I eliminated sugar, wheat, caffeine, and dairy. I lost 80lbs, cut my risk of heart disease by more than half (per blood labs) and my hair started to grow back (vitamins and meditation help to a lesser degree). I was able to start running and lifiting and the ladies are way interested. But go ahead and munch on Doritos and Mt. Dew if you prefer - a goatee should compensate.
Oh, and I have literally hundreds of delicious dishes I can make without doing any foraging. Just shop the outer perimeter of the grocery store and experience real food.
It's illegal to sell some things like this (moon rocks, etc.). That either creates free (aka "black") market pressures, or for the fully law-abiding, incentives to dispose.
It's like kidneys - there's both a massive abundance and a massive shortage because the price mechanism is made illegal in the market. As usual, people suffer and die when the politicians get involved.
In the case of an MI the factor that matters most is how fast the patient gets to the hospital. Yeah, assuming CPR/AED, but nine minutes can be huge. It's an edge case but it's real.
If I were a judge with a gun to my head like that I'd issue a batshit-crazy ruling, like talking about the mystery of numbers and grains of sand on a beach, to at least signal something is very wrong.
But apart from the aqueduct, roads, public health, sanitation, peace, public order, education, and healthcare
Yes, those are things that nobody would demand in a market situation. Clearly we need human sacrifice on the order of hundreds of millions of people to provide water transportation systems.
"But if we don't sacrifice the virgins, the sun won't come up, and then everybody will die!"
I'm not sure which is the most repulsive: the Stockholm syndrome, the lack of reason and creativity, or the sociopathic disregard for the lives of millions in deference to the propaganda of a seventh-grade government-school civics teacher.
"You can ignore reality, but you can't ignore the consequences of reality."
ha, at least read Apple's security whitepaper if you're going to tell other people to do so. Newer iPhones (5s and later) have trusted hardware - older ones don't, it's that simple. You need a certain OS level to use it effectively, obviously.
I don't even own any iOS devices and I know this. It's no crime to not stay advised of the market, but if you're going to castigate others you really need to be well-informed.
The only valid conclusion is that none of the "engineers" involved have any reasonable level of experience and knowledge as to how to implement cryptography right. As a consequence they all fail.
Generally speaking, everybody gets crypto wrong. The factors that we can control are how many people are looking at the code and how good is the reputation of the authors.
Who wrote the WD firmware? A low bidder anonymous tech firm? An intern working on reference demo code?
Smart people will run LUKS on their drives or Veracrypt (or even Bitlocker) on their drives. If WD were smart they'd just OEM Veracrypt for the "Home Edition" users and ship cheaper drives - only in a synthetic benchmark could this approach be worse than all the others.
... not for you - did your seventh-grade government school teacher perhaps try to tell you otherwise? Try to deal with empirical reality, not platitudes.
The entrenched interests that give high-paying jobs to former regulators are delighted that startups can't compete and that the products only have to be safe on paper, not subject to real competitive review (notice that Consumer Reports doesn't compare replacement needs - Consumers' Union does lobbying instead, unlike cars).
Gosh, back when I was doing medical work it was astonishing how a respirator could be shut down with a passing radio. FDA and FCC gave medical a complete pass on RF interference, not because shielding and grounding is hard, but because medical industry paid for the exemption and they could save a few bucks on manufacturing, and fuck the grandma who needs a vent. The relative cost was minimal, but they're special snowflakes and they didn't have to worry about a spunky startup getting a booth at a trade show demonstrating the reckless endangerment by the old corps.
have you seen a good chiropractor? Find one who views the nervous system like an organic data network and can talk about cognitive load. I had a neck injury and it caused more than a month of fuzzy-thinking and fatigue due to both the injury itself and to the extra cycles my brain had to do keeping my off-kilter balance. The before and after x-rays are pretty striking - the doc did good work.
When there's a product that ships from China and has only a single, 5-star, over-the-top, broken-English verified-buyer purchase, I know to avoid the product. And all the vendor's products have similar ones... I guess we'll lose that filter.
performs this service but destroys the sample and the DNA data afterwards
that's a good idea. They'll create a market and then get an National Security Letter saying they have to keep the data anyway, but can't tell anybody, and maybe if they're lucky they'll get a motivation payment, like RSA got from the NSA for making the weak PRNG a default in their products.
They can charge their customers a premium and also make some extra on the side. Fascist USA is best USA.
Oh - that new genomics company with very cheap tests and only a drop of blood? Henry Kissinger is a board member. They're not even subtle about it anymore.
Somebody could convince me with data to the contrary but as far as I can tell Redhat puts the most money into Linux and pays the most developers to work on Linux, therefore the most work is coming out of Red Hat, therefore Redhat work gets adopted at a proportionally higher level. There doesn't need to be any conspiracy - Redhat has the money because they're popular because people like the work they do. It's a totally competitive marketplace - their dominance in enterprise is because their stuff works and is of good quality, not because of any sort of monopolistic bundling agreements - in a free market we cheer the winners!
That said, this is an area in which Redhat has been sorely lacking. If a competitor had come along with a tightly-integrated package manager and DevOps system that would couple with a network deployment system for effective cloud provisioning, Redhat would face some very fast and very intense competition to stay relevant. Fortunately they seem to realize this (finally). They could still blow it by not getting the necessary hooks all the way down into rpm, so their success is not guaranteed.
Now that PuppetLabs has destroyed everything by making puppet 4 incompatible with puppet 3, I'll take a look at ansible.
But blackmail is illegal anyway, so if they're willing to break the law to get what they want, they can do it either way, and if they are not willing to break the law, then the possibility of blackmailing MPs doesn't matter either.
Right. So the only winning move is to disband GCHQ entirely.
We have confirmation that in the USA the NSA spies on Senators and all-but confirmation that they're being blackmailed to support the MIC. Any US Senators who aren't willing to take those arrows (the dirt will come out if they move against the intelligence apparatus that has taken control of the governments along with the banksters) should retire and start collecting their undeserved pensions.
It's just human nature that such things happen, so it would be very surprising if GCHQ isn't operating similarly and the British MP's aren't in a similar situation. They have no move that won't hurt them.
Walmart is first and foremost a tech company . Their computerized logistics chain is the essential technology that enables them to be a multinational behemoth rather than a typical regional discount store chain. This has been true for decades.
Google supposedly requires news sites to not show different content to Googlebot than it does to users, at least for three articles a day, or be labeled a "subscription" site, in the News listings. There's even a reporting tool for users to notify Google if such shenanigans is going on.
Google doesn't actually seem to act on any of those reports, though, so news sites can be paywalled and Google will help drive traffic their direction. But then again, since nobody is playing by the rules, User-Agent-Switcher doesn't seem like such a bad option either.
When Memphis falls down, people are going to lose their minds. It's just a guessing game as to when. Nobody is prepared for it and the USG will drag down the rest of the country to deal with a relatively local disaster. "United we stand, together we fall".
I eliminated sugar, wheat, caffeine, and dairy. I lost 80lbs, cut my risk of heart disease by more than half (per blood labs) and my hair started to grow back (vitamins and meditation help to a lesser degree). I was able to start running and lifiting and the ladies are way interested. But go ahead and munch on Doritos and Mt. Dew if you prefer - a goatee should compensate.
Oh, and I have literally hundreds of delicious dishes I can make without doing any foraging. Just shop the outer perimeter of the grocery store and experience real food.
It's illegal to sell some things like this (moon rocks, etc.). That either creates free (aka "black") market pressures, or for the fully law-abiding, incentives to dispose.
It's like kidneys - there's both a massive abundance and a massive shortage because the price mechanism is made illegal in the market. As usual, people suffer and die when the politicians get involved.
I don't know about you but I want politicians to tell me what I can say about other politicians.
In the case of an MI the factor that matters most is how fast the patient gets to the hospital. Yeah, assuming CPR/AED, but nine minutes can be huge. It's an edge case but it's real.
If I were a judge with a gun to my head like that I'd issue a batshit-crazy ruling, like talking about the mystery of numbers and grains of sand on a beach, to at least signal something is very wrong.
But apart from the aqueduct, roads, public health, sanitation, peace, public order, education, and healthcare
Yes, those are things that nobody would demand in a market situation. Clearly we need human sacrifice on the order of hundreds of millions of people to provide water transportation systems.
"But if we don't sacrifice the virgins, the sun won't come up, and then everybody will die!"
I'm not sure which is the most repulsive: the Stockholm syndrome, the lack of reason and creativity, or the sociopathic disregard for the lives of millions in deference to the propaganda of a seventh-grade government-school civics teacher.
"You can ignore reality, but you can't ignore the consequences of reality."
And now (finally) in 6.0 it'll be hardware-accelerated. So it'll be usable and not panned like the Nexus 6.
This is one of the hidden costs of supporting the copyright system - privatize the gains, socialize the losses. Good government, have a cookie.
No, they'll sue youtube-dl and Xposed now, for cutting into their revenue. "Don't be Evil" is so last month.
why can't your monitor handle rotation? Is it a 60lb VGA display?
> do your homework
ha, at least read Apple's security whitepaper if you're going to tell other people to do so. Newer iPhones (5s and later) have trusted hardware - older ones don't, it's that simple. You need a certain OS level to use it effectively, obviously.
I don't even own any iOS devices and I know this. It's no crime to not stay advised of the market, but if you're going to castigate others you really need to be well-informed.
should be in prison
But NYC *is* the prison. The mistake would be assuming that most residents aren't happy about being frisked and irradiated.
The only valid conclusion is that none of the "engineers" involved have any reasonable level of experience and knowledge as to how to implement cryptography right. As a consequence they all fail.
Generally speaking, everybody gets crypto wrong. The factors that we can control are how many people are looking at the code and how good is the reputation of the authors.
Who wrote the WD firmware? A low bidder anonymous tech firm? An intern working on reference demo code?
Smart people will run LUKS on their drives or Veracrypt (or even Bitlocker) on their drives. If WD were smart they'd just OEM Veracrypt for the "Home Edition" users and ship cheaper drives - only in a synthetic benchmark could this approach be worse than all the others.
... not for you - did your seventh-grade government school teacher perhaps try to tell you otherwise? Try to deal with empirical reality, not platitudes.
The entrenched interests that give high-paying jobs to former regulators are delighted that startups can't compete and that the products only have to be safe on paper, not subject to real competitive review (notice that Consumer Reports doesn't compare replacement needs - Consumers' Union does lobbying instead, unlike cars).
Gosh, back when I was doing medical work it was astonishing how a respirator could be shut down with a passing radio. FDA and FCC gave medical a complete pass on RF interference, not because shielding and grounding is hard, but because medical industry paid for the exemption and they could save a few bucks on manufacturing, and fuck the grandma who needs a vent. The relative cost was minimal, but they're special snowflakes and they didn't have to worry about a spunky startup getting a booth at a trade show demonstrating the reckless endangerment by the old corps.
have you seen a good chiropractor? Find one who views the nervous system like an organic data network and can talk about cognitive load. I had a neck injury and it caused more than a month of fuzzy-thinking and fatigue due to both the injury itself and to the extra cycles my brain had to do keeping my off-kilter balance. The before and after x-rays are pretty striking - the doc did good work.
When there's a product that ships from China and has only a single, 5-star, over-the-top, broken-English verified-buyer purchase, I know to avoid the product. And all the vendor's products have similar ones... I guess we'll lose that filter.
performs this service but destroys the sample and the DNA data afterwards
that's a good idea. They'll create a market and then get an National Security Letter saying they have to keep the data anyway, but can't tell anybody, and maybe if they're lucky they'll get a motivation payment, like RSA got from the NSA for making the weak PRNG a default in their products.
They can charge their customers a premium and also make some extra on the side. Fascist USA is best USA.
Oh - that new genomics company with very cheap tests and only a drop of blood? Henry Kissinger is a board member. They're not even subtle about it anymore.
Somebody could convince me with data to the contrary but as far as I can tell Redhat puts the most money into Linux and pays the most developers to work on Linux, therefore the most work is coming out of Red Hat, therefore Redhat work gets adopted at a proportionally higher level. There doesn't need to be any conspiracy - Redhat has the money because they're popular because people like the work they do. It's a totally competitive marketplace - their dominance in enterprise is because their stuff works and is of good quality, not because of any sort of monopolistic bundling agreements - in a free market we cheer the winners!
That said, this is an area in which Redhat has been sorely lacking. If a competitor had come along with a tightly-integrated package manager and DevOps system that would couple with a network deployment system for effective cloud provisioning, Redhat would face some very fast and very intense competition to stay relevant. Fortunately they seem to realize this (finally). They could still blow it by not getting the necessary hooks all the way down into rpm, so their success is not guaranteed.
Now that PuppetLabs has destroyed everything by making puppet 4 incompatible with puppet 3, I'll take a look at ansible.
Have you heard about the airplanes dropping out of the sky because "Mom's WiFi" ruined the weather forecast?
Have you heard about government bureaucracies that constantly seek to expand using the flimsiest of justifications to increase their power?
The entire comments section here is predictable. Clickbait sells ads, even to Slashdotters.
With scandal after scandal, the same parties stay in power. It's the same everywhere.
That's because the parties are only an illusion of choice, perpetuated to placate the masses. Strike the root.
But blackmail is illegal anyway, so if they're willing to break the law to get what they want, they can do it either way, and if they are not willing to break the law, then the possibility of blackmailing MPs doesn't matter either.
Right. So the only winning move is to disband GCHQ entirely.
We have confirmation that in the USA the NSA spies on Senators and all-but confirmation that they're being blackmailed to support the MIC. Any US Senators who aren't willing to take those arrows (the dirt will come out if they move against the intelligence apparatus that has taken control of the governments along with the banksters) should retire and start collecting their undeserved pensions.
It's just human nature that such things happen, so it would be very surprising if GCHQ isn't operating similarly and the British MP's aren't in a similar situation. They have no move that won't hurt them.
Dude, go back to the cows.
Walmart is first and foremost a tech company . Their computerized logistics chain is the essential technology that enables them to be a multinational behemoth rather than a typical regional discount store chain. This has been true for decades.
Google supposedly requires news sites to not show different content to Googlebot than it does to users, at least for three articles a day, or be labeled a "subscription" site, in the News listings. There's even a reporting tool for users to notify Google if such shenanigans is going on.
Google doesn't actually seem to act on any of those reports, though, so news sites can be paywalled and Google will help drive traffic their direction. But then again, since nobody is playing by the rules, User-Agent-Switcher doesn't seem like such a bad option either.
When Memphis falls down, people are going to lose their minds. It's just a guessing game as to when. Nobody is prepared for it and the USG will drag down the rest of the country to deal with a relatively local disaster. "United we stand, together we fall".
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...