Even that doesn't always work. The last expensive item I bought from Amazon was a Panasonic microwave. It's terrible, but there were no bad reviews on amazon.com. After getting frustrated with it, I did a google search for the model and found a ton of negative reviews. I obviously wouldn't have bought it if amazon.com hadn't censored the negative reviews.
I got frustrated and bought a $300 commercial Sharp R-21LCFS from a local restaurant supply store. I wanted a high quality microwave and was willing to pay extra since I had two quit in the previous six months. I checked amazon.com, and it had 4.5 stars. It quit in less than a month. I returned it, and the manager of the store said more often than not they're returned. If true, then why did they keep selling them?
I was, like now, waiting on something to compile. Relevant XKCD:
https://xkcd.com/303/
I disagree. You can't just talk about total salary. You also need to consider the number of hours worked since programmers are usually required to work a lot more hours than anyone else. I make more than twice as much as my project manager who is also on salary, but she only works 35 hours a week since she has to leave early to pick up her kids. I usually work over three times that many hours a week, so I'm making less per hour. I don't think it's wrong for me to think I need to be paid more.
We've heard that claim before. When, for example, a cotton gin could replace a year of work every single hour it runs, people panicked. Instead of that being a problem, it freed-up people to do more productive jobs.
But the longer you measure, and we haven't been measuring that long, you statistically expect new highs. That's just how the math works. You need wide-spread and decades-long measurements to make a conclusion.
At least it's not yet another promising battery technology.
But is Watson cheaper than a doctor?
We started requiring a YubiKey USB key, and hours worked by people from home dropped over 20%! YubiKey claims to be FIPS compliant which is what our SSAE 16 requirements require. Security is important, but blocking people working extra hours is a huge cost.
The only positive here is that Time Machine "just works."
Or likable. Why would you pick an actress for the main part that is such a horrible person that it shines through on screen? I understand trying to be edgy by picking someone gender-ambiguous and unpleasant, but not for the main character!
Wait. What? You call him a racist, but if he was then why would you claim he wants to help China?
So how is this Trump's fault? If Trump wanted to leak info to China, he would just do so.
Oh come on. They're Amazon, not Comcast.
But seriously, we had to switch to https to keep Comcast from breaking out web site.
> $22,500 per year,
I helped two of my neighbors with their taxes a couple of years ago that are pilots for a regional Delta affiliate, and I can confirm the pay is low. Both made around $24k a year. They didn't have to work that much since Delta is severely limited by SEATAC's terrible design that limits capacity (which is supposed to be helped by an upgrade in 2020), but that's still not much money to live off of in the Seattle area.
Plus at least among my friends, nearly all of them that have an Internet connection fast enough to stream video already have Netflix. There's simply not that much room for growth.
> like logs that aren't human-readable
I don't have a problem with journalctl and binary logs since they're more efficient and easier to filter by unit. My problem is when you have log messages that don't make it to the journal. That makes it much hard to troubleshoot problems.
Even after they've had accounts for decades! I opened my first account with them (well, a bank they bought-out) 47 years ago, but even I'm considering moving to a new bank. In the their branch a block from my office, they treat me like a king since I have a portfolio-level account (their highest level, used to be called Premier). They've even sent someone twice to my home on a Saturday to help with an issue. I get tons of free stuff including a large safe deposit box for work that they don't charge me for and also notarizing documents for work.
I'm almost frustrated enough with them to consider quitting them even with the free perks. They opened a MasterCard account without my permission, and I only found-out about it when bogus charges were sold to a collection agency in Olympia, WA. I only had an ATM card on purpose. That took almost a year to get fixed. They thought I would be happy with them since they hired a lawyer at their cost to help, but I would have rather them not issue a credit card without my permission in the first place.