sounds like you have the ford lane assist too. infiniti's lane assist is onpar with tesla. also turn signal always overrides lane assist.
regardless all of these systems are hackable on your canbus. i want to adjust my lane assist to track closer to the middle of the lane rather then after i've hit the line (like tesla and infiniti)
you don't. but that won't stop company CEOs seeing it and thinking "this is a wonderful way to continue productivity!" and sign up for it en masse. haven't you learned that stupid ideas are the most profitable and thus have the most support?
You have described case law. We have at least two branches of government. One who writes the law (contract law as you put it) and one who upholds the law (precedent law as you put it). When a law has never been challenged then you are fighting to have a judge interpret the law the way you see it should be interpreted. When a judge interprets a law a specific way and creates a ruling it is up to either the third branch to validate or invalidate the law. Otherwise future judges can accept or deny the interpretation other judges have made. This continues until you reach the Supreme court who ultimately makes the final decision. Please note a lower court must accept the ruling from a higher court, even if the judge does not agree with the decision. Once the final decision has been made, it either validates or invalidates the written law. The branch in charge of writing the law can then rewrite the law, remove the law, or keep it as is.
There is no "training" in established vs non-established law. A lawyer is supposed to understand law, period. You may get a shitty lawyer who doesn't research case law but that's your problem. Or in other words, if you're a programmer and you are paid a lot of money you should be expected to switch between languages as the project requires. You wouldn't hire a C# developer and be okay when he or she doesn't know how to spell Java even though your project is clearly a Java app.
If you want to go with shitty car analogies, you wouldn't buy a car that reverses in one direction, right? So why would you hire a lawyer that doesn't understand case law?
No but time in a vm is not very accurate. If you are using kvm/qemu this becomes even worse due to lack of fine grained scheduling compared to xen,VMware. In my experience, kvm can lose time due to runaway I/O on the hypervisor. Try this experiment again with the vms using tmpfs or otherwise minimizing disk writes.
If I can contact you through your blog, I will follow up directly. Your project sounds interesting:)
I use an HP Specrte x360 and I have used it on the new American seats that are the smallest of all the airlines. Bonus, when the flight attendant comes by yelling at me to turn off the laptop, I simply flip it around like I'm in a dell commercial and continue to use it like normal.
The laptop consistently passes for a tablet (doubly so if I put it in the tsa bin in tablet form) so just as my 1997 Sony Vaio has proven, 10-13" is the sweet spot for laptops. Anything smaller is a toy, anything larger is a desktop.
planes have fire extinguishing systems, mr armchair analyst. and not just a single shot like NOS, they can fire extinguish for something like 30 straight minutes if necessary. also, the cargo is not pressured, so an explosion is not as dangerous and a fire smothers much easier when there isn't enough air to breathe.
My 13" laptop (macbook air equivalent) allows me to work comfortably in first class, bulkhead and regular economy seats. Seriously, the best upgrade I ever made was a laptop that fits on my lap while seated on a plane. I don't have to hold my arms like a muscular dystrophy patient to use my laptop anymore and I actually WANT to to dev work on the plane. If I get an empty seat next to me (happens a lot on SWA, apparently people don't like my resting bitch face) then bonus, I get to use a mouse!
So, my datacenter that I have built and put together myself should be a public service for everyone to use without compensating me for things like startup costs and growing pains? I don't think so. I understand you are saying what you are saying directed at the Verizons, Comcasts, and AT&T's of the world. But a lot of internet land is actually powered by the smaller folks who actually have profitable datacenters and network pipes. If we are going to make internet a utility, then we need to implement government programs to provide services for those who do not have the ability to create the same. Sure there are hypothetical what-ifs. What If a startup needs a datacenter and if costs are astronomical due to regulatory burdens, then government provides multiple datacenter options to choose from. That is the benefit of a utility.. But as you start going into the details of your proposal you quickly realize that there is no reason to make datacenters or even cables a utility. It is not financially impossible for a company to start a datacenter or ISP. Not yet, at least. And if there's anything the good ol' USA has taught me is that we will never regulate anything until its almost too late.
So no, the network is not going to be regulated until the true cost of telecommunication begins to go up (hint transmission costs are still dropping) or growth goes down (not likely with UWB/5G wireless on the horizon)
For the desktop replacement, you still have distros based on debian which have fairly up-to-date release schedules.
KDE Neon is Kubuntu with a different name. Linux Mint is Ubuntu with a streamlined UI.
In both of these you can swap out to plain gnome2 or gnome3, xfce, enlightenment, or windowmaker if you want.
For server, you're kinda boned. You can go back to debian, which isn't too bad. CentOS with epel is a functional cross, but theres no way you are running bleeding edge with a RHEL distro. The plus about RHEL is that rpm packaging is dirt simple and you can have a bleeding edge environment if you don't mind the upkeep (1% project overhead in my exp).
My worry is that Ubuntu is going to follow the path of RedHat. Where Ubuntu takes over debian as the defacto fork and updates trickle back to debian. Usurping the debian development and testing in the process. Anyway I suspect tinfoil and pennies to be given away freely in this thread.
did customers really hold off or did they go elsewhere?
D I G I T A L L O C K I N
You bought all your videos on iTunes store, all of your music is iTunes in the cloud, and all of your photos and videos are also in iCloud. I would say half of those buying iPhones don't think there is a way out and can't fathom losing the thousands of $ they put into apple digital products
And also the added advantage of speaking your voice to BeauHD and other editors here. If you provide the link without optin=true, you get the actual OPTION to OPT IN.
did you ever stop to consider this a training program to make india great? india has been the goto for IT outsourcing since the late 90s, their economy is posting double digit growth right now. all this is going to do is move the competition over seas. i am currently working with a contracting team out of india and the work is phenomenal. now i know this is not the norm, but i can very well seeing in the next 5 years some serious competition from overseas IT resources.
keep saying you want to make america great again, in reality we're making other countries great
How many people root their Android device? Has anyone looked into SuperSU and how the simple su binary works? Nope.
The su binary that is passed around for all rooted Android distros has no source. It is maintained by a random person with financial motivation to not be conservative with your privacy or security.
I don't think Android users really care about backdoors to be honest
If Alphabet offers everything else but their content, where is the content going to go. Facebook? Bing?
Think about it then ask yourself, who has the biggest streaming platform on the internet? Nix that, what company exists which have more cash reserves than all of the broadcasters combined? That may be taken too literally, but the odds are stacked far from the broadcaster's favor based on Netflix and Amazon action.
cargo holds have smoke detectors and fire suppression systems. it would be noticed immediately and the flight would be diverted. a single note 7 caught fire, not multiple note 7s on a flight. so considering the same events transpired except note 7s were placed in storage the problem would still be a single note 7 catching fire (or probably less since phones would be powered off and less likely to overheat and rupture).
FUD that is FUD is still FUD that gets +5 insightful
I hate to burst your bubble, but I wonder if I may be part of this class action. I had a laptop that was Windows 7 for the longest time. It decided to upgrade itself to Windows 10. Cool. For about a month then my laptop refused to boot windows again. I can boot to a usb stick but not to any other partition on the HD. It is very possible that EFI went corrupt after an upgrade. I tried to recover the system and ended up losing all my data. Also, I could not reinstall Windows 7 or 10 ever again. My laptop is effectively bricked.
I honestly would be saying the same thing that you did IF I hadn't experienced the same issue that lady who had to buy a new one did. Because I am an expert, I know I can install a new OS. But the fact that I cannot reinstall Windows (first reboot puts the system into a hung state) is telling. I also had to buy a new laptop because I need Microsoft products to do my job. It's not like I had time to send it in for warranty repair and twiddle my thumbs while they send me a new laptop. Plus that laptop was an i7-2600k. It wasn't a slouch, I still played CS:GO and BF4 on it up until it decided to not turn on again -- I didn't want a new laptop, I NEEDED it.. So it's entirely plausible and now I am going to resurrect that machine and maybe consider joining in on this adventure.
maybe, i just worry how they go about doing it and what options the little person has if they get caught in the trap. my business is small, we only have 5 lines. i don't need to spend $500/month on phone service. my voip service costs me $24-$29/month and it allows me to set our outbound phone numbers to our sales people's personal cell phones. this measure, to me, sounds like my company will be swept up in the mess and not given two shits meaning i'm going to have to spend $500/mo with some major provider to prevent being swept up.
and $5 says robocalls won't end, they'll just make a smarter robo
sounds like you have the ford lane assist too. infiniti's lane assist is onpar with tesla. also turn signal always overrides lane assist.
regardless all of these systems are hackable on your canbus. i want to adjust my lane assist to track closer to the middle of the lane rather then after i've hit the line (like tesla and infiniti)
Never change, slashdot. Never change.
which has led to several crashes
citation needed
you don't. but that won't stop company CEOs seeing it and thinking "this is a wonderful way to continue productivity!" and sign up for it en masse. haven't you learned that stupid ideas are the most profitable and thus have the most support?
-dk
You have described case law. We have at least two branches of government. One who writes the law (contract law as you put it) and one who upholds the law (precedent law as you put it). When a law has never been challenged then you are fighting to have a judge interpret the law the way you see it should be interpreted. When a judge interprets a law a specific way and creates a ruling it is up to either the third branch to validate or invalidate the law. Otherwise future judges can accept or deny the interpretation other judges have made. This continues until you reach the Supreme court who ultimately makes the final decision. Please note a lower court must accept the ruling from a higher court, even if the judge does not agree with the decision. Once the final decision has been made, it either validates or invalidates the written law. The branch in charge of writing the law can then rewrite the law, remove the law, or keep it as is.
There is no "training" in established vs non-established law. A lawyer is supposed to understand law, period. You may get a shitty lawyer who doesn't research case law but that's your problem. Or in other words, if you're a programmer and you are paid a lot of money you should be expected to switch between languages as the project requires. You wouldn't hire a C# developer and be okay when he or she doesn't know how to spell Java even though your project is clearly a Java app.
If you want to go with shitty car analogies, you wouldn't buy a car that reverses in one direction, right? So why would you hire a lawyer that doesn't understand case law?
-dk
can still MITM encrypted connections if the router doesn't do certificate verification
-dk
QNX is still out there in droves. All those small gas station ATMs? Yea baby, running off a 1.44MB floppydisk
No but time in a vm is not very accurate. If you are using kvm/qemu this becomes even worse due to lack of fine grained scheduling compared to xen,VMware. In my experience, kvm can lose time due to runaway I/O on the hypervisor. Try this experiment again with the vms using tmpfs or otherwise minimizing disk writes.
If I can contact you through your blog, I will follow up directly. Your project sounds interesting :)
-dk
I use an HP Specrte x360 and I have used it on the new American seats that are the smallest of all the airlines. Bonus, when the flight attendant comes by yelling at me to turn off the laptop, I simply flip it around like I'm in a dell commercial and continue to use it like normal.
The laptop consistently passes for a tablet (doubly so if I put it in the tsa bin in tablet form) so just as my 1997 Sony Vaio has proven, 10-13" is the sweet spot for laptops. Anything smaller is a toy, anything larger is a desktop.
planes have fire extinguishing systems, mr armchair analyst. and not just a single shot like NOS, they can fire extinguish for something like 30 straight minutes if necessary. also, the cargo is not pressured, so an explosion is not as dangerous and a fire smothers much easier when there isn't enough air to breathe.
Spotted the guy with a 15" or larger laptop.
My 13" laptop (macbook air equivalent) allows me to work comfortably in first class, bulkhead and regular economy seats. Seriously, the best upgrade I ever made was a laptop that fits on my lap while seated on a plane. I don't have to hold my arms like a muscular dystrophy patient to use my laptop anymore and I actually WANT to to dev work on the plane. If I get an empty seat next to me (happens a lot on SWA, apparently people don't like my resting bitch face) then bonus, I get to use a mouse!
So, my datacenter that I have built and put together myself should be a public service for everyone to use without compensating me for things like startup costs and growing pains? I don't think so. I understand you are saying what you are saying directed at the Verizons, Comcasts, and AT&T's of the world. But a lot of internet land is actually powered by the smaller folks who actually have profitable datacenters and network pipes. If we are going to make internet a utility, then we need to implement government programs to provide services for those who do not have the ability to create the same. Sure there are hypothetical what-ifs. What If a startup needs a datacenter and if costs are astronomical due to regulatory burdens, then government provides multiple datacenter options to choose from. That is the benefit of a utility.. But as you start going into the details of your proposal you quickly realize that there is no reason to make datacenters or even cables a utility. It is not financially impossible for a company to start a datacenter or ISP. Not yet, at least. And if there's anything the good ol' USA has taught me is that we will never regulate anything until its almost too late.
So no, the network is not going to be regulated until the true cost of telecommunication begins to go up (hint transmission costs are still dropping) or growth goes down (not likely with UWB/5G wireless on the horizon)
For the desktop replacement, you still have distros based on debian which have fairly up-to-date release schedules.
KDE Neon is Kubuntu with a different name.
Linux Mint is Ubuntu with a streamlined UI.
In both of these you can swap out to plain gnome2 or gnome3, xfce, enlightenment, or windowmaker if you want.
For server, you're kinda boned. You can go back to debian, which isn't too bad. CentOS with epel is a functional cross, but theres no way you are running bleeding edge with a RHEL distro. The plus about RHEL is that rpm packaging is dirt simple and you can have a bleeding edge environment if you don't mind the upkeep (1% project overhead in my exp).
My worry is that Ubuntu is going to follow the path of RedHat. Where Ubuntu takes over debian as the defacto fork and updates trickle back to debian. Usurping the debian development and testing in the process. Anyway I suspect tinfoil and pennies to be given away freely in this thread.
-dk
did customers really hold off or did they go elsewhere?
D I G I T A L L O C K I N
You bought all your videos on iTunes store, all of your music is iTunes in the cloud, and all of your photos and videos are also in iCloud. I would say half of those buying iPhones don't think there is a way out and can't fathom losing the thousands of $ they put into apple digital products
And also the added advantage of speaking your voice to BeauHD and other editors here. If you provide the link without optin=true, you get the actual OPTION to OPT IN.
I miss CmdrTaco.
did you ever stop to consider this a training program to make india great? india has been the goto for IT outsourcing since the late 90s, their economy is posting double digit growth right now. all this is going to do is move the competition over seas. i am currently working with a contracting team out of india and the work is phenomenal. now i know this is not the norm, but i can very well seeing in the next 5 years some serious competition from overseas IT resources.
keep saying you want to make america great again, in reality we're making other countries great
How many people root their Android device? Has anyone looked into SuperSU and how the simple su binary works? Nope.
The su binary that is passed around for all rooted Android distros has no source. It is maintained by a random person with financial motivation to not be conservative with your privacy or security.
I don't think Android users really care about backdoors to be honest
If Alphabet offers everything else but their content, where is the content going to go. Facebook? Bing?
Think about it then ask yourself, who has the biggest streaming platform on the internet? Nix that, what company exists which have more cash reserves than all of the broadcasters combined? That may be taken too literally, but the odds are stacked far from the broadcaster's favor based on Netflix and Amazon action.
-dk
you're welcome
-dk
11:59PM 4/1/2017 and april fools layout has been removed.
-dk
cargo holds have smoke detectors and fire suppression systems. it would be noticed immediately and the flight would be diverted. a single note 7 caught fire, not multiple note 7s on a flight. so considering the same events transpired except note 7s were placed in storage the problem would still be a single note 7 catching fire (or probably less since phones would be powered off and less likely to overheat and rupture).
FUD that is FUD is still FUD that gets +5 insightful
-dk
and everyone else associated with this suit.
gonna be a hard time finding an impartial jury.
I hate to burst your bubble, but I wonder if I may be part of this class action. I had a laptop that was Windows 7 for the longest time. It decided to upgrade itself to Windows 10. Cool. For about a month then my laptop refused to boot windows again. I can boot to a usb stick but not to any other partition on the HD. It is very possible that EFI went corrupt after an upgrade. I tried to recover the system and ended up losing all my data. Also, I could not reinstall Windows 7 or 10 ever again. My laptop is effectively bricked.
I honestly would be saying the same thing that you did IF I hadn't experienced the same issue that lady who had to buy a new one did. Because I am an expert, I know I can install a new OS. But the fact that I cannot reinstall Windows (first reboot puts the system into a hung state) is telling. I also had to buy a new laptop because I need Microsoft products to do my job. It's not like I had time to send it in for warranty repair and twiddle my thumbs while they send me a new laptop. Plus that laptop was an i7-2600k. It wasn't a slouch, I still played CS:GO and BF4 on it up until it decided to not turn on again -- I didn't want a new laptop, I NEEDED it.. So it's entirely plausible and now I am going to resurrect that machine and maybe consider joining in on this adventure.
-dk
maybe, i just worry how they go about doing it and what options the little person has if they get caught in the trap. my business is small, we only have 5 lines. i don't need to spend $500/month on phone service. my voip service costs me $24-$29/month and it allows me to set our outbound phone numbers to our sales people's personal cell phones. this measure, to me, sounds like my company will be swept up in the mess and not given two shits meaning i'm going to have to spend $500/mo with some major provider to prevent being swept up.
and $5 says robocalls won't end, they'll just make a smarter robo
-dk
This sounds slow, but it isn't I get nearly the full upload bandwith of my connection.
So you 6gb/s ssd drives are limited to a whooping 100mbps. That's slow, bruh. Unless your drives are all IDE this does not scale.