The woman was homeless, so I'm willing to bet that her family smelled money and decided to cash in quick. I bet that Uber got a hell of a bargain because they would have likely settled for an extremely low amount, likely less than $100,000.
Because they make no money on the consoles, they are loss leaders. So if a bunch of people just ran out and bought the consoles with no intention of purchasing any games, Nintendo loses money. If they really wanted to monetize it they would have to do something similar to the Linksys WRT54G. Release a slightly higher-priced version with the ability to "hack" the OS.
I work for the government and nearly all outbound traffic from the over 12,000 employees in our agencies comes through one of two IPs, depending on which side of the country you are on. So yes, it is entirely feasible that there could be hundreds of people accessing these sites behind just a single IP.
I'm surprised that SF to LA is not there, or Seattle to SF. Perhaps due to land cost? Those are both major business and travel routes servicing large populations.
Just another example of stodgy people trying to hold on to antiquated business models. I agree people should be compensated for their work. However, there is a plethora of available information out there now. I heavily research most everything I buy and already know what I want when I come in to the store. By the time I pick my product I'm more interested in the best price.
I live in Portland, OR. So I know a lot of the liberals he is talking about, and they most certainly do exist. I'm sitting reading cyberchondriac's post and am wholeheartedly agreeing (and supporting) that which he or she is saying. I see and hear this stuff on a daily basis.
I've had that "dream" be a reality since I've been on Google Voice for at least eight years. I'm sure that Microsoft phone users could still retain this ability by using Hangouts and/or Google Voice.
I agree, after being a Pandora listener for about eight years now my stations are very well trained and I get the variety of music I like to listen to. I always used to listen to the plain old radio because if I only listened to my own music collection it was harder to get introduced to new stuff. With Pandora I get the best of both worlds. I can cull out music I don't like, seed in what I do, and still get cool stuff I've never heard of before.
I listen to everything from hard rock and gangsta rap to showtunes and Celtic. The single genre stations that come with satellite radio just don't cut it and I find myself constantly switching between stations to find something. As much as I don't really want to pay for it, I really do like Pandora.
Pandora (paid) for radio-type streaming and Amazon Prime Music for purchased music and playlist type stuff. I would get rid of Pandora but it's the only streaming service out there that still plays Tool.
Who's to say that some other country will do any better? I agree it is a poor move and will likely just end up being abused more against US citizens than espionage. However, it's not like the US is the only surveillance-happy country out there. The UK and China are as bad, if not worse. At least the US is being relatively transparent about their intentions. I doubt you would get much notification if China mandated that all its companies installed backdoors in their products.
I work for one of the District Courts. We have several judges who are "retired" but still working. Sometimes the just go in to senior status, sometimes they are recalled. It depends on the caseload of the court in question.
Internet service sucks here because most of the local governments here decided to award monopolies to Internet service companies.
That happened to an ex-girlfriend of mine. Happy Valley, OR has an exclusivity contract with Comcast to only allow Comcast to provide Internet service. My ex lived in Clackamas, not in the city of Happy Valley. She wanted to reduce her Internet bill and tried calling the local telco because they had a basic plan that was half the cost of Comcast. The CenturyLink CSR looked up her address and couldn't figure out why they couldn't provide Internet access. Then she realized that Comcast had claimed even areas outside of Happy Valley and that CenturyLink was barred from giving anything other than phone service.
I expect that soon cable companies will just increase the price of internet service by the amount a basic tv subscription costs and say that basic tv service is "free" with an internet plan.
I lived in a rural community several years ago and they almost did just that. Internet servers was $50 standalone or $40 with cable service. Basic cable (local channels plus some other garbage like QVC and Christian channels) was $6/mo. So I added basic cable and paid less than I would if I had chosen Internet only.
My in-laws had their cable and Internet service through BendBroadband. They are light users and were still getting overage charges for using to much bandwidth to the point that they had to regulate their usage. I called up BendBroadband and they basically told me "we are a small company so we can't do anything about it". They have about the worst channel selection guide I have ever seen and their DVR is even worse. (Possibly the worse DVR implementation I have ever seen.)
I had my in-laws switch to DirecTV with CenturyLink and they never had problems again. In fact, their monthly TV/Internet lowered by about 20% and they got a DVR that was actually useful.
I have been in IT for 20 years and I haven't made less than $50K since 1998 as a systems administrator with no degree. This was in Santa Rosa, CA just north of San Francisco from until 2004 until I moved to Portland, OR. The trend has continued up here, too.
It just seems to me that anyone who is making less than that, say $45,000 would just get a pay increase to the minimum and continue to be worked 50-60+ hours a week. Anyone making less than $45K is probably help desk and doesn't really have the same overtime requirements that server admins, network admins, and developers do.
The summary says this person requested anonymity but it closed with "she said". Considering this is an IT department, wouldn't the fact that the interviewee is female help the company to narrow down this person?
fappf.app is already taken. How about a different name?
The woman was homeless, so I'm willing to bet that her family smelled money and decided to cash in quick. I bet that Uber got a hell of a bargain because they would have likely settled for an extremely low amount, likely less than $100,000.
Because they make no money on the consoles, they are loss leaders. So if a bunch of people just ran out and bought the consoles with no intention of purchasing any games, Nintendo loses money. If they really wanted to monetize it they would have to do something similar to the Linksys WRT54G. Release a slightly higher-priced version with the ability to "hack" the OS.
The trouble with marbled crayfish....
Chuck E. Cheese has been "targeting our children with predatory gambling masked in a game" for decades now.
I work for the government and nearly all outbound traffic from the over 12,000 employees in our agencies comes through one of two IPs, depending on which side of the country you are on. So yes, it is entirely feasible that there could be hundreds of people accessing these sites behind just a single IP.
I got news for you. Marxists killed many, many more people in the 20th century than Nazis and Fascists combined!
Including many Jews, as well as persecuting them and seizing their property/belongings.
Probably because Volvo will accept liability for self-driving cars. https://www.forbes.com/sites/j...
People called Romany you go the house?
I'm surprised that SF to LA is not there, or Seattle to SF. Perhaps due to land cost? Those are both major business and travel routes servicing large populations.
Just another example of stodgy people trying to hold on to antiquated business models. I agree people should be compensated for their work. However, there is a plethora of available information out there now. I heavily research most everything I buy and already know what I want when I come in to the store. By the time I pick my product I'm more interested in the best price.
Dexter figured this out long before Up. https://www.youtube.com/watch?...
I live in Portland, OR. So I know a lot of the liberals he is talking about, and they most certainly do exist. I'm sitting reading cyberchondriac's post and am wholeheartedly agreeing (and supporting) that which he or she is saying. I see and hear this stuff on a daily basis.
Haven't the British been going after pirates for hundreds of years? https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
I've had that "dream" be a reality since I've been on Google Voice for at least eight years. I'm sure that Microsoft phone users could still retain this ability by using Hangouts and/or Google Voice.
I agree, after being a Pandora listener for about eight years now my stations are very well trained and I get the variety of music I like to listen to. I always used to listen to the plain old radio because if I only listened to my own music collection it was harder to get introduced to new stuff. With Pandora I get the best of both worlds. I can cull out music I don't like, seed in what I do, and still get cool stuff I've never heard of before. I listen to everything from hard rock and gangsta rap to showtunes and Celtic. The single genre stations that come with satellite radio just don't cut it and I find myself constantly switching between stations to find something. As much as I don't really want to pay for it, I really do like Pandora.
I used to stream Pandora everywhere but it doesn't like to work all the time when I'm on 4G. Now I either listen to Amazon in the car or SiriusXM.
Pandora (paid) for radio-type streaming and Amazon Prime Music for purchased music and playlist type stuff. I would get rid of Pandora but it's the only streaming service out there that still plays Tool.
Who's to say that some other country will do any better? I agree it is a poor move and will likely just end up being abused more against US citizens than espionage. However, it's not like the US is the only surveillance-happy country out there. The UK and China are as bad, if not worse. At least the US is being relatively transparent about their intentions. I doubt you would get much notification if China mandated that all its companies installed backdoors in their products.
I work for one of the District Courts. We have several judges who are "retired" but still working. Sometimes the just go in to senior status, sometimes they are recalled. It depends on the caseload of the court in question.
Internet service sucks here because most of the local governments here decided to award monopolies to Internet service companies.
That happened to an ex-girlfriend of mine. Happy Valley, OR has an exclusivity contract with Comcast to only allow Comcast to provide Internet service. My ex lived in Clackamas, not in the city of Happy Valley. She wanted to reduce her Internet bill and tried calling the local telco because they had a basic plan that was half the cost of Comcast. The CenturyLink CSR looked up her address and couldn't figure out why they couldn't provide Internet access. Then she realized that Comcast had claimed even areas outside of Happy Valley and that CenturyLink was barred from giving anything other than phone service.
I expect that soon cable companies will just increase the price of internet service by the amount a basic tv subscription costs and say that basic tv service is "free" with an internet plan.
I lived in a rural community several years ago and they almost did just that. Internet servers was $50 standalone or $40 with cable service. Basic cable (local channels plus some other garbage like QVC and Christian channels) was $6/mo. So I added basic cable and paid less than I would if I had chosen Internet only.
My in-laws had their cable and Internet service through BendBroadband. They are light users and were still getting overage charges for using to much bandwidth to the point that they had to regulate their usage. I called up BendBroadband and they basically told me "we are a small company so we can't do anything about it". They have about the worst channel selection guide I have ever seen and their DVR is even worse. (Possibly the worse DVR implementation I have ever seen.) I had my in-laws switch to DirecTV with CenturyLink and they never had problems again. In fact, their monthly TV/Internet lowered by about 20% and they got a DVR that was actually useful.
I have been in IT for 20 years and I haven't made less than $50K since 1998 as a systems administrator with no degree. This was in Santa Rosa, CA just north of San Francisco from until 2004 until I moved to Portland, OR. The trend has continued up here, too. It just seems to me that anyone who is making less than that, say $45,000 would just get a pay increase to the minimum and continue to be worked 50-60+ hours a week. Anyone making less than $45K is probably help desk and doesn't really have the same overtime requirements that server admins, network admins, and developers do.
The summary says this person requested anonymity but it closed with "she said". Considering this is an IT department, wouldn't the fact that the interviewee is female help the company to narrow down this person?