You have to weigh your options. If there is incriminating evidence to be found that would give you a worse sentence, then go to jail for the lesser crime.
AFAIK, at WWDC 06 developers were told Carbon would have full 64 bit compatibility. This year at WWDC Apple said "nope, we changed our minds.". This is why many developers are mad. But, I'm with you still. It's been fairly obvious that Apple doesn't want to put more effort into Carbon than they have to and that it'll be losing support sooner rather than later.
Yes but my point was the system instability might not be because of the Apple code making the system freeze but rather the kernel extensions not being very good.
I think it's more to do with the enormous size of portions in the US. The fast food meals are sometimes over 1000 calories, 60g of fat(the entire amount I eat in one day). Late night carbs is one bad thing most overweight people do as well. Eating half a bag of chips late at night gives your body a huge amount of energy that it has nothing to do with, so it stores it as fat.
She is sort of right but there's a threshold of how much you need to eat to cause this to happen. It's called starvation mode. Your body will try to hold on to the fat that it has when you're starving yourself. If you starve yourself too much then it doesn't work and you will still lose fat and especially muscle. Most people can't go that far though and after a week or two they give into their appetite and start eating more again. It's in this short period that starvation mode works.
Thanks. It's good timing since I'm actually studying for my cryptography class right now. Your comment seems to be a little contradictory for at least OpenSSL, mod_ssl(default settings), which the paper finds is vulnerable, at least some versions of it.
Reading this, it's a wonder how this doesn't happen more often. Especially within a data center. Some malicious person could rent a server in a data center where the latency to other servers is very low and perform timing attacks on other web servers.
They weren't legally taken down. All the CRIA did was threaten their ISP with a lawsuit and they had to shut down. Also, they don't have the money to defend themselves in court if the CRIA decided to sue Demonoid. CRIA might not even win in court but they have the money to outlast.
And? I don't hear of anyone being limited to saying anything here. However I do hear of in the US that protestors aren't allowed near the event they are protesting against a lot of the time. In the US, you have free speech as long as it's out of the way and no one can see it. Here in Canada there's huge parades of people that smoke pot out in the open and the police don't do anything about it. I can't recall what event this was at but it was in Toronto these past few years.
The point is, your constitution says lots of things but your government routinely wipes it's ass with it, blatantly ignoring it.
I think it's because the trolls are happy that Apple has a flaw found in its code. Then you get the usual trolls about "I thought MACS just worked lolz".
The Mini is basically a Macbook in a different package. You will get the same performance, which is actually pretty good as long as you're not trying to run Motion of FCP on it.
Because every fucking thread about OS X has your same stupid fucking question. The answer has been posted a million times and if you really were an OS X user you would already know they're not just "bug fixes".
Some people are either a) retarded, or b) trolling. Why is it so hard to not see 10.x.x is the bug fixes and 10.x is features. We've been going over this same shit for years, and every time a 10.x release comes out, the retarded or trolls(take your pick) pull out the same stupid ass question.
If you're so worried Apple used some open source code maybe you should complain BSD made it open source in the first place. Apple publishes all their kernel source for anyone to take anything from. I don't get the whining about Apple using open source code. If the authors didn't want someone to use it then don't put the code out there for people to use.
Last summer I flew from Detroit to San Francisco on NWA. I didn't get any meal either on the flight there or the return. They wanted to charge $10 US for a bag of junk like candy and caramel pop corn. Coffee, tea and water were free but that was it. I did go for the cheapest flight I could find since I am a student but it was lame they asked me what meal I prefer when I bought the ticket yet I didn't get jack squat besides little cups of water and coffee.
I suppose Dells and HPs are 100% flawless right? Yeah...
You have to weigh your options. If there is incriminating evidence to be found that would give you a worse sentence, then go to jail for the lesser crime.
AFAIK, at WWDC 06 developers were told Carbon would have full 64 bit compatibility. This year at WWDC Apple said "nope, we changed our minds.". This is why many developers are mad. But, I'm with you still. It's been fairly obvious that Apple doesn't want to put more effort into Carbon than they have to and that it'll be losing support sooner rather than later.
Yes but my point was the system instability might not be because of the Apple code making the system freeze but rather the kernel extensions not being very good.
Parallels installs kernel extensions so no surprise there that it might cause system instability.
I did an archive and install and I haven't had any problems besides bugs in applications. Archive and install has always worked for me since 10.1.
Neither is the Finder.
I think it's more to do with the enormous size of portions in the US. The fast food meals are sometimes over 1000 calories, 60g of fat(the entire amount I eat in one day). Late night carbs is one bad thing most overweight people do as well. Eating half a bag of chips late at night gives your body a huge amount of energy that it has nothing to do with, so it stores it as fat.
She is sort of right but there's a threshold of how much you need to eat to cause this to happen. It's called starvation mode. Your body will try to hold on to the fat that it has when you're starving yourself. If you starve yourself too much then it doesn't work and you will still lose fat and especially muscle. Most people can't go that far though and after a week or two they give into their appetite and start eating more again. It's in this short period that starvation mode works.
It would be better to compare the number to the number of people who actually have internet access.
Thanks. It's good timing since I'm actually studying for my cryptography class right now.
Your comment seems to be a little contradictory for at least OpenSSL, mod_ssl(default settings), which the paper finds is vulnerable, at least some versions of it.
Reading this, it's a wonder how this doesn't happen more often. Especially within a data center. Some malicious person could rent a server in a data center where the latency to other servers is very low and perform timing attacks on other web servers.
Can you post a reference for that? If that's true how come people aren't breaking SSL all the time?
They weren't legally taken down. All the CRIA did was threaten their ISP with a lawsuit and they had to shut down. Also, they don't have the money to defend themselves in court if the CRIA decided to sue Demonoid. CRIA might not even win in court but they have the money to outlast.
And? I don't hear of anyone being limited to saying anything here. However I do hear of in the US that protestors aren't allowed near the event they are protesting against a lot of the time. In the US, you have free speech as long as it's out of the way and no one can see it. Here in Canada there's huge parades of people that smoke pot out in the open and the police don't do anything about it. I can't recall what event this was at but it was in Toronto these past few years.
The point is, your constitution says lots of things but your government routinely wipes it's ass with it, blatantly ignoring it.
Uhh, Canada, for one. And maybe you missed how the current US government is ignoring your constitution every single day.
I think it's because the trolls are happy that Apple has a flaw found in its code. Then you get the usual trolls about "I thought MACS just worked lolz".
Well, you are wrong. There's significant kernel changes as well as API changes including deprecated API calls.
This is the first thing I've seen that actually works! Thanks! Now let's see how good it works over AFP...
It's pretty stupid considering you can buy firecrackers and fireworks all over the place in the US.
The Mini is basically a Macbook in a different package. You will get the same performance, which is actually pretty good as long as you're not trying to run Motion of FCP on it.
Because every fucking thread about OS X has your same stupid fucking question. The answer has been posted a million times and if you really were an OS X user you would already know they're not just "bug fixes".
Some people are either a) retarded, or b) trolling. Why is it so hard to not see 10.x.x is the bug fixes and 10.x is features. We've been going over this same shit for years, and every time a 10.x release comes out, the retarded or trolls(take your pick) pull out the same stupid ass question.
If you're so worried Apple used some open source code maybe you should complain BSD made it open source in the first place. Apple publishes all their kernel source for anyone to take anything from. I don't get the whining about Apple using open source code. If the authors didn't want someone to use it then don't put the code out there for people to use.
Last summer I flew from Detroit to San Francisco on NWA. I didn't get any meal either on the flight there or the return. They wanted to charge $10 US for a bag of junk like candy and caramel pop corn. Coffee, tea and water were free but that was it. I did go for the cheapest flight I could find since I am a student but it was lame they asked me what meal I prefer when I bought the ticket yet I didn't get jack squat besides little cups of water and coffee.
If they're not taken down for all the kiddy pr0n & all that other illegal stuff on usenet then I fail to see how the RIAA can shut it down.