Be careful, the Sprint Unlimited Plan is only on their 4G service. If 4G service is not available, the phone silently downshifts to 3g where the 5gig caps still apply.
Sprint has the smallest 4g network of all the major carriers.
Whoever, having devised or intending to devise any scheme or artifice to defraud, or for obtaining money or property by means of false or fraudulent pretenses, representations, or promises, transmits or causes to be transmitted by means of wire, radio, or television communication in interstate or foreign commerce, any writings, signs, signals, pictures, or sounds for the purpose of executing such scheme or artifice, shall be fined under this title or imprisoned not more than 20 years, or both. If the violation affects a financial institution, such person shall be fined not more than $1,000,000 or imprisoned not more than 30 years, or both.
A customer is asking for one web page, mediacom is substituting another for monetary gain. How is this not wire fraud?
- make sure the equipment is clean; Just rinsing it out isn't enough, everything needs to be washed. - grind the beans yourself, or buy fresh grounds. Coffee grounds go stale in just a few days. - use lots of coffee. 2 tablespoons per cup. - use good tasting water. If you don't like the taste of the water before it becomes coffee, you probably won't like it post brewing.
A lone IT guy does not need software to keep himself on task. A Moleskin, lab notebook, or even a stack of notecards will do the job nicely and won't require training, spin up time, network connectivity, or electricity.
Bob: "Hi, I'm Bob! I work for the Owner. I'd like to hire you to take care of the Owner's house. Here are the keys. These keys are VERY important. Besides the owner, you are the only one allowed to have the keys. This is Helen. She works for you, but isn't allowed to have the keys"
Housesitter: "Cool! sounds like a great job!"
Years later...
Helen: "Give me the keys"
Housesitter: "Do you even work here any more? You haven't shown up for work in months. And why are you going through all the Owners closets?"
Helen: "Help! Police!"
Housesitter: "WTF?"
Police: "You're under arrest! Give Helen the keys."
Housesitter: "I can't. Bob told me that I can only give the keys to the Owner"
Bob: "Give the keys to Helen"
Housesitter: "I can't. You told me that I can only give the keys to the Owner."
In order for information to be considered exempt from release under the FOIA it must fit into one of the following categories AND there must be a legitimate Government purpose served by withholding it:
Information which is currently and properly classified.
Information that pertains solely to the internal rules and practices of the agency. (This exemption has two profiles, "high" and "low." The "high" profile permits withholding of a document that, if released, would allow circumvention of an agency rule, policy, or statute, thereby impeding the agency in the conduct of its mission. The "low" profile permits withholding if there is no public interest in the document, and it would be an administrative burden to process the request.)
Information specifically exempted by a statute establishing particular criteria for withholding. The language of the statute must clearly state that the information will not be disclosed.
Information such as trade secrets and commercial or financial information obtained from a company on a privileged or confidential basis that, if released, would result in competitive harm to the company, impair the government's ability to obtain like information in the future, or protect the government's interest in compliance with program effectiveness.
Inter-agency memoranda that are deliberative in nature; this exemption is appropriate for internal documents that are part of the decision making process and contain subjective evaluations, opinions and recommendations.
Information the release of which could reasonably be expected to constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion of the personal privacy of individuals.
Records or information compiled for law enforcement purposes that (a) could reasonably be expected to interfere with law enforcement proceedings; (b) would deprive a person of a right to a fair trial or impartial adjudication; (c) could reasonably be expected to constitute an unwarranted invasion of the personal privacy of others, (d) disclose the identity of a confidential source, (e) disclose investigative techniques and procedures, or (f) could reasonably be expected to endanger the life or physical safety of any individual.
Certain records of agencies responsible for supervision of financial institutions.
Geological and geophysical information concerning wells.
Actually, a free market offers no protection in this case. Right now, manufacturers use the DMCA to protect their diagnostic gear, but without its protections they could use any scheme they wanted.
Imagine instead each diagnostic code encrypted via a one time pad that is unique to each car that rolls off the line. Only members of the companies authorized repair network would be able to access it.
Not only is he the worlds smallest loneliest minority, but he's surrounded by morons. He doesn't just resent us, he feels like a prisoner that can never escape.
Case 5: The Neanderthal is not only smarter than we are, but more socially adept. He solves global warming and cures cancer. The world sees him as the noble savage. He's on all the late night TV shows. Paparazzi follow him everywhere. All the popular people want to be seen with him. Who could deny him his right to a mate? A female is cloned. She's every bit as charismatic and smart as he is. She discovers the Grand Unified Theory. They become role models for the world. Low brows and strong chins are all the fashion. Their child is beloved by all humanity. All hail the Neoanderthal!
5) Reparations for the victims of hurrican katrina who were failed by their governments.
It's not the taxpayers responsibility to fund disaster recovery efforts. A compassionate community should be able to do that without needing to have the government confiscate our property from us (in the form of taxes).
That might be the case under your administration, but it was not the case under the government in power at the time of the disaster. If those people were owed reparations, it needs to be determined under the framework of laws that was in place at the time.
Tangentially, I think your compassionate community idea really doesn't work when the entire community is destroyed in the disaster. Some disasters are just too big to be handled locally.
The cpu lag problem is nothing compared to the dialup problem.
When I moved out the sticks there was no dsl, no cable , and satelite was too way expensive. That left me with modem over ancient phone lines (how 20th century!). A friend gave me a 56k modem with which I found I was able to connect at a MIGHTY 22k baud.
The new Yahoo mail was COMPLETELY unusable. It couldn't get past the loading screen.
I used to work with a guy named John. He told me this story.
A few years ago John was interviewing candidates for a position. He received a few resumes, but one really stood out. The guy looked sharp...on paper. The odd thing was that during the intereviewed, he kept talking about all of the Ctt experience he had - Johns had never heard of Ctt and wondered what the guy was talking about. When quized about it the candidate was rather vague, only describing it as an object oriented version of c. That's when John experienced what some refer to as a moment of clarity. The candidate was saying Ctt, but he was talking about C++. Further investigation revealed that the guy was completely full of shit and had fabricated the entire resume.
and that's they story of why they give programming quizes to candidates...even those that look good on paper.
Even after you test a Model 3, how do you rate its reliability against any car with an internal combustion engine?
Take a look at the top 10 car repairs of 2015: (From http://blog.credit.com/2016/04...)
Replacing an oxygen sensor – $249
Replacing a catalytic converter – $1,153
Replacing ignition coil(s) and spark plug(s) – $390
Tightening or replacing a fuel cap – $15
Thermostat replacement – $210
Replacing ignition coil(s) – $236
Mass air flow sensor replacement – $382
Replacing spark plug wire(s) and spark plug(s) – $331
Replacing evaporative emissions (EVAP) purge control valve – $168
Replacing evaporate emissions (EVAP) purging solenoid – $184
The model 3 doesn't even have any of these parts.
They will have cloned the drive before they let her anywhere near it.
They aren't going to default on existing contracts. They just won't offer unlimited contracts in the future.
I used 'shat' in a scrabble tournament. It passed challenge. I assure you, it is a word.
Be careful, the Sprint Unlimited Plan is only on their 4G service. If 4G service is not available, the phone silently downshifts to 3g where the 5gig caps still apply.
Sprint has the smallest 4g network of all the major carriers.
Wire Fraud:
A customer is asking for one web page, mediacom is substituting another for monetary gain. How is this not wire fraud?
Is there such a thing as 'just getting by' in your world?
try this next time you make coffee.
- make sure the equipment is clean; Just rinsing it out isn't enough, everything needs to be washed.
- grind the beans yourself, or buy fresh grounds. Coffee grounds go stale in just a few days.
- use lots of coffee. 2 tablespoons per cup.
- use good tasting water. If you don't like the taste of the water before it becomes coffee, you probably won't like it post brewing.
I cannot agree more.
A lone IT guy does not need software to keep himself on task. A Moleskin, lab notebook, or even a stack of notecards will do the job nicely and won't require training, spin up time, network connectivity, or electricity.
Isn't it more like....
Bob: "Hi, I'm Bob! I work for the Owner. I'd like to hire you to take care of the Owner's house. Here are the keys. These keys are VERY important. Besides the owner, you are the only one allowed to have the keys. This is Helen. She works for you, but isn't allowed to have the keys"
Housesitter: "Cool! sounds like a great job!"
Years later...
Helen: "Give me the keys"
Housesitter: "Do you even work here any more? You haven't shown up for work in months. And why are you going through all the Owners closets?"
Helen: "Help! Police!"
Housesitter: "WTF?"
Police: "You're under arrest! Give Helen the keys."
Housesitter: "I can't. Bob told me that I can only give the keys to the Owner"
Bob: "Give the keys to Helen"
Housesitter: "I can't. You told me that I can only give the keys to the Owner."
The Owner: "Give me the keys"
Housesitter: "Ok, here you go! Can I leave now?"
Police: "Back to jail, Criminal!"
In order for information to be considered exempt from release under the FOIA it must fit into one of the following categories AND there must be a legitimate Government purpose served by withholding it:
(Excerpted from: http://www.fas.org/irp/doddir/dod/5200-1r/appendix_c.htm)
more like a Commodore 64
I agree with you in principle, but you could have chosen better examples to make your point.
Scrubs and Earl had gone seriously downhill. The first few seasons of each were hilariously funny, but they were in trouble at the end.
Frasier ran for nine years.
Actually, a free market offers no protection in this case. Right now, manufacturers use the DMCA to protect their diagnostic gear, but without its protections they could use any scheme they wanted.
Imagine instead each diagnostic code encrypted via a one time pad that is unique to each car that rolls off the line. Only members of the companies authorized repair network would be able to access it.
If you have 100 users and are using anything more complicated that a telephone and a stack of notecards you are a moron.
If you absolutely MUST have something digital try this: a shared drive and a text editor.
Did you take a shower today? The water probably came from the government, through government pipes.
Did you drive to work? You probably drove on a government road.
Was your country occupied by a foreign army? That's probably because of your government funded Army.
Do you have electricity? It probably came to your house through a wire that was installed on a government mandated easement.
I could give you more examples... a lot more examples, but I think I'd be wasting my time.
Case 4: The Neanderthal is smarter than we are.
Not only is he the worlds smallest loneliest minority, but he's surrounded by morons. He doesn't just resent us, he feels like a prisoner that can never escape.
Case 5: The Neanderthal is not only smarter than we are, but more socially adept. He solves global warming and cures cancer. The world sees him as the noble savage. He's on all the late night TV shows. Paparazzi follow him everywhere. All the popular people want to be seen with him. Who could deny him his right to a mate? A female is cloned. She's every bit as charismatic and smart as he is. She discovers the Grand Unified Theory. They become role models for the world. Low brows and strong chins are all the fashion. Their child is beloved by all humanity. All hail the Neoanderthal!
That might be the case under your administration, but it was not the case under the government in power at the time of the disaster. If those people were owed reparations, it needs to be determined under the framework of laws that was in place at the time.
Tangentially, I think your compassionate community idea really doesn't work when the entire community is destroyed in the disaster. Some disasters are just too big to be handled locally.
Not in Ohio.
We don't have any suitably active geothermal sites.
We also don't have a high enough average wind speed for wind power.
and we don't have an ocean for tidal power (there isn't an exploitable tide on Lake Erie).
About the only green options we have a solar and nuclear.
Will be be able to use the controller on any USB ready device..like, say, my PC?
It would be interesting to see how many of the names in that list use the same password for MySpace account as they do in their email account.
your adblocker (or something like it) is proabaly closing a popup window as soon as it appears.
The cpu lag problem is nothing compared to the dialup problem.
When I moved out the sticks there was no dsl, no cable , and satelite was too way expensive. That left me with modem over ancient phone lines (how 20th century!). A friend gave me a 56k modem with which I found I was able to connect at a MIGHTY 22k baud.
The new Yahoo mail was COMPLETELY unusable. It couldn't get past the loading screen.
I used to work with a guy named John. He told me this story.
A few years ago John was interviewing candidates for a position. He received a few resumes, but one really stood out. The guy looked sharp...on paper. The odd thing was that during the intereviewed, he kept talking about all of the Ctt experience he had - Johns had never heard of Ctt and wondered what the guy was talking about. When quized about it the candidate was rather vague, only describing it as an object oriented version of c. That's when John experienced what some refer to as a moment of clarity. The candidate was saying Ctt, but he was talking about C++. Further investigation revealed that the guy was completely full of shit and had fabricated the entire resume.
and that's they story of why they give programming quizes to candidates...even those that look good on paper.
MOTHER OF GOD you're right! How could we have been so blind?
...
I'll alert the Congress, you go give Saddam back his country!!!1!
The authorization for Operation Iraqi Liberation was granted by a Congressional Resolution in October 2002.