I did this once. I intended to use the cable tv cable in the wall of my apartment as an antenna. After plugging it in and scanning for channels, I discovered the cable was active and I had access to free cable all along.
Yea, Amazing discovery there bud... It took me I'd say less than 5 seconds of using the app the first time to see this as there are basically 3 tabs across the top. Me, Friends, and Public. The largest section of the wikipedia article about venmo is a description of this feature...
Not really. 1: it was already assumed that there were illicit ISM catchers in embassies. I've heard security experts basically say someone is failing the intelligence portion of their mission if they aren't doing this. 2: it is already known that there were illicit ISM catchers in embassies in the DC area for a while now, but since we can only focus on one story for one news cycle we've forgotten about it until someone new reports on it a few months later.
https://www.royalsreview.com/2... In 2015 MLB officials questioned KC Royals Manager Ned Yost about his use of his apple watch. He assured them that w/o the phone it's just a watch, he ended up switching to a locally assembled luxury watch to quash any suspicions allegedly. But this is a known problem in the MLB and they've been, at least selectively watching for 2 years.
I thought comic con was about non-comic book related celebrity appearances and dressing up like a dalek? People are actually still taking comic books to these things?
I'd be willing to lump that possibly in with shock and being unaware what they are doing, or just being an asshole. I've seen enough people after accidents do some pretty irrational things attributed to shock.
Absent other regulations, it's up to the federal trade commission, similar state-level bodies, and disgruntled customers filing lawsuits to keep companies from using deceptive advertising.
Where the FTC and state regulators don't act, it's up to consumers to sue or their advocates such as the press or Consumer's Union to shame them into honesty.
So, will we be seeing regulatory action soon, or will the land sharks be filing class-action suits, or will this be just a case of public shaming?
Or, will nothing happen at all?
The FDA can regulate here and work with the Department of Justice to enforce in this case as this is a cosmetic that is "misbranded". http://www.fda.gov/Cosmetics/G...
Article implies the FDA has no jurisdiction over this based on that they don't test cosmetics by default, but they do regulate based on it being a "misbranded" cosmetic product. http://www.fda.gov/Cosmetics/G...
As a sports fan who chooses not to get screwed over by the cable or satellite TV companies, I don't have access to the ESPN app. Paying a couple bucks a month extra to Amazon for live sports would be well worth it to me vs paying for a cable subscription.
It will probably be like current streaming packages. Those games that people like ESPN has exclusive rights to will be blacked out. This already happens if you have NBA League Pass. Those games that ESPN or TNT has exclusive rights to are blacked out even from video streaming on the official NBA app with the highest level of package. The NBA app lets you stream audio from one of the local radio stations broadcasting the game in return. So you'll still never be able to see your team play the Cavs, Lakers, or $OTHERPOPULARTEAM/anticipated game unless you have ESPN or TNT or whatever other station streaming or no. Same thing with MLB's streaming packages, I can't remember if they offer an audio stream when video is blacked out.
Including this in a package on Prime is great, but only for 75% of games. For the rest you still need access to ESPN/TNT/TSN in some way.
I click on the vice link and the url indicates it should be an article about Wells Fargo but the article is really about US military involvement in Yamen.
"it will be useless in less than an hour, preventing nearly all fraudulent transactions." So how do you not prevent desired recurring transactions? This seems like the wrong way to solve this.
Everyone I know who does it, does it for stupid trivial shit and it still fails. It seems to be ineffective and greatly annoys those around them, but they don't seem to care when people are angrily looking at them for yelling "set timer for 10 minutes" 7 times. Happens to android and iOS users
I was recently told by a visiting European that the T-Mobile free international data is a feature only offered to T-Mobile US based customers. Though I did not do any checking to validate this.
Doping in cycling has been around since the very beginning. It predates the TdF. It's pretty much ingrained in the sport itself. Where as doping in other sports came later in their history.
I think the association with cheating in cycling seems more prevalent due to the history and the exposure. I'm not certain that cycling has more cheating than any other sport.
Is one of two possible values really a scale?
I did this once. I intended to use the cable tv cable in the wall of my apartment as an antenna.
After plugging it in and scanning for channels, I discovered the cable was active and I had access to free cable all along.
I am protected.
"ultra-elite deposit of silicon dioxide" "somnambulant train station"
What?
Yea, Amazing discovery there bud...
It took me I'd say less than 5 seconds of using the app the first time to see this as there are basically 3 tabs across the top. Me, Friends, and Public.
The largest section of the wikipedia article about venmo is a description of this feature...
That's a lot of words to basically say, they remastered something.
Not really.
1: it was already assumed that there were illicit ISM catchers in embassies. I've heard security experts basically say someone is failing the intelligence portion of their mission if they aren't doing this.
2: it is already known that there were illicit ISM catchers in embassies in the DC area for a while now, but since we can only focus on one story for one news cycle we've forgotten about it until someone new reports on it a few months later.
https://www.royalsreview.com/2...
In 2015 MLB officials questioned KC Royals Manager Ned Yost about his use of his apple watch. He assured them that w/o the phone it's just a watch, he ended up switching to a locally assembled luxury watch to quash any suspicions allegedly.
But this is a known problem in the MLB and they've been, at least selectively watching for 2 years.
Perhaps the motive is to spoil it for others.
I thought comic con was about non-comic book related celebrity appearances and dressing up like a dalek?
People are actually still taking comic books to these things?
Trolleys always operate on a fixed route.
ah yes 2,200 is also bigger than a breadbox. So this iceberg is bigger than a breadbox!
I'd be willing to lump that possibly in with shock and being unaware what they are doing, or just being an asshole.
I've seen enough people after accidents do some pretty irrational things attributed to shock.
A company whose employee retention plan is to call the lawyers likely isn't a great place to work anyways.
Absent other regulations, it's up to the federal trade commission, similar state-level bodies, and disgruntled customers filing lawsuits to keep companies from using deceptive advertising.
Where the FTC and state regulators don't act, it's up to consumers to sue or their advocates such as the press or Consumer's Union to shame them into honesty.
So, will we be seeing regulatory action soon, or will the land sharks be filing class-action suits, or will this be just a case of public shaming?
Or, will nothing happen at all?
The FDA can regulate here and work with the Department of Justice to enforce in this case as this is a cosmetic that is "misbranded".
http://www.fda.gov/Cosmetics/G...
Article implies the FDA has no jurisdiction over this based on that they don't test cosmetics by default, but they do regulate based on it being a "misbranded" cosmetic product.
http://www.fda.gov/Cosmetics/G...
As a sports fan who chooses not to get screwed over by the cable or satellite TV companies, I don't have access to the ESPN app. Paying a couple bucks a month extra to Amazon for live sports would be well worth it to me vs paying for a cable subscription.
It will probably be like current streaming packages. Those games that people like ESPN has exclusive rights to will be blacked out.
This already happens if you have NBA League Pass. Those games that ESPN or TNT has exclusive rights to are blacked out even from video streaming on the official NBA app with the highest level of package. The NBA app lets you stream audio from one of the local radio stations broadcasting the game in return.
So you'll still never be able to see your team play the Cavs, Lakers, or $OTHERPOPULARTEAM/anticipated game unless you have ESPN or TNT or whatever other station streaming or no.
Same thing with MLB's streaming packages, I can't remember if they offer an audio stream when video is blacked out.
Including this in a package on Prime is great, but only for 75% of games. For the rest you still need access to ESPN/TNT/TSN in some way.
I click on the vice link and the url indicates it should be an article about Wells Fargo but the article is really about US military involvement in Yamen.
"it will be useless in less than an hour, preventing nearly all fraudulent transactions."
So how do you not prevent desired recurring transactions?
This seems like the wrong way to solve this.
Everyone I know who does it, does it for stupid trivial shit and it still fails. It seems to be ineffective and greatly annoys those around them, but they don't seem to care when people are angrily looking at them for yelling "set timer for 10 minutes" 7 times.
Happens to android and iOS users
There are non-google app stores.
Apple had its own exploding battery issues not long ago.
Why is an article about the poll on a speculative topic not related to the focus of slashdot even posted here?
I was recently told by a visiting European that the T-Mobile free international data is a feature only offered to T-Mobile US based customers. Though I did not do any checking to validate this.
Doping in cycling has been around since the very beginning. It predates the TdF.
It's pretty much ingrained in the sport itself. Where as doping in other sports came later in their history.
I think the association with cheating in cycling seems more prevalent due to the history and the exposure. I'm not certain that cycling has more cheating than any other sport.