They turned up at the state court and said the case should be heard in a federal court. When it was moved to the federal court, they didn't turn up. Problem was that they said in the state court that the federal court had juristiction.
In England, where Spamhaus is based, if the defendant doesn't turn up, then the case is decided solely on the evidence of the claimant, so things can still be thrown out, though it is a lot less likely to happen than if you turn up.
China is now as democratic as Britain was in the 18th Century when we started to industrialise. It took us about 100 years or so from then to get to a fully democratic government. We are seeing the first signs in China with their union activity and so on.
I have an unlimited plan and use about 65MB per month - Exchange Activsync plus very occassional web browsing. The only other option is to pay by the kB, and that would cost me a lot more.
Currently O2 have an unlimited data plan which costs £5 per month, no tethering allowed. A tethering plan costs £10 per month for 1 GB of data or £15 per month for 3 GB of data. That is the same cost as geting a separate HSDPA modem contract.
I use rsync for backups, so after the first run, there is nowhere near 1TB of data written in one shot. I can for example usually back up my laptop over a GSM link in a few minutes.
Every business is in business to make money. Some businesses make money by selling a premium product at a premium price. Others, like Microsoft, make money by selling a good enough product at a competitive price.
That's not a station. The stations on Oxford Street are Marble Arch, Bond Street, Oxford Circus and Tottenham Court Road. All are on the Central Line. Bond Street is additionally on the Jubilee Line, Oxford Circus on the Bakerloo and Victoria Lines, and Tottenham Court Road on the Northern Line.
That's fine for pictures. You want as much picture in your field of vision as possible, and that means widescreen. However for text, you don't want the lines too long, because then it is difficult to find the beginning of the next line. So you want tall narrow columns.
wap = Wireless Application Protocol. A means of transmitting web pages written in wml - Wireless markup language to small handheld devices, and to desktop web browsers that support it, such as Opera.
It has now largely been replaced with phones that support full blown html.
The most popular wap site in Britain, and almost the only one, is Transport for London. The only other ones I'm aware of are National Rail, The Phone Book, and Yell (Yellow Pages).
In Britain, I go to wap.thephonebook.com , type in who I am looking for, then tap on the resulting phone number to dial it. Much better than paying several pounds to someone in India who can barely speak English to try and find the number for me.
I think Cyberspy is arguing that their software is intended to be installed with the consent of the owner of the computer. For example parents monitoring their childrens' computer useage, and employers monitoring their employees.
There will be satellite phones from networks with a polar orbit, such as Iridium, but not networks like Inmarsat which has a geostationary orbit. That's why it is so expensive.
How many gallons of water did it take to make the clothes you are wearing? How many to grow the food you eat? The water you buy from your local water company is a tiny fraction of your total water requirements.
They should have sued in England. The UK is three separate legal juristictions, England/Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland.
They turned up at the state court and said the case should be heard in a federal court. When it was moved to the federal court, they didn't turn up. Problem was that they said in the state court that the federal court had juristiction.
In England, where Spamhaus is based, if the defendant doesn't turn up, then the case is decided solely on the evidence of the claimant, so things can still be thrown out, though it is a lot less likely to happen than if you turn up.
China is now as democratic as Britain was in the 18th Century when we started to industrialise. It took us about 100 years or so from then to get to a fully democratic government. We are seeing the first signs in China with their union activity and so on.
We are comparing it to North Korea which is a lot worse than what the Chinese demonstrated at Tiananmen Square.
There are apps that let you stream live TV over the internet. I guess they can suck up a lot of bandwidth.
I have an unlimited plan and use about 65MB per month - Exchange Activsync plus very occassional web browsing. The only other option is to pay by the kB, and that would cost me a lot more.
Currently O2 have an unlimited data plan which costs £5 per month, no tethering allowed. A tethering plan costs £10 per month for 1 GB of data or £15 per month for 3 GB of data. That is the same cost as geting a separate HSDPA modem contract.
Well quite. If they want to limit the service, they shouldn't call it an unlimited service.
Psst, wireless phone providers have exclusive monopolies (well four company cartel), ISPs don't.
I use rsync for backups, so after the first run, there is nowhere near 1TB of data written in one shot. I can for example usually back up my laptop over a GSM link in a few minutes.
Every business is in business to make money. Some businesses make money by selling a premium product at a premium price. Others, like Microsoft, make money by selling a good enough product at a competitive price.
They are Rangers football hooligans. Other Scottish teams and the Scottish national team have a much better reputation.
So far only leet.
That's not a station. The stations on Oxford Street are Marble Arch, Bond Street, Oxford Circus and Tottenham Court Road. All are on the Central Line. Bond Street is additionally on the Jubilee Line, Oxford Circus on the Bakerloo and Victoria Lines, and Tottenham Court Road on the Northern Line.
They are really English football holigans, but that is another story altogether.
That's fine for pictures. You want as much picture in your field of vision as possible, and that means widescreen. However for text, you don't want the lines too long, because then it is difficult to find the beginning of the next line. So you want tall narrow columns.
wap = Wireless Application Protocol. A means of transmitting web pages written in wml - Wireless markup language to small handheld devices, and to desktop web browsers that support it, such as Opera.
It has now largely been replaced with phones that support full blown html.
The most popular wap site in Britain, and almost the only one, is Transport for London. The only other ones I'm aware of are National Rail, The Phone Book, and Yell (Yellow Pages).
If you can find a phone anywhere that doesn't have at least a wap browser, please send me a link.
Something like
http://www.yell.com/ucs/UcsSearchAction.do?keywords=pizza&companyName=&location=Westminster&scrambleSeed=45793804&searchType=advance&M=&lastKeyword=pizza&lastClarifyIndex=&lastClarifyOptions=&lastSearchall=&lastSearchallTax=&lastbandedclarifyResults=&bandedclarifyResults=&ssm=1
is your friend.
In Britain, I go to wap.thephonebook.com , type in who I am looking for, then tap on the resulting phone number to dial it. Much better than paying several pounds to someone in India who can barely speak English to try and find the number for me.
I think Cyberspy is arguing that their software is intended to be installed with the consent of the owner of the computer. For example parents monitoring their childrens' computer useage, and employers monitoring their employees.
Yes, and it was so inadvertant that they even applied for a patent on it. http://www.theregister.co.uk/2010/06/03/google_wardriving_patent/
There will be satellite phones from networks with a polar orbit, such as Iridium, but not networks like Inmarsat which has a geostationary orbit. That's why it is so expensive.
How many gallons of water did it take to make the clothes you are wearing? How many to grow the food you eat? The water you buy from your local water company is a tiny fraction of your total water requirements.