I thought it was funny as hell. I did remove the s to read the EFF article. I have to agree, they seem to have a vested interest in keeping Comodo alive.
You just opened up your mouth and made yourself look stupid and hateful. Not all police/fire dispatchers take 911 calls. Some of them handle just the radios, and only talk to other cops and firemen. Not the public at large.
Did you happen to know that Pharma spends more for advertising in the US than R&D?
How about we get like almost every other country in the world, and ban prescription drug advertising, that would cut down on their costs dramatically, and make drugs cheaper for everyone.
Sorry, that's wrong, in most states, if you refuse to blow at the scene, you lose your license right then and there, and can be convicted of DUI for refusal to blow. It's a nasty thing that has come about since the Supreme Court decided there's a DUI exception to the Constitution.
Now just wait for the local Telco and Cableco to sue your hometown for doing that. While your town is getting sued, they will start building out their own network while the town is having to fight in court and not be able to do any work.
You mean, $8-10 per month, not per disc you rent, for rentals from Netflix and BlockBuster, and with the way the queues work, if you find it sucks at the first disc, you can just remove the rest of the series from the queue right then, and move something else up in the queue to watch. Also with the watch it now for some of the stuff, you don't even need to wait for the discs to arrive in the mail.
If you were to spend the money you're wasting on bad DVD purchases on subscriptions to Netflix and BlockBuster, you'd end up saving money becuase you'd end up buying fewer bad shows.
As a result I feel it's necessary to "test drive" media before purchase. With CDs I can get legal samples online, but with TV shows on DVD there is no method except to download it and see if it's any good. It's illegal, but I do it because I don't want to get stuck wasting thousands of dollars on trash.
Other options.
Netflix. They even happen to have Galactica 1980 on watch it now.
Reading reviews online.
Reading reviews in magazines.
Netflix.
Asking friends about shows.
Hulu.
Youtube (Ok, this one isn't fully legal)
Blockbuster.
All the other video rental stores.
Did I mention Netflix?
I know not everything would be on all the options listed, so there's up to 8 other options, unless you don't have any friends, then there's only up to 7 options.
So don't say the only option you have is to download.
Because cellphone voice communications requires a constant link between the cellphone and the tower, where SMS is transmitted in bursts when the cellphone and the tower can hear each other.
You'll find in situtations where the cell towers are jammed with calls of people calling each other to see if everything is OK after a major storm, a SMS will get through even if you can't make a call.
Sorry, you are completely wrong about the companies with a BES server being unaffected. All that the BES server does is interface to the company's mail system, and the servers at RIM to send emails over to the users Blackberries. Our company was without blackberry email for over 6 hours. Good thing I was able to say it was a global issue with blackberries, and my bosses went, ok, thanks for keeping me informed about it.
like in a theater Oh, so you were the one shining that bright damn light in my eyes the last time I was watching a movie. Texting in a theater is almost as bad as talking on the phone in a theater. Dim the display, or just leave if the movie is so boring that you don't want to pay attention to it.
The only email that might be worth reading en route is one that has a substantial relationship to a literal issue of imminent life-or-death. But its not worth checking to see if an email might be in that category en route, unless you are nearly certain that you wouldn't get any other email coming in at the time. If I was trying to get in touch with someone about life-or-death issue like that, I'd call them, not send an email. Email isn't immedate enough for something like that.
His dad, private banker Ross Singletary, calls it "a legit concern." He adds: "Some emails are important enough to look at en route."
No. No, no emails are important enough to look at en route. Period.
Get a life, and pay more attention to things around you instead of work. There's a whole world outside, and your kids mental well being is more important than your job no matter what you might think.
Here's the trick, reverse the two, make your server with the IP restrictions primary, and your buddy's server the secondary. All real servers will bounce off the primary, then mail to the secondary, all spammers who just mail to the primary will not get through, and the scum who thinks mailing to the secondary server will get through without checks will have a nice suprise.
That reminds me of a bash quote, URL broken to protect the stupid:
*** Topic in #doghouse is 'Our hearts are extended to the 17 victims of the recent internet fraud' * Anubis has joined #doghouse <Anubis> what fraud? <Kadmium> You haven't heard about it? <Anubis> no? <Kadmium> You can read the full story at http://www-tubgirl-com <Anubis> omg wtf! *** Kadmium changes topic to 'Our hearts are extended to the 18 victims of the recent internet fraud'
Reminds of 'Thrice upon a Time', where receiving information from the future was creating micro-black holes, which then were causing detectable micro-damage elsewhere, IIRC.
That's the book I was thinking about, but you are wrong about the "time machine" causing the black holes, it was an expermintal fusion plant that was creating the micro-black holes, and was causing interference with the time machine, so they had to send a message back in time to stop the plant from going online, without having a chance to figure out what would happen to them by sending the message.
It could just be something that CBS told them to print. I don't trust a word they say now.
Don't forget, this asshole is also an asshole that thinks that drone strikes on US citizens on US soil is OK.
I thought it was funny as hell. I did remove the s to read the EFF article. I have to agree, they seem to have a vested interest in keeping Comodo alive.
I would have liked to seen your second link, but it appears that EFF uses Comodo for their SSL cert.
EFF, I'd think about suing Comodo for your money back on the Cert, and get one from another company.
You just opened up your mouth and made yourself look stupid and hateful. Not all police/fire dispatchers take 911 calls. Some of them handle just the radios, and only talk to other cops and firemen. Not the public at large.
Did you happen to know that Pharma spends more for advertising in the US than R&D?
How about we get like almost every other country in the world, and ban prescription drug advertising, that would cut down on their costs dramatically, and make drugs cheaper for everyone.
Sorry, that's wrong, in most states, if you refuse to blow at the scene, you lose your license right then and there, and can be convicted of DUI for refusal to blow. It's a nasty thing that has come about since the Supreme Court decided there's a DUI exception to the Constitution.
Now just wait for the local Telco and Cableco to sue your hometown for doing that. While your town is getting sued, they will start building out their own network while the town is having to fight in court and not be able to do any work.
(e.g. ask a person if they can sense which way is down)
I know that one! The enemy's gate is down!
Well, I don't know of any legal online movie viewing services that has CC included.
You mean, $8-10 per month, not per disc you rent, for rentals from Netflix and BlockBuster, and with the way the queues work, if you find it sucks at the first disc, you can just remove the rest of the series from the queue right then, and move something else up in the queue to watch. Also with the watch it now for some of the stuff, you don't even need to wait for the discs to arrive in the mail.
If you were to spend the money you're wasting on bad DVD purchases on subscriptions to Netflix and BlockBuster, you'd end up saving money becuase you'd end up buying fewer bad shows.
As a result I feel it's necessary to "test drive" media before purchase. With CDs I can get legal samples online, but with TV shows on DVD there is no method except to download it and see if it's any good. It's illegal, but I do it because I don't want to get stuck wasting thousands of dollars on trash.
Other options.
I know not everything would be on all the options listed, so there's up to 8 other options, unless you don't have any friends, then there's only up to 7 options.
So don't say the only option you have is to download.
You got the flavor wrong.
"Tastes like raspberry, sir."
"Raspberry! There's only one man who would dare give me the raspberry!"
"LONESTAR!"
Because cellphone voice communications requires a constant link between the cellphone and the tower, where SMS is transmitted in bursts when the cellphone and the tower can hear each other.
You'll find in situtations where the cell towers are jammed with calls of people calling each other to see if everything is OK after a major storm, a SMS will get through even if you can't make a call.
You like big apertures, and you can not lie?
Sorry, you are completely wrong about the companies with a BES server being unaffected. All that the BES server does is interface to the company's mail system, and the servers at RIM to send emails over to the users Blackberries. Our company was without blackberry email for over 6 hours. Good thing I was able to say it was a global issue with blackberries, and my bosses went, ok, thanks for keeping me informed about it.
You're both wrong, it's a WoW player.
IM LFG
I'M Looking For Group(For those people who don't know what WoW is)
His dad, private banker Ross Singletary, calls it "a legit concern." He adds: "Some emails are important enough to look at en route."
No. No, no emails are important enough to look at en route. Period.
Get a life, and pay more attention to things around you instead of work. There's a whole world outside, and your kids mental well being is more important than your job no matter what you might think.
Here's the trick, reverse the two, make your server with the IP restrictions primary, and your buddy's server the secondary. All real servers will bounce off the primary, then mail to the secondary, all spammers who just mail to the primary will not get through, and the scum who thinks mailing to the secondary server will get through without checks will have a nice suprise.
That reminds me of a bash quote, URL broken to protect the stupid:
*** Topic in #doghouse is 'Our hearts are extended to the 17 victims of the recent internet fraud'
* Anubis has joined #doghouse
<Anubis> what fraud?
<Kadmium> You haven't heard about it?
<Anubis> no?
<Kadmium> You can read the full story at http://www-tubgirl-com
<Anubis> omg wtf!
*** Kadmium changes topic to 'Our hearts are extended to the 18 victims of the recent internet fraud'
I've got a couple of servers here at my office that has dongles on the USB ports for high end medical imaging software.
Dongles ain't anywhere near dead.
Don't you mean cattlepult?
Reminds of 'Thrice upon a Time', where receiving information from the future was creating micro-black holes, which then were causing detectable micro-damage elsewhere, IIRC.
That's the book I was thinking about, but you are wrong about the "time machine" causing the black holes, it was an expermintal fusion plant that was creating the micro-black holes, and was causing interference with the time machine, so they had to send a message back in time to stop the plant from going online, without having a chance to figure out what would happen to them by sending the message.