You said you would not hold for a child keeping secrets from their parents. Obviously other countries disagree. If you want the ability to snoop into their phone, you need to reciprocate, otherwise you're just a hypocrite. Same as parents who spank their kids but would never put up with their kid hitting back.
Do you have any idea how many pills a city needs? The average adult has 12 prescriptions per year, and these pill machines can't fill many of them (insulin, liquid antibiotics, etc.), BTW - you'd be far better off hooking up a diesel locomotive to the mains than "getting another generator." Almost 2 MW of electricity, but it made a mess driving it off the tracks and 1000 feet on city streets.
Producing less than 50 pills an hour? This would not be any good for anything but the smallest drug stores, and they have no need for it. This would be awful in an epidemic.
Good way to model how trust is supposed to work - NOT IN A MILLION YEARS. What else do you do - spy on them in the bathroom or stick an IR camera in their bedroom to catch them masturbating? Send drones to follow them wherever they go? Throw a fit when they don't want to friend you on Facebook because they don't want you to embarrass them?
Gee, you would have a sh*t hemorrhage here. At 14 kids have the legal right to consult doctors and receive hospital care, and as long as the hospitalization is for 12 hours or less, can demand the parents never be informed. Makes it a lot easier for teens to get a free abortion. Also makes it easier to get treatment for STDs and contraceptives ( helps to have universal health and drug plans so the parents never see a bill ).
Oh, I understood all right. Only a dummy would use that feature even once. Sounds to me more like a feature than a bug. The whole "minion" thing is way overdone , not to mention also stupid. Let the emos send them to each other, along with a bunch of stupid emojis.
Not really. Google even admitted that there was a bug that, after sending the image, any subsequent emails could have the image attached to those even without pressing the button. It could be that many of these people who reported the issue sent the funny email once, intentionally, and then all subsequent emails got it too. They shouldn't be considered "dumb" when it was the stupid engineer and QA teams who were too stupid to see a simple bug. For once, it was the stupidity of the "computer people" and not of the "luser".
They were dumb to press it the first time. Really dumb. It made it clear that any future replies would be rejected. So if you don't want them to send a reply, just don't send them one.
It's a long standing tradition. Some of us still have a sense of humour. So here's an on topic idea - why not make your post a "mic drop" post and say no more on the subject?
Absolutely. I saw it last night, and it was clear that clicking it would send all replies to/dev/null. I thought it was a great way to deal with online harassment. If you're too stupid to read, maybe you need to stick to phone calls.
There's a sucker born every minute. People who believe this is a free gift never heard of a Trojan Horse, and the people following the cheerleaders never heard of a Judas Goat.
Just mount a third load-bearing rail 9.5" inside of one of the existing rails, and you can run standard-gauge cars, and standard-gauge wheelsets, etc. on the same track as their odd-ball cars.
Not really. Orbital still needs to buy Russian engines. There's no tech like old tech. Should have stuck with the Saturn series and their proposed Saturn Heavy variants. Stupid space plane.
No, deleting the key does not conceal the document. It is already concealed. It is also in their possession. So they are not concealing the evidence by deleting the key.
And the FBI can examine the phone to their beady little hearts content. Apple isn't stopping that. They're just refusing to help, since Apple isn't in possession of any evidence.However, there is no evidence that there is ANYTHING of value on the phone. Maybe the FBI shouldn't have ordered the cloud password changed. If anyone should be charged with hiding evidence, it's them.
The key is NOT evidence. Can't you get it through your thick skull.The key MAY be needed, but the key is not itself evidence. And there is NO evidence that there is ANYTHING of evidentiary value on the phone. What happened to probable cause, etc?
Here the parents are allowed to give their kids hyphenated last names, but once they reach 18,they can use one or the other, or continue using both. The next generation, in the case where both parents have hyphenated names, can use either parents hyphenated name, but not both. They can also use one name for the kid, no hyphen. No way are we going to put up with that crazy crap of names growing crazily long like the Queen or other royalty. Sounds good much like a fancy show dog.
We are talking about an age of naivete
Got news for you - kids today know all about sex by the time they're 8.
I am also talking about knowing the lock code should something seem off. I never said a word about going through the device.
Those two statements are contradictory. You'd obviously go through their phone "should something seem off."
I so hope you do not have any children.
You hope in vain - two wonderful daughters who both own their own homes and are doing pretty good.
You said you would not hold for a child keeping secrets from their parents. Obviously other countries disagree. If you want the ability to snoop into their phone, you need to reciprocate, otherwise you're just a hypocrite. Same as parents who spank their kids but would never put up with their kid hitting back.
Do you have any idea how many pills a city needs? The average adult has 12 prescriptions per year, and these pill machines can't fill many of them (insulin, liquid antibiotics, etc.), BTW - you'd be far better off hooking up a diesel locomotive to the mains than "getting another generator." Almost 2 MW of electricity, but it made a mess driving it off the tracks and 1000 feet on city streets.
Producing less than 50 pills an hour? This would not be any good for anything but the smallest drug stores, and they have no need for it. This would be awful in an epidemic.
Good way to model how trust is supposed to work - NOT IN A MILLION YEARS. What else do you do - spy on them in the bathroom or stick an IR camera in their bedroom to catch them masturbating? Send drones to follow them wherever they go? Throw a fit when they don't want to friend you on Facebook because they don't want you to embarrass them?
Gee, you would have a sh*t hemorrhage here. At 14 kids have the legal right to consult doctors and receive hospital care, and as long as the hospitalization is for 12 hours or less, can demand the parents never be informed. Makes it a lot easier for teens to get a free abortion. Also makes it easier to get treatment for STDs and contraceptives ( helps to have universal health and drug plans so the parents never see a bill ).
And once they get the photos maybe they will realize that photos are nearly valueless when compared to memories of shared times together.
Traditions can be stupid.
Just to point out "can be" isn't the same as "are."
Oh, I understood all right. Only a dummy would use that feature even once. Sounds to me more like a feature than a bug. The whole "minion" thing is way overdone , not to mention also stupid. Let the emos send them to each other, along with a bunch of stupid emojis.
Not really. Google even admitted that there was a bug that, after sending the image, any subsequent emails could have the image attached to those even without pressing the button. It could be that many of these people who reported the issue sent the funny email once, intentionally, and then all subsequent emails got it too. They shouldn't be considered "dumb" when it was the stupid engineer and QA teams who were too stupid to see a simple bug. For once, it was the stupidity of the "computer people" and not of the "luser".
They were dumb to press it the first time. Really dumb. It made it clear that any future replies would be rejected. So if you don't want them to send a reply, just don't send them one.
Falling victim to a bad user interface does not mean someone is dumb.
In this case it does.
It's a long standing tradition. Some of us still have a sense of humour. So here's an on topic idea - why not make your post a "mic drop" post and say no more on the subject?
Absolutely. I saw it last night, and it was clear that clicking it would send all replies to /dev/null. I thought it was a great way to deal with online harassment. If you're too stupid to read, maybe you need to stick to phone calls.
I am certainly not a fan of the foot-cheese-eater. MIT license all the way :-)
There's a sucker born every minute. People who believe this is a free gift never heard of a Trojan Horse, and the people following the cheerleaders never heard of a Judas Goat.
Just mount a third load-bearing rail 9.5" inside of one of the existing rails, and you can run standard-gauge cars, and standard-gauge wheelsets, etc. on the same track as their odd-ball cars.
It's a bubble, and now it's deflating because, like the mortgage-backed certificates, the underlying assets are crap.
We know it wasn't virtual reality streams, which they say will need this. Don't believe it - the future is all reality shows and reruns.
Not really. Orbital still needs to buy Russian engines. There's no tech like old tech. Should have stuck with the Saturn series and their proposed Saturn Heavy variants. Stupid space plane.
And the FBI can examine the phone to their beady little hearts content. Apple isn't stopping that. They're just refusing to help, since Apple isn't in possession of any evidence.However, there is no evidence that there is ANYTHING of value on the phone. Maybe the FBI shouldn't have ordered the cloud password changed. If anyone should be charged with hiding evidence, it's them.
Could create some problems if the first-born later gets a sex change :-)
The key is NOT evidence. Can't you get it through your thick skull.The key MAY be needed, but the key is not itself evidence. And there is NO evidence that there is ANYTHING of evidentiary value on the phone. What happened to probable cause, etc?
And the blended family of Mr. Master and Mrs. Bates. Pity poor Johnny Master-Bates. Think of the children!
Here the parents are allowed to give their kids hyphenated last names, but once they reach 18,they can use one or the other, or continue using both. The next generation, in the case where both parents have hyphenated names, can use either parents hyphenated name, but not both. They can also use one name for the kid, no hyphen. No way are we going to put up with that crazy crap of names growing crazily long like the Queen or other royalty. Sounds good much like a fancy show dog.
Try Dildo, NL. Or Swastika, ON.