it's not the cell phones that are the problem. it's the users. just like with everything else in life. the devices are awesome, very handy. but when someone answers a phone in a movie and instead of asking the person to hold and going outside they proceede to talk loudly and interrupt everyone, that's annoying. once again to be clear. the phone isn't annoying, the idiot user is.
I think that jamming the signal is opening up the wrong can of worms. and is going about it all the wrong way. maybe required cell phone carrying classes? hehe
zeb
http://www.zeb.hznet.us
ok considering EULAs and no review policies... What if john doe was to use software (OS) on a computer in a public setting, say a library or internet cafe etc.
He did not buy it, he didn't install it he has never seen any licence, EULA or 'a no review policy.' regardless of if EULAs are binding to begin with, you can't put someone in a contract if they never even saw the thing.
Whats next?
Every time your computer comes out of standby or screen saver a EULA agreement pops up?
Enough already!
____
by reading this post you agree not to sue me for time lost. Furthermore if you get fired at work for reading this, it aint my fault.
I would leave 30 minutes early 3 times a week to go to my martial arts classes.
I was a salaried employee, so I got paid the same no matter what.
My boss, her boss, 3 of the programers, and untold support people took between 5 and 8 smoke breaks, each lasting 15 minutes or more per day.
Reminds me of a government agency I used to work for.
Standard ISDN... in idaho... LOL! I'm from idaho. our town just got rid of the party line a year or two ago. I work for the government so I have a T3 at work. but as for home. a "56K" running at about 20K a second. if you live within a certain distance of the city limits, centrytel has just gotten capabilities for DSL. whoopie.
although not all towns are as remote as mine (we are the most remote county seat in the nation) but the tale is true for much of idaho. giving people/compainies credit for broadband is a great thing.
zeb
a bit of that would have been useful in the original question, I too, thought this was a troll :D
So, they stole a standard Microsoft EULA?
I'm thinking only one thing. paper jam. zeb
it's not the cell phones that are the problem. it's the users. just like with everything else in life. the devices are awesome, very handy. but when someone answers a phone in a movie and instead of asking the person to hold and going outside they proceede to talk loudly and interrupt everyone, that's annoying. once again to be clear. the phone isn't annoying, the idiot user is. I think that jamming the signal is opening up the wrong can of worms. and is going about it all the wrong way. maybe required cell phone carrying classes? hehe zeb http://www.zeb.hznet.us
ok considering EULAs and no review policies... What if john doe was to use software (OS) on a computer in a public setting, say a library or internet cafe etc. He did not buy it, he didn't install it he has never seen any licence, EULA or 'a no review policy.' regardless of if EULAs are binding to begin with, you can't put someone in a contract if they never even saw the thing. Whats next? Every time your computer comes out of standby or screen saver a EULA agreement pops up? Enough already! ____ by reading this post you agree not to sue me for time lost. Furthermore if you get fired at work for reading this, it aint my fault.
I would leave 30 minutes early 3 times a week to go to my martial arts classes. I was a salaried employee, so I got paid the same no matter what. My boss, her boss, 3 of the programers, and untold support people took between 5 and 8 smoke breaks, each lasting 15 minutes or more per day.
Reminds me of a government agency I used to work for.
Hangar Z
Standard ISDN... in idaho... LOL! I'm from idaho. our town just got rid of the party line a year or two ago. I work for the government so I have a T3 at work. but as for home. a "56K" running at about 20K a second. if you live within a certain distance of the city limits, centrytel has just gotten capabilities for DSL. whoopie. although not all towns are as remote as mine (we are the most remote county seat in the nation) but the tale is true for much of idaho. giving people/compainies credit for broadband is a great thing. zeb
Wow. I never thought of that. that surprises me. I should have. Oh well. hmm. I'm thinking holiday colors.