No wrong could possibly ever be done by the end user. It's always PayPal's fault. Ridiculous!
Half of the things that wikileaks does is borderline illegal. I'm not saying that the things they expose don't, but there might be better means of doing it. I have no idea if Wikileaks has broken the ToS but it's perfectly within PayPal's rights to freeze an account for fraud.
9 times out of 10, it's an automatic restriction put in place by various fraud rules. It happens and is also why PayPal doesn't lose their ass to fraud.
PayPal for the record of course wants to become a bank. But it's a long slow process to do so. Stop acting like PayPal is trying to skirt the law by not being a US bank. It's more of a hassle sometimes to not be and certainly costs more in the end.
The inflection in the reviewer's voice is half the fun. Don't be a party-pooper until you give it a chance! Do you think sarcasm translates perfectly over text too? It's a satirical and humorous but has some serious (from a nerd's point of view) points.
I started my unix-life about 13 years ago with FreeBSD. It was the 2.x.x era. It was young but super stable and used by many Internet power houses like Yahoo. Long story short, I eventually migrated mainly to Linux on my personal servers. I've been using Gentoo for about 5 years now. Now, I want a file-system to store all my stuff on my home server that is superior to ext3.
This quest has brought me back full circle to FreeBSD 8. I've used ZFS professionally for many years now and is my preference. So my first thought was to use OpenSolaris. Unfortunately, I was saddened to see that my old but still perfectly working 3ware 8xxx SATA cards are unsupported in Solaris. That left me with FreeBSD which had 3ware support and happily stable ZFS support.
Moral of the story is that while OpenSolaris has expanded hardware support here and there, it's still woefully short of "anything you might have laying around" type of support which is essential for the home hobbyist. Interestingly, while I'm sure there have been many under-the-hood changes over the years, FreeBSD from a user's perspective is still near identical to how it was all those years ago. That is somewhat disappointing because the menu-interface should've been drastically improved years ago. Seriously, why would I want to hit "Cancel" to move to the next menu?
You clearly haven't tried to manage fraud on more than 70 million active accounts. Anybody that's had a high school statistics class will tell you that some innocent people are going to get caught in the net. Of course, it's not perfect. It never will be. Neither is the Visa fraud system that denies charges that it deems to be "out of character" for your habits. But I don't see you bitching that Visa won't let you buy a lifetime subscription to your favorite monkeyporn site.
My point is that, PayPal gets a bad rap because of a small minority of people that have had a bad experience because they met the fraud models that were put in place to protect the other millions and millions of customers. Sorry to hear about the misfortune. Life goes on.
So the ONLY difference between the two scenarios you're positing is possibly the number of phones jailbreak-able before they fix their code. Give me a break.
There will be literally millions of phones produced with 3.0. It's not like they're scarce. Also, 3.1 won't available before September at best. Apple really isn't that quick with their releases.
You're betting heavily that Apple's 3.1 code will be perfect. History has shown that code is never perfect (especially on something so complex) so if it is, Apple will have reached a computing milestone.
Nerds seem to have a good bit of hate towards Twitter. I've never really understood why. It could be because of the ridiculous names associated with it. Twitter, tweeting, twits, etc. But these are the same people that have no problem whatsoever using Google, Yelp and even WYSIWYG apps.
Names aside, perhaps its because the 'common' people use it and find it enjoyable. Ditch the air of superiority and embrace what communication is becoming. For better or for worse, it's here to stay like e-mail. That fad from 30 years ago that is still around today.
I'm not thrilled about not have a subsidy but I see the rationale. They don't want people dumping their suddenly displaced iP3G on eBay for $200, since people would lap that up without a contract because the current 3G phone is "good enough" for most people.
However, this move will hurt number of units moved, which in the end, I think Apple cares about more than the kickbacks they're getting from AT&T for contracts. This is probably just more AT&T dickery. There has been plenty of that today with the MMS and Tethering issues.
Hello, you obviously don't live here. There is ONE other national GSM carrier in the US besides AT&T, that is T-Mobile and their 3G network is weak at best (or at least is vastly less mature).
Nextly, that doesn't matter much if you want a subsidy from the sole official provider of the iPhone in the US.
I think he also ignores the fact that although music tastes vary widely from person to person, from my view the vast majority of independent label music is crap in most people's view. Does that mean it -is-? No, not necessarily. But mass-marketing is by definition, the taste of the masses or at least music that the masses will pay for.
Because ZFS is a gross memory hog.:) These servers work out pretty good for cold storage, but putting lots of random I/O read stress on it and you'll be left wanting some 15k SCSI disks. Oh well, price vs. performance.
Very simple... Grab a free MaxMind GeoIP database from http://www.maxmind.com/ and integrate it into your sign-up process. Done!
Re:Want a job? Get on LinkedIn
on
Linked In Or Out?
·
· Score: 3, Interesting
That's the whole point of LinkedIn, it's supposed to be work-related and have nothing to do with your non-professional life. You could look at it like just another social network but it's not setup to be like that. You can't post a bunch of pictures of what you did this weekend and get people's inane comments on them.
When it comes to 'chummy co-workers', I'm going to go out on a limb and say a vast majority of companies probably prefer co-workers that get along and are comfortable with each other because it leads to effective communication. Sure, relationships can go sour and outside influences can mess with that but in many cases you see the people you work with more hours per day than your spouse. Most reasonable people can see that and put small issues aside that would otherwise taint a non-professional relationship.
What I'm trying to get at here is that friendly is better than hostile 100% of the time and these tools like LinkedIn that get us just a little bit closer to each other are a good thing when used properly. I'm venturing to guess there is a very tiny fraction of the time that this information available online can be used for bad intentions. But hey, so can a phonebook.
Sounds vaguely reminiscent of the double-crosses that would happen in TradeWars 2002. Granted, your BBS'ing community was much smaller, but I wager that TW2002 might be more fun still than EVE Online.
I hope you realize the upside to this. The p2p selection isn't random. The idea is that you'll hopefully be paired with people on your own local network so that everybody on your segment can watch it with minimal inbound bandwidth across your Internet link.
All the paranoia about this is expected from this crowd but when you realize that hey, the other 99% of the population on the Internet probably isn't as savvy, the big picture becomes a bit clearer.
The irony is the amount of people willing to use p2p for illegal uses and spew a big chunk of bandwidth out for that but unwilling to allow the same for a free, high quality legal video feed that costs real money (and a lot of it) to produce.
I have no idea what the hell this article is talking about. This will be the most covered event in history, because, well, it is history. There will be many, many, many live video streams covering it and just because one provider has decided to use Silverlight doesn't mean the whole Internet has to use just one feed.
CNN.com for example will be covering this using their same live flash player they've been using for a while. So let's not kid ourselves and pretend that MS has a monopoly on the Internet.
The date of the FCC approval is in the first linked story. Sure, it was proposed a little over a year ago, but they were separate companies until recently and completely operationally separate until VERY recently (try two weeks).
Anyway, satellite radio will continue on, they'll just keep getting cash infusions from somewhere until they start making money.
There's a lot to be said for having 20something million customers. If you can't make a business work with well over a billion dollars a year in revenue, it's time to trash upper-management and bring in somebody new that can.
What's more, who even uses RAID 5 anymore? I thought it was all RAID 10 and whatnot these days.
Just because the number is higher doesn't mean it's 'better'. RAID levels are to be chosen based on what (performance, size, redundancy) is specifically required. One size most definitely does not fit all. RAID 10 is really just RAID 1+0 anyway, which is to say a stripe of mirrors.
For many 'cold storage' or online-archiving cases, RAID 5 is desired because it offers the greatest redundancy and storage combination with not bad performance. I have many RAID 5 arrays at home and work. They typically consist of drives under 500GB each though and consist of 6 drives or under. The (old) article brings up valid points though and it is something that should be considered.
ZFS does offer some more protections like byte-level parity checks but at the heart of it still consists of striping. Sun does recommend good practices on using ZFS on an X4500 (Thumper) like keeping raid groups (which are then concatenated into a pool) smaller than 9 drives and using double-parity like in RAID 6.
The big hurdle here is that until ZFS makes it into the stock Linux kernel tree, adoption will be limited. (Full) Mac OS X support will definitely help on that front.
Let's give more bandwidth to ordinary people that run super-secure Operating Systems and will undoubtedly never get any malicious trojans.
Seriously, 1Gbps is so insanely overboard. Many service providers don't even need that much bandwidth. That much can only be used for bad things.
The amusing part about it, is that it will be capped at 30GB transfer a month probably. AWESOME! You can reach your cap for the month in a matter of hours.
I have to say ditto on that. I'm very much a Linux/Mac person. But I have to say the 360 is pretty fantastic. I haven't played a Wii game in around 6 months, but I play CoD, GH or Forza pretty much daily.
Besides not having very many attractive (to me) looking games, the decision to leave out HD and online play (until recently, and even then it's not unified like the 360) has definitely had an effect on me not playing it. I don't consider myself a hardcore gamer, but technical details like that are huge.
No wrong could possibly ever be done by the end user. It's always PayPal's fault. Ridiculous!
Half of the things that wikileaks does is borderline illegal. I'm not saying that the things they expose don't, but there might be better means of doing it. I have no idea if Wikileaks has broken the ToS but it's perfectly within PayPal's rights to freeze an account for fraud.
9 times out of 10, it's an automatic restriction put in place by various fraud rules. It happens and is also why PayPal doesn't lose their ass to fraud.
PayPal for the record of course wants to become a bank. But it's a long slow process to do so. Stop acting like PayPal is trying to skirt the law by not being a US bank. It's more of a hassle sometimes to not be and certainly costs more in the end.
Administrators of websites can access your accounts. Oh my word!
The inflection in the reviewer's voice is half the fun. Don't be a party-pooper until you give it a chance! Do you think sarcasm translates perfectly over text too? It's a satirical and humorous but has some serious (from a nerd's point of view) points.
You're missing out but to each, their own.
I started my unix-life about 13 years ago with FreeBSD. It was the 2.x.x era. It was young but super stable and used by many Internet power houses like Yahoo. Long story short, I eventually migrated mainly to Linux on my personal servers. I've been using Gentoo for about 5 years now. Now, I want a file-system to store all my stuff on my home server that is superior to ext3.
This quest has brought me back full circle to FreeBSD 8. I've used ZFS professionally for many years now and is my preference. So my first thought was to use OpenSolaris. Unfortunately, I was saddened to see that my old but still perfectly working 3ware 8xxx SATA cards are unsupported in Solaris. That left me with FreeBSD which had 3ware support and happily stable ZFS support.
Moral of the story is that while OpenSolaris has expanded hardware support here and there, it's still woefully short of "anything you might have laying around" type of support which is essential for the home hobbyist. Interestingly, while I'm sure there have been many under-the-hood changes over the years, FreeBSD from a user's perspective is still near identical to how it was all those years ago. That is somewhat disappointing because the menu-interface should've been drastically improved years ago. Seriously, why would I want to hit "Cancel" to move to the next menu?
But it gets the job done.
You clearly haven't tried to manage fraud on more than 70 million active accounts. Anybody that's had a high school statistics class will tell you that some innocent people are going to get caught in the net. Of course, it's not perfect. It never will be. Neither is the Visa fraud system that denies charges that it deems to be "out of character" for your habits. But I don't see you bitching that Visa won't let you buy a lifetime subscription to your favorite monkeyporn site.
My point is that, PayPal gets a bad rap because of a small minority of people that have had a bad experience because they met the fraud models that were put in place to protect the other millions and millions of customers. Sorry to hear about the misfortune. Life goes on.
So the ONLY difference between the two scenarios you're positing is possibly the number of phones jailbreak-able before they fix their code. Give me a break.
There will be literally millions of phones produced with 3.0. It's not like they're scarce. Also, 3.1 won't available before September at best. Apple really isn't that quick with their releases.
You're betting heavily that Apple's 3.1 code will be perfect. History has shown that code is never perfect (especially on something so complex) so if it is, Apple will have reached a computing milestone.
Nerds seem to have a good bit of hate towards Twitter. I've never really understood why. It could be because of the ridiculous names associated with it. Twitter, tweeting, twits, etc. But these are the same people that have no problem whatsoever using Google, Yelp and even WYSIWYG apps.
Names aside, perhaps its because the 'common' people use it and find it enjoyable. Ditch the air of superiority and embrace what communication is becoming. For better or for worse, it's here to stay like e-mail. That fad from 30 years ago that is still around today.
I'm not thrilled about not have a subsidy but I see the rationale. They don't want people dumping their suddenly displaced iP3G on eBay for $200, since people would lap that up without a contract because the current 3G phone is "good enough" for most people.
However, this move will hurt number of units moved, which in the end, I think Apple cares about more than the kickbacks they're getting from AT&T for contracts. This is probably just more AT&T dickery. There has been plenty of that today with the MMS and Tethering issues.
Hello, you obviously don't live here. There is ONE other national GSM carrier in the US besides AT&T, that is T-Mobile and their 3G network is weak at best (or at least is vastly less mature).
Nextly, that doesn't matter much if you want a subsidy from the sole official provider of the iPhone in the US.
I think he also ignores the fact that although music tastes vary widely from person to person, from my view the vast majority of independent label music is crap in most people's view. Does that mean it -is-? No, not necessarily. But mass-marketing is by definition, the taste of the masses or at least music that the masses will pay for.
Because ZFS is a gross memory hog. :) These servers work out pretty good for cold storage, but putting lots of random I/O read stress on it and you'll be left wanting some 15k SCSI disks. Oh well, price vs. performance.
Very simple... Grab a free MaxMind GeoIP database from http://www.maxmind.com/ and integrate it into your sign-up process. Done!
That's the whole point of LinkedIn, it's supposed to be work-related and have nothing to do with your non-professional life. You could look at it like just another social network but it's not setup to be like that. You can't post a bunch of pictures of what you did this weekend and get people's inane comments on them.
When it comes to 'chummy co-workers', I'm going to go out on a limb and say a vast majority of companies probably prefer co-workers that get along and are comfortable with each other because it leads to effective communication. Sure, relationships can go sour and outside influences can mess with that but in many cases you see the people you work with more hours per day than your spouse. Most reasonable people can see that and put small issues aside that would otherwise taint a non-professional relationship.
What I'm trying to get at here is that friendly is better than hostile 100% of the time and these tools like LinkedIn that get us just a little bit closer to each other are a good thing when used properly. I'm venturing to guess there is a very tiny fraction of the time that this information available online can be used for bad intentions. But hey, so can a phonebook.
Sounds vaguely reminiscent of the double-crosses that would happen in TradeWars 2002. Granted, your BBS'ing community was much smaller, but I wager that TW2002 might be more fun still than EVE Online.
Go Text! It's Best!
I hope you realize the upside to this. The p2p selection isn't random. The idea is that you'll hopefully be paired with people on your own local network so that everybody on your segment can watch it with minimal inbound bandwidth across your Internet link.
All the paranoia about this is expected from this crowd but when you realize that hey, the other 99% of the population on the Internet probably isn't as savvy, the big picture becomes a bit clearer.
The irony is the amount of people willing to use p2p for illegal uses and spew a big chunk of bandwidth out for that but unwilling to allow the same for a free, high quality legal video feed that costs real money (and a lot of it) to produce.
I have no idea what the hell this article is talking about. This will be the most covered event in history, because, well, it is history. There will be many, many, many live video streams covering it and just because one provider has decided to use Silverlight doesn't mean the whole Internet has to use just one feed.
CNN.com for example will be covering this using their same live flash player they've been using for a while. So let's not kid ourselves and pretend that MS has a monopoly on the Internet.
kthnx.
The better to monitor you with! Would this be government operated? Yikes!
The date of the FCC approval is in the first linked story. Sure, it was proposed a little over a year ago, but they were separate companies until recently and completely operationally separate until VERY recently (try two weeks).
Anyway, satellite radio will continue on, they'll just keep getting cash infusions from somewhere until they start making money.
There's a lot to be said for having 20something million customers. If you can't make a business work with well over a billion dollars a year in revenue, it's time to trash upper-management and bring in somebody new that can.
What's more, who even uses RAID 5 anymore? I thought it was all RAID 10 and whatnot these days.
Just because the number is higher doesn't mean it's 'better'. RAID levels are to be chosen based on what (performance, size, redundancy) is specifically required. One size most definitely does not fit all. RAID 10 is really just RAID 1+0 anyway, which is to say a stripe of mirrors.
For many 'cold storage' or online-archiving cases, RAID 5 is desired because it offers the greatest redundancy and storage combination with not bad performance. I have many RAID 5 arrays at home and work. They typically consist of drives under 500GB each though and consist of 6 drives or under. The (old) article brings up valid points though and it is something that should be considered.
ZFS does offer some more protections like byte-level parity checks but at the heart of it still consists of striping. Sun does recommend good practices on using ZFS on an X4500 (Thumper) like keeping raid groups (which are then concatenated into a pool) smaller than 9 drives and using double-parity like in RAID 6.
The big hurdle here is that until ZFS makes it into the stock Linux kernel tree, adoption will be limited. (Full) Mac OS X support will definitely help on that front.
I'm going to troll ridiculously old articles and post them to Slashdot and hope the editors don't notice... oh cool, they didn't here either!
Let's give more bandwidth to ordinary people that run super-secure Operating Systems and will undoubtedly never get any malicious trojans.
Seriously, 1Gbps is so insanely overboard. Many service providers don't even need that much bandwidth. That much can only be used for bad things.
The amusing part about it, is that it will be capped at 30GB transfer a month probably. AWESOME! You can reach your cap for the month in a matter of hours.
Advertising.
Just set your double tap home to disable or ipod. Not much you can do then. But yes, double tap should probably be disabled when locked.
Thank you for the advert, it's prevented me from having to do it. :D
I have to say ditto on that. I'm very much a Linux/Mac person. But I have to say the 360 is pretty fantastic. I haven't played a Wii game in around 6 months, but I play CoD, GH or Forza pretty much daily.
Besides not having very many attractive (to me) looking games, the decision to leave out HD and online play (until recently, and even then it's not unified like the 360) has definitely had an effect on me not playing it. I don't consider myself a hardcore gamer, but technical details like that are huge.