When I was depressed I could perform sexually but didn't want to. When I was on SSRIs I wanted to have sex, but couldn't finish the job. I could have banged away for hours and we'd have got nowhere but sore. Now I'm back off the drugs and I have no sex drive. Bloody nightmare.
A few years ago, around 2006/7, I worked in a (UK) school doing IT support. One of the guys in the science department was some kind of Linux geek. He had a Red Hat server running on the school network for some reason or other, I forget what, and he had requested and been given an external IP address on the network so that he could get in from home and do... whatever.
So, one day the big talk is that the local education authority, who provided the Internet connection, have been getting calls from the US Department of Defence wanting to know why they're getting hundreds of thousands of hits to some of their servers from this address block. The education authority traced it to the school and we traced it to this guys Red Hat server and pulled the plug. I didn't get a good look at it, but it was running a 2.4 kernel well into the 2.6 days, so I'm guessing there were plenty of other things that were out of date on there.
I don't know whether you'd lay the blame on the science teacher or the admin who let him put that box on the network with an external IP address and then didn't spot oodles of outgoing SSH attempts or whatever, but one way or another someone took it on trust that someone else knew what they were doing with Linux when they clearly didn't.
It doesn't mean "no tips" at all. I have used card readers that prompt you for a tip. The waiter starts out by putting in the amount of the bill, then gives you the reader. At this point, the reader asks if you want to tip, and if you say yes, it asks you how much and you put the amount in. The reader then gives you the total to check, and if you're happy with it, you put in your PIN and the job is done.
In relation to other things people have said in this thread, it's interesting to see how things have evolved in the UK as regards how people feel about letting their cards out of their sight. Some places still want you to sign receipts rather than using Chip and Pin so they'll take your cards away to the till rather than bringing a Chip and Pin machine to you. When I've been out with people and that's happened, people have been vocally concerned about their cards being taken away, where previously you'd never have really given it a second thought.
Ticket issuers Ticketmaster and Veritix tout paperless tickets as a way to eliminate worries about lost, stolen, or counterfeit tickets, and to banish long will-call lines.
Note for the British English impaired - a tout is what you on the other side of the pond call a scalper.
Main rate CT is currently 28%, small companies rate is 21%. Marginal rate applies between 300k and 1,500k, though the thresholds depend on how many associated companies you have. The 24% rate won't be the lowest in the western world, though it will apparently be the lowest in the G20. The drop in CT rates is good, as is the drop in NI, though it's balanced by the drop in capital allowances from 20% to 18% for main pool expenditure and 10% to 8% for special rate pool expenditure.
Why yes, I do happen to be a a corporation tax adviser;)
The Finnish government is based on proportional representation and coalitions, so my Finnish mother tells me, which I imagine means less scope for governments to sieze tyrannical power without someone to keep them in check. The country is indeed also very socialist, but somehow it works and you don't appear to piss money up the wall on stupid things in the same way that Britain does.
I'd move to Finland in a heartbeat if I could learn the language and persuade my wife and kids, and the political system is one of the reasons.
Watchmen was such a faithful adaptation of the comic that it was unwatchable as a film
One of the main aims in producing Watchmen, the comic, was to show what a comic can do that a film can't. So they went ahead and made the film, it didn't work terribly well, and the circle is complete.
Are you even required to have an Internet connection to use Natal? Can it even perform adequate facial recognition to ID a person? Wikipedia says it only does 48 skeletal points, and I doubt enough of those are on the face to recognise a specific person. Can you turn Natal off? Can you not use it altogether?
violent video games where 99% of the time the *targets* are other human beings, and there is little to no moral context for the violence
I've got to take exception to this. Plenty of violent games have moral context. You mentioned Halo, which has the moral context of repelling hostile invaders. That's pretty moral as far as I'm concerned. The same goes for other games like Call of Duty - wars are waged, generally, for moral reasons.
OK, so something like GTA is decidedly immoral, so I'll accept any objections to that on these grounds, but to say that violent games have little to no moral context seems a bit short sighted to me.
The explanation I heard for the mixed fabric rule was that the two threads will wear and shrink at different rates, so the garment will fall apart and you waste both materials. We've pretty much got around that problem these days though.
I'm not comparing them to anything really, except to their own past values. Apple's market cap has recently exceeded that of Wal*Mart, and their share price has been similarly growing.
Besides, I wasn't saying they were outstripping everyone else, just that they are by no means dying.
Android will bury Apple for the same reason the PC buried the Mac.
While I really have no idea about whether Android devices will overtake the iPhone, it's absurd to claim that PCs have "buried" the Mac. While PCs have the market share the Mac platform is patently alive and well. One might also raise the issue of Apple's stock price and market cap, though of course it's hard to pick out how much of that is due to the iPhone, iTunes, the iPod, etc as opposed to Mac computers.
Facebook is a really lame site. If he cares so much about her posts then just close the facebook account. You want to update your friends call them, talk to them. Facebook is the reason people are becoming anti social. For thousands of years people got along with out facebook and I bet we can get along again by just doing face to face or call to call social networking.
People got by for thousands of years without computers, but I doubt you're about to pull the plug. "Oh, but computers are useful!" you say. Well, yeah, so is Facebook. Facebook allows a whole bunch of people to better keep in touch with a whole bunch of other people, including many that they would otherwise not keep in touch with at all.
Just because you have no use for it, doesn't make it useless. Maybe you and your friends just haven't figured out how to use it yet.
My family were quite free and easy about words - if it was in common usage it was fine. My dad's epic vocabulary was generally used instead of a dictionary. The one house rule we did have was that blanks could be swapped and re-circulated: At the start of your turn, if there was a blank on the board and you had the letter it represented in your hand, you could swap them and take the blank into your hand.
When I was depressed I could perform sexually but didn't want to. When I was on SSRIs I wanted to have sex, but couldn't finish the job. I could have banged away for hours and we'd have got nowhere but sore. Now I'm back off the drugs and I have no sex drive. Bloody nightmare.
A few years ago, around 2006/7, I worked in a (UK) school doing IT support. One of the guys in the science department was some kind of Linux geek. He had a Red Hat server running on the school network for some reason or other, I forget what, and he had requested and been given an external IP address on the network so that he could get in from home and do... whatever.
So, one day the big talk is that the local education authority, who provided the Internet connection, have been getting calls from the US Department of Defence wanting to know why they're getting hundreds of thousands of hits to some of their servers from this address block. The education authority traced it to the school and we traced it to this guys Red Hat server and pulled the plug. I didn't get a good look at it, but it was running a 2.4 kernel well into the 2.6 days, so I'm guessing there were plenty of other things that were out of date on there.
I don't know whether you'd lay the blame on the science teacher or the admin who let him put that box on the network with an external IP address and then didn't spot oodles of outgoing SSH attempts or whatever, but one way or another someone took it on trust that someone else knew what they were doing with Linux when they clearly didn't.
I don't think anyone is averse to paying artists for their work except the fucking record companies.
It doesn't mean "no tips" at all. I have used card readers that prompt you for a tip. The waiter starts out by putting in the amount of the bill, then gives you the reader. At this point, the reader asks if you want to tip, and if you say yes, it asks you how much and you put the amount in. The reader then gives you the total to check, and if you're happy with it, you put in your PIN and the job is done.
In relation to other things people have said in this thread, it's interesting to see how things have evolved in the UK as regards how people feel about letting their cards out of their sight. Some places still want you to sign receipts rather than using Chip and Pin so they'll take your cards away to the till rather than bringing a Chip and Pin machine to you. When I've been out with people and that's happened, people have been vocally concerned about their cards being taken away, where previously you'd never have really given it a second thought.
True, but in the context you quote it actually means "to promote or praise energetically".
No shit, I never knew that.
Note for the British English impaired - the above is sarcasm.
Ticket issuers Ticketmaster and Veritix tout paperless tickets as a way to eliminate worries about lost, stolen, or counterfeit tickets, and to banish long will-call lines.
Note for the British English impaired - a tout is what you on the other side of the pond call a scalper.
Guns are actually a most inefficient way to kill humans, poison is better and you can make very nasty stuff with commercially available chemicals.
I'd love to see footage of that bank job.
You're welcome.
Main rate CT is currently 28%, small companies rate is 21%. Marginal rate applies between 300k and 1,500k, though the thresholds depend on how many associated companies you have. The 24% rate won't be the lowest in the western world, though it will apparently be the lowest in the G20. The drop in CT rates is good, as is the drop in NI, though it's balanced by the drop in capital allowances from 20% to 18% for main pool expenditure and 10% to 8% for special rate pool expenditure.
Why yes, I do happen to be a a corporation tax adviser ;)
I'll bet Nintendo don't know how to do those things and I'm sure they flat out don't want to do those things.
The Finnish government is based on proportional representation and coalitions, so my Finnish mother tells me, which I imagine means less scope for governments to sieze tyrannical power without someone to keep them in check. The country is indeed also very socialist, but somehow it works and you don't appear to piss money up the wall on stupid things in the same way that Britain does.
I'd move to Finland in a heartbeat if I could learn the language and persuade my wife and kids, and the political system is one of the reasons.
It's fitting this message should be passed along by an anonymous coward.
Why is the parent post flamebait? It's a very well known phenomenon that when US products go on sale in the UK, the exchange rate may as well be 1:1.
One of the main aims in producing Watchmen, the comic, was to show what a comic can do that a film can't. So they went ahead and made the film, it didn't work terribly well, and the circle is complete.
Are you even required to have an Internet connection to use Natal? Can it even perform adequate facial recognition to ID a person? Wikipedia says it only does 48 skeletal points, and I doubt enough of those are on the face to recognise a specific person. Can you turn Natal off? Can you not use it altogether?
This is not 1984. Calm down.
What if when you bought the car you agreed to a contract that granted Sony the right to remove any part of the car at any time?
The real question in all of this is whether the EULA is binding.
I've got to take exception to this. Plenty of violent games have moral context. You mentioned Halo, which has the moral context of repelling hostile invaders. That's pretty moral as far as I'm concerned. The same goes for other games like Call of Duty - wars are waged, generally, for moral reasons.
OK, so something like GTA is decidedly immoral, so I'll accept any objections to that on these grounds, but to say that violent games have little to no moral context seems a bit short sighted to me.
Big deal. Call me when it can do a 4 dimensional Rubik's cube.
The explanation I heard for the mixed fabric rule was that the two threads will wear and shrink at different rates, so the garment will fall apart and you waste both materials. We've pretty much got around that problem these days though.
I'm not comparing them to anything really, except to their own past values. Apple's market cap has recently exceeded that of Wal*Mart, and their share price has been similarly growing.
Besides, I wasn't saying they were outstripping everyone else, just that they are by no means dying.
While I really have no idea about whether Android devices will overtake the iPhone, it's absurd to claim that PCs have "buried" the Mac. While PCs have the market share the Mac platform is patently alive and well. One might also raise the issue of Apple's stock price and market cap, though of course it's hard to pick out how much of that is due to the iPhone, iTunes, the iPod, etc as opposed to Mac computers.
It's a lot easier to have 12 million than it used to be.
People got by for thousands of years without computers, but I doubt you're about to pull the plug. "Oh, but computers are useful!" you say. Well, yeah, so is Facebook. Facebook allows a whole bunch of people to better keep in touch with a whole bunch of other people, including many that they would otherwise not keep in touch with at all.
Just because you have no use for it, doesn't make it useless. Maybe you and your friends just haven't figured out how to use it yet.
How many laptops have user replaceable graphics cards? After all, the Mac Mini and the iMac are basically laptops in elaborate cases.
My family were quite free and easy about words - if it was in common usage it was fine. My dad's epic vocabulary was generally used instead of a dictionary. The one house rule we did have was that blanks could be swapped and re-circulated: At the start of your turn, if there was a blank on the board and you had the letter it represented in your hand, you could swap them and take the blank into your hand.