A bunch of printers publicly available on the internet. And that's the manufacturer's problem? This has noting to do with anything other than some people setting up their printers for public access, intentionally of accidentally. Noting to see here...
I'm not sure I'd bet on 100,000 more jobs in the next 18 months until I see how things go after Trump closes the door on cheap imports from China with heavy tariffs.
They were not marked cards in any way whatsoever. He's totally in his fair right. In my opinion the casino has no case at all. He won the money fair and square. It's up to the casino to man -up to the new world, like the rest of us.
This is not new news. People have been complaining of bad battery life well before Consumer Reports: http://www.macrumors.com/2016/....
The bottom line is it shouldn't have such drastically different test results with the same repeated tests. Whether it's the batteriesSafari or otherwise, it should be at least consistant.
http://www.macrumors.com/2016/...
I think you're right about them being in last place when it comes to developing autonomous car technology, but saying "actually owning the vehicles would cost a ton of money for no obvious benefit to Uber" is not true. Simple math shows they would make a killing. Even if you estimate that they average a measly $15/hr with their autonomous cars, working an average of 20 hours per day, 50 weeks/yr, that's $105,000 per year. I think that's what they call profitable.
4.5 cents per user. I love the line "Today’s settlement closes an important chapter on the company’s past and reinforces our commitment to operating with integrity,"
I never understood people who say abstinence is the only effective method. The whole idea of contraception is how to have sex without risking pregnancy. It's like saying the only way to avoid tax is to never make or spend money. It's impractical.
I had a vasectomy and it was one of the simplest things I ever did. One hour and it's done and about a week of taking it easy. It makes so much sense and it's reliability is magnitudes better than anything mentioned here.I think any guy serious about an effective contraception would consider a vasectomy.
What this means is there really isn't ever going to be any meaningful competition in internet service providers in the foreseeable future. If Google with all it's cash can't feasibly put a competitive service together then no one can. If anything, competition is disappearing, with AT&T/TimeWarner's merger and all. Although we still need to see if that gets approved.
If you do a fresh install of Windows 7 these days? The update process is PAINFUL! You'll literally need to leave the PC downloading updates for a good 8-10 hours or more before it finally starts doing anything obvious.
The problem with Mobileye's view is that no matter what you call it, people will treat it like the car drives itself. Mobileye's CTO, "No matter how you spin it, (Autopilot) is not designed for that. It is a driver assistance system and not a driverless system". They'd like to differentiate the 2 but the line is very blurry, and fading more everyday.
Mobileye's disclaimer is no more indemnifying than Tesla's, "continuously educated customers on the use of the features, reminding them that they're responsible to keep their hands on the wheel and remain alert and present when using Autopilot".
To me it just smells like Mobileye is doing anything they can to make sure blame doesn't make it all the way to them.
...credit and debit cards used at those stores during the first six months of 2016 may have been compromised in the breach.
How is it that it went undetected by credit card companies and banks for so long? Surely they should have detected a pattern. I've always wondered why credit card companies don’t seem to care about fraud. It's like they have no interest in getting to the bottom of it.
It's very different. There were no copyright and licensing concerns with telephones. It's a valid concern. The FCC is on the right track but it just needs to put more thought into it.
The least they could do is drop the prices to some degree. They've always been notorious for keeping the prices high years after release. Look at their monitors.Why would anyone buy 5-10 year old LCD monitor technology, at peak prices??
I do it from time to time. I'm running MacOS Sierra at the moment on my notebook. I'm not the average user but I'm nicely set up to be able to clone off my systems quickly (Win and Mac) to try out betas. If the beta experience turns out to be a disaster I simply restore an image and put my profile back. With SSDs it's a 15-20 minute process.
If you're going to beta test something, you're not going to get a good test in unless it's your primary system. You'll know pretty fast if you need to switch back or not. It's all about having a backup plan and a fast one at that. It's really not a big deal for a good tech head but if backup and restore.
The president of Foxconn was asked about this in 2010; why not manufacture in the US using automation? He said, "I worry America has too many lawyers. I don’t want to spend time having people sue me every day.” Labor costs aren't the only concern; the US is a regulatory and political mine field filled with lavishly funded pressure groups that impose huge costs on industrial investment.
Of the 382 comments posted so far, this is the best. You nailed it.
A bunch of printers publicly available on the internet. And that's the manufacturer's problem? This has noting to do with anything other than some people setting up their printers for public access, intentionally of accidentally. Noting to see here...
I'm not sure I'd bet on 100,000 more jobs in the next 18 months until I see how things go after Trump closes the door on cheap imports from China with heavy tariffs.
Yep, exactly. They could have done a bit of rudimentary troubleshooting before posting the problem.
They were not marked cards in any way whatsoever. He's totally in his fair right. In my opinion the casino has no case at all. He won the money fair and square. It's up to the casino to man -up to the new world, like the rest of us.
I have no idea what this means
This is not new news. People have been complaining of bad battery life well before Consumer Reports: http://www.macrumors.com/2016/.... The bottom line is it shouldn't have such drastically different test results with the same repeated tests. Whether it's the batteriesSafari or otherwise, it should be at least consistant. http://www.macrumors.com/2016/...
I think you're right about them being in last place when it comes to developing autonomous car technology, but saying "actually owning the vehicles would cost a ton of money for no obvious benefit to Uber" is not true. Simple math shows they would make a killing. Even if you estimate that they average a measly $15/hr with their autonomous cars, working an average of 20 hours per day, 50 weeks/yr, that's $105,000 per year. I think that's what they call profitable.
4.5 cents per user. I love the line "Today’s settlement closes an important chapter on the company’s past and reinforces our commitment to operating with integrity,"
That is exactly the situation. Well spoken
It should be that the user HAS to have purchased the item. Why would you do it any other way?
The radar unit plugs in to the lander's headphone jack. Unfortunately, the headphone jack was removed on the new landers.
I never understood people who say abstinence is the only effective method. The whole idea of contraception is how to have sex without risking pregnancy. It's like saying the only way to avoid tax is to never make or spend money. It's impractical. I had a vasectomy and it was one of the simplest things I ever did. One hour and it's done and about a week of taking it easy. It makes so much sense and it's reliability is magnitudes better than anything mentioned here.I think any guy serious about an effective contraception would consider a vasectomy.
What this means is there really isn't ever going to be any meaningful competition in internet service providers in the foreseeable future. If Google with all it's cash can't feasibly put a competitive service together then no one can. If anything, competition is disappearing, with AT&T/TimeWarner's merger and all. Although we still need to see if that gets approved.
Ya, because nuclear power plants are so beautiful to look at.
Actually, it's "you're" fun at parties...
If you do a fresh install of Windows 7 these days? The update process is PAINFUL! You'll literally need to leave the PC downloading updates for a good 8-10 hours or more before it finally starts doing anything obvious.
I think that was the intent.
I'd like to know what the No Change image looks like. Did I miss that somewhere in the article?
So you're against stopping hate speech?
The problem with Mobileye's view is that no matter what you call it, people will treat it like the car drives itself. Mobileye's CTO, "No matter how you spin it, (Autopilot) is not designed for that. It is a driver assistance system and not a driverless system". They'd like to differentiate the 2 but the line is very blurry, and fading more everyday. Mobileye's disclaimer is no more indemnifying than Tesla's, "continuously educated customers on the use of the features, reminding them that they're responsible to keep their hands on the wheel and remain alert and present when using Autopilot". To me it just smells like Mobileye is doing anything they can to make sure blame doesn't make it all the way to them.
...credit and debit cards used at those stores during the first six months of 2016 may have been compromised in the breach.
How is it that it went undetected by credit card companies and banks for so long? Surely they should have detected a pattern. I've always wondered why credit card companies don’t seem to care about fraud. It's like they have no interest in getting to the bottom of it.
It's very different. There were no copyright and licensing concerns with telephones. It's a valid concern. The FCC is on the right track but it just needs to put more thought into it.
The least they could do is drop the prices to some degree. They've always been notorious for keeping the prices high years after release. Look at their monitors.Why would anyone buy 5-10 year old LCD monitor technology, at peak prices??
I do it from time to time. I'm running MacOS Sierra at the moment on my notebook. I'm not the average user but I'm nicely set up to be able to clone off my systems quickly (Win and Mac) to try out betas. If the beta experience turns out to be a disaster I simply restore an image and put my profile back. With SSDs it's a 15-20 minute process. If you're going to beta test something, you're not going to get a good test in unless it's your primary system. You'll know pretty fast if you need to switch back or not. It's all about having a backup plan and a fast one at that. It's really not a big deal for a good tech head but if backup and restore.
The president of Foxconn was asked about this in 2010; why not manufacture in the US using automation? He said, "I worry America has too many lawyers. I don’t want to spend time having people sue me every day.” Labor costs aren't the only concern; the US is a regulatory and political mine field filled with lavishly funded pressure groups that impose huge costs on industrial investment.
Of the 382 comments posted so far, this is the best. You nailed it.
Wouldn't anyone using Windows 10 be considered as having accessibility needs?