For $5 you can take the raw data dump provided by 23andme and have it processed by Prometheus and they give you all sorts of details not covered by 23andme. For that fee you can have your data reprocessed for free in the future to apply it to the latest research available.
An employee with a total salary of ~120k probably actually cots the company 200k to employ. So that number doesn't actually sound too far off for the employer's actual cost.
Most airlines specify electronics are not covered for damage. This may have to change but for now don't expect electronics to be covered. If it's like the current international ban items lime DSLR cameras and even lenses (they contain electronics) are also banned.
Actually this is a pure cable modem issue. http://www.dslreports.com/tool... is a test that can be used to see if your modem is affected. https://www.dslreports.com/tes... lists some of the affected modems. The ARRIS SB6190 is one of the more popular modems on the list that is affected.
My Vizio P75-C1 75" 4K "Home Theater Display" legally can't be called a "TV" because it doesn't come with an ATSC tuner. The FCC requires all "televisions" to come with a tuner since 2007.
This is for WiFi calling, not cell data. You would have to purchase WiFi access from the airline to use the onflight WiFi which already blocks things like streaming. WiFi calling would potentially be something else they block.
They would have to prove the owner knew someone was in the car at the time of him initiating the locking of the car. If anything BMW would be held liable for requiring "special knowledge" in order to unlock the car from the inside when a lock was initiated from the outside. Someone has died in a BMW from heatstroke due to this behavior and nothing has changed in the behavior. So I suspect it is unlikely any changes are made as a result from this case.
Page 38 of the manual states "Do not lock the vehicle from the outside with people inside the car, as the vehicle cannot be unlocked from inside without special knowledge."
So if the car was remotely locked this would be the case. The owner of the car could have initiated the outside lock with the BMW Remote Control App. You have to press the lock button from inside the car to allow someone from the inside the car to unlock it.
The default behavior on BMW cars is that you have to pull the door handle lever twice to open it. The first pull unlocks thw door and it and the second pull opens the door. I've had passengers think they were locked in because while they pulled the handle once they couldn't open the door and I have to tell them to pull it again.
I would be surprised if the guy was woken up by the SOS system with a CSR talking to him and he then pulls the handle once and thinks he is locked in since the door doesn't open. Then the CSR messes with the drugged up guy making him think he is locked in if there is any truth to the article and what was being said to him..
This is not true. For example Anno 2070 on Steam
3rd-party DRM: Solidshield Tages SAS
3 machine activation limit
Steam games are allowed to use any DRM they want. So it has both machine activation limits and at one time required an internet connection to play until Ubisoft changed it.
You can buy MMOs on steam which require a subscription plus internet connection to play. Steam is a publisher and distributor. If they aren't the publisher, the game may come with an internet required DRM system.
I would look into the Razor Naga MMO mouse. It's basically a number pad on the mouse. Depending on how you map things, you could get a lot of use out of it I bet.
I bought Hawk 2 from steam and recently Driver SF for $1 from the ubi store. The legit version of Hawk 2 would crash constantly due to failures with their DRM server. Driver SF wouldn't even install right and would fail to launch. So I installed the pirate versions of both, which worked just fine without issues... So what do I count as? Yeah of course people are pirating the games, so they can actually enjoy them.
Yeah, and that was my initial concern too once I saw this other person's information on my account. I checked my iTunes purchase history though, and there haven't been any purchases made other than my own.
This may be unrelated, but yesterday I noticed that my iTunes account had became corrupted with someone else's data. My first name, last name, address and registered CC number became someone else's info. Had I not noticed, I would have been making charges against this other persons account.
Maybe someone wrote one messed up database query and screwed up a massive amount of people's payment association. Some users are starting to notice they have someone else's info and are going on a buying spree. Or people are just making their normal purchases and are unknowingly charging other people's accounts, like I almost did last night.
I live in Sandy, UT and the ONLY way to get over 22Mbps is to get Comcast's Extreme 50/10 package which is over $100 a month and it only became available 3 weeks ago. While the median income here is 80k/ year and plenty of people can afford it, I doubt 50% of the 100k people here upgraded to that package in the last 3 weeks.
In Sandy, Comcast has 3 subnets you can get assigned to. One of them would only result in 40/6 speedtest results and would never result in uploads over 7.5Mbps. While connections through another gateway would result in 62/12 results. So I changed the Mac address on router until I got connected to the good network. So I've run a few hundred speed tests in the last week. I'm sure others have recently upgraded have been running many speed tests too. As they trouble shoot why they aren't getting the full speed listed they will run even more tests than normal. Which has screwed up the "Average" for results in the area I'm sure.
The article seemed a bit misleading. It made it sound like the game was dependent on races having all class types available for RVR, when it's not. It would be like saying Alliance in WoW is in trouble because they removed the ability for Gnomes to be priests.
In WAR there are two factions, Order and Destruction. Order has the Ironbreaker and the Swordmaster as tanks, the White Lion and the Witch Hunter as melee dps. Destruction has the Black Orc and Chosen as tanks, the Witch Elf and Marauder as melee dps.
Just because particular races don't have tanks doesn't mean the faction doesn't have tanks for the RVR.
Comcast offers 2 gigabytes per month of free newsgroup access. Newsgroups are going to be faster than any torrent you try. Comcast newsgroup service maxes out my connection any time I use it. The whole idea that slow ftp/http is the only method of downloading isn't true. You just need to be a little more knowledgeable about methods available for downloading binaries.
Back in the day the EVE/script folder had the decompiled python in it in plain text. People did stuff like modify it to create merchant bots that would auto buy/sell stuff on the markets and whatever else they wanted to modify. Then CCP changed it to one 'compiled.code' file instead of all the uncompiled python files, which is easier to manage and check for people making changes.
So you can still just take that 'compiled.code' file and decompile it to readable code. Which is what got 'leaked'
It's nothing special at all really, and is only a portion of the client code. Anyone that was interested in messing with it has already seen the Python, especially people that played when it wasn't even pre-compiled.
Next thing you know right clicking a web page to 'view source' will be considered leaking source code too?
Circuit City often offers new PC games at $10 less than retail. My guess is that they hope you start going there regularly for all purchases. Well from my experience they ran things horribly and I don't return unless its a deal, which means little profit for them. They had a game for sell at $10 off. Multiple people in the game section couldn't find it and I couldn't either. I leave the store, get online and order it for in store pickup since it says it is available at that location. ($21 gift card if they can't provide it in 21 min) Magically when they had $21 on the line they find the game in less than 2 minutes (they said they were looking for it for at least 10 min before that)
Maybe they truly couldn't find it...but I felt like it was more of a scam to get you in the store then they say they are out of it so they don't lose money on the discount. It sure didn't help build my confidence in the store.
Does this mean you should also install every toolbar/spyware known to man as part of your development process? To ensure it works on all systems? Patched or unpatched, you are missing out on huge target audiences in either case.
For $5 you can take the raw data dump provided by 23andme and have it processed by Prometheus and they give you all sorts of details not covered by 23andme. For that fee you can have your data reprocessed for free in the future to apply it to the latest research available.
Email seems like a reliably way to inform people... 23andme sends emails out when they find new changes and have updates.
An employee with a total salary of ~120k probably actually cots the company 200k to employ. So that number doesn't actually sound too far off for the employer's actual cost.
Most airlines specify electronics are not covered for damage. This may have to change but for now don't expect electronics to be covered. If it's like the current international ban items lime DSLR cameras and even lenses (they contain electronics) are also banned.
Actually this is a pure cable modem issue. http://www.dslreports.com/tool... is a test that can be used to see if your modem is affected. https://www.dslreports.com/tes... lists some of the affected modems. The ARRIS SB6190 is one of the more popular modems on the list that is affected.
My Vizio P75-C1 75" 4K "Home Theater Display" legally can't be called a "TV" because it doesn't come with an ATSC tuner. The FCC requires all "televisions" to come with a tuner since 2007.
This is for WiFi calling, not cell data. You would have to purchase WiFi access from the airline to use the onflight WiFi which already blocks things like streaming. WiFi calling would potentially be something else they block.
They would have to prove the owner knew someone was in the car at the time of him initiating the locking of the car. If anything BMW would be held liable for requiring "special knowledge" in order to unlock the car from the inside when a lock was initiated from the outside. Someone has died in a BMW from heatstroke due to this behavior and nothing has changed in the behavior. So I suspect it is unlikely any changes are made as a result from this case.
The BMW 550i uses an electronically controlled headrest that can't be detached. This IS a "modern" car...
Page 38 of the manual states "Do not lock the vehicle from the outside with people inside the car, as the vehicle cannot be unlocked from inside without special knowledge." So if the car was remotely locked this would be the case. The owner of the car could have initiated the outside lock with the BMW Remote Control App. You have to press the lock button from inside the car to allow someone from the inside the car to unlock it.
The default behavior on BMW cars is that you have to pull the door handle lever twice to open it. The first pull unlocks thw door and it and the second pull opens the door. I've had passengers think they were locked in because while they pulled the handle once they couldn't open the door and I have to tell them to pull it again. I would be surprised if the guy was woken up by the SOS system with a CSR talking to him and he then pulls the handle once and thinks he is locked in since the door doesn't open. Then the CSR messes with the drugged up guy making him think he is locked in if there is any truth to the article and what was being said to him..
This is not true. For example Anno 2070 on Steam 3rd-party DRM: Solidshield Tages SAS 3 machine activation limit Steam games are allowed to use any DRM they want. So it has both machine activation limits and at one time required an internet connection to play until Ubisoft changed it. You can buy MMOs on steam which require a subscription plus internet connection to play. Steam is a publisher and distributor. If they aren't the publisher, the game may come with an internet required DRM system.
I would look into the Razor Naga MMO mouse. It's basically a number pad on the mouse. Depending on how you map things, you could get a lot of use out of it I bet.
I bought Hawk 2 from steam and recently Driver SF for $1 from the ubi store. The legit version of Hawk 2 would crash constantly due to failures with their DRM server. Driver SF wouldn't even install right and would fail to launch. So I installed the pirate versions of both, which worked just fine without issues... So what do I count as? Yeah of course people are pirating the games, so they can actually enjoy them.
Meridian 59 was before that. The 59 comes from 1995 backwards and that's when it was released.
Yeah, and that was my initial concern too once I saw this other person's information on my account. I checked my iTunes purchase history though, and there haven't been any purchases made other than my own.
This may be unrelated, but yesterday I noticed that my iTunes account had became corrupted with someone else's data. My first name, last name, address and registered CC number became someone else's info. Had I not noticed, I would have been making charges against this other persons account. Maybe someone wrote one messed up database query and screwed up a massive amount of people's payment association. Some users are starting to notice they have someone else's info and are going on a buying spree. Or people are just making their normal purchases and are unknowingly charging other people's accounts, like I almost did last night.
I live in Sandy, UT and the ONLY way to get over 22Mbps is to get Comcast's Extreme 50/10 package which is over $100 a month and it only became available 3 weeks ago. While the median income here is 80k/ year and plenty of people can afford it, I doubt 50% of the 100k people here upgraded to that package in the last 3 weeks. In Sandy, Comcast has 3 subnets you can get assigned to. One of them would only result in 40/6 speedtest results and would never result in uploads over 7.5Mbps. While connections through another gateway would result in 62/12 results. So I changed the Mac address on router until I got connected to the good network. So I've run a few hundred speed tests in the last week. I'm sure others have recently upgraded have been running many speed tests too. As they trouble shoot why they aren't getting the full speed listed they will run even more tests than normal. Which has screwed up the "Average" for results in the area I'm sure.
The article seemed a bit misleading. It made it sound like the game was dependent on races having all class types available for RVR, when it's not. It would be like saying Alliance in WoW is in trouble because they removed the ability for Gnomes to be priests. In WAR there are two factions, Order and Destruction. Order has the Ironbreaker and the Swordmaster as tanks, the White Lion and the Witch Hunter as melee dps. Destruction has the Black Orc and Chosen as tanks, the Witch Elf and Marauder as melee dps. Just because particular races don't have tanks doesn't mean the faction doesn't have tanks for the RVR.
Dell must have been doing some good lobbying down there. Computer broken? It's now cheaper to just buy a new one!
Comcast offers 2 gigabytes per month of free newsgroup access. Newsgroups are going to be faster than any torrent you try. Comcast newsgroup service maxes out my connection any time I use it. The whole idea that slow ftp/http is the only method of downloading isn't true. You just need to be a little more knowledgeable about methods available for downloading binaries.
Back in the day the EVE/script folder had the decompiled python in it in plain text. People did stuff like modify it to create merchant bots that would auto buy/sell stuff on the markets and whatever else they wanted to modify. Then CCP changed it to one 'compiled.code' file instead of all the uncompiled python files, which is easier to manage and check for people making changes. So you can still just take that 'compiled.code' file and decompile it to readable code. Which is what got 'leaked' It's nothing special at all really, and is only a portion of the client code. Anyone that was interested in messing with it has already seen the Python, especially people that played when it wasn't even pre-compiled. Next thing you know right clicking a web page to 'view source' will be considered leaking source code too?
I didn't know PC games had region restrictions.
Circuit City often offers new PC games at $10 less than retail. My guess is that they hope you start going there regularly for all purchases. Well from my experience they ran things horribly and I don't return unless its a deal, which means little profit for them. They had a game for sell at $10 off. Multiple people in the game section couldn't find it and I couldn't either. I leave the store, get online and order it for in store pickup since it says it is available at that location. ($21 gift card if they can't provide it in 21 min) Magically when they had $21 on the line they find the game in less than 2 minutes (they said they were looking for it for at least 10 min before that) Maybe they truly couldn't find it...but I felt like it was more of a scam to get you in the store then they say they are out of it so they don't lose money on the discount. It sure didn't help build my confidence in the store.
Does this mean you should also install every toolbar/spyware known to man as part of your development process? To ensure it works on all systems? Patched or unpatched, you are missing out on huge target audiences in either case.