We are getting undercut by those wanting to live the same life as us. What these people don't understand is that they are lowering said life style.
Who's going to stand up and say so, when everyone is so focused on climbing higher in the world themselves to escape the "not as good as it used to be" level they're at now?
A person who wants a lifestyle of "more", for example everyone ever to exist, doesn't really know what that lifestyle of "more" is actually like, so they have no frame of reference to know if they are damaging it. They just know that it's "more" and therefore must be better than what they have now.
In their eyes it doesn't matter how much of that cliff crumbles on the way up, because they are still higher up in the world when they get to its summit. Who cares if it's a foot shorter and everyone standing on it is now a foot lower and angry with you, as long as you can see over the heads of your former peers, right? But wait, there's always another plateau just a little higher up.
That pesky greed thing is innate to human beings. Left to its own devices, it overrides any regard for the wellbeing of others.
The biggest problem with these contactless payments, bigger even than trust, is that it separates you mentally from your money. It makes it easy for people to fail to develop and maintain responsible financial habits. It softens the blow of spending money. If that blow doesn't hurt, then you can imagine what happens to the thought of security. The closer you are to the cash, the more you pay attention to its security! Someone takes $20 out of your wallet, you get upset. Someone skims your card, you don't even notice, and if you ever find out, you hope the card company will just reverse the charge. What incentive do you have to care anymore?
When you pay cash, you see the actual money leave your hands. A check is still symbolic in that you're giving them something permanently. When you pay with a debit card, you start to really lose the connection to your money. You put it back in your wallet when you're done. We have had contactless payments for a while and when you use it, you don't think, just buy. I used to have a Paypass enabled debit card and all I had to do was wave my wallet towards the payment terminal to pay. Or if it was in my coat pocket, just wave my coat at the terminal.
The overwhelming message from retailers is: Don't think about your money, just spend it! We'll make it easy! Consumers like easy.
Of course any mobile device manufacturer is all too happy to get involved with that. If banks made cell phones, they would be playing in this space too.
I'm preaching to the 4-digit choir here, I know. Let me issue the disclaimer that I am not a teacher but a bunch of my friends are, and my job does depend on staying up to date.
You're right, the gap cannot be mitigated. It's how kids' lives and brains work. We were the same way at one point, too. You'll never have as much time to learn new stuff, nor the same neuroplasticity, as you did when you were a bored junior high schooler with all those summers and weekends and snow days and such. It was nice to be so free from responsibility that I could drop a whole week's evenings into writing a DOS game in BASIC or C or assembler, or whatever else, learning while I did it.
Staying ahead of the kids requires a LOT of effort and an independent adult with all of the relevant things to take care of might not be able to stay ahead of the most dedicated ones. You may have the wisdom and specialization of years of experience (I'd like to see those kids build a robust enterprise network, or spec out an IVR soup-to-nuts) but being up to speed on all of the new stuff? Forget it. Grading assignments and planning lessons around an existing curriculum takes a lot of time and you just want a break when you're finally done at 10pm. You have time for some of the new stuff but not all of it.
I do think there should be in-service days, decent salaries, ongoing education benefits, etc for computer teachers. Attract some real talent.
After all: The new hires we work with today were those kids in a computer class just a couple years ago, so maybe schools can make better coworkers for the rest of us.
The number of STDs this celebrity has will shock you! Now with the names of the partners they got it from!
You'll never guess who has herpes! Online dating, now with health background checks (including identifiable previous partners) on each potential match.
Parents, find out if your grown children have had a pregnancy test with this one tool.
Media leaks from the hack suggest that my opponent has mental health issues, so clearly you should vote for me instead.
Sorry, we can't hire you. HR investigation pulled up your medical records and told us to invent a reason not to hire you, because they think with your conditions you will be taking a lot of medical leave.
It looks like it was compiled from "average viewer" survey data after showing people a movie clip, not static computer graphics like text and menus on a website.
The problem with that, as I understand it: On Windows, you can change the drivers' INF files to use PID 0 with any text editor. You could do something similar on any OS. The problem is, the OS won't even try to load drivers for devices with PID 0. So you can't write a driver for that unless you intend to write a new driver for the USB chipset itself that remaps PID 0 devices to something else.
Why is Apple even responsible for tracking that kind of information?
Can I sue them if they get it wrong, rendering my mail client unable to connect to the correct server (or revealing my credentials to a third party) because it followed their instructions instead of mine? No, that wasn't a typo, but thank you for redirecting my login credentials to the wrong server, which then stole them and used them...
Wellllll... kind of. When you're publicly traded, it's all about risk and paring down excesses. Shareholders don't want you to take risks. They want you play it safe so their share values don't go down. They want to see that you've cut operating expenses by X in every report. This limits your ability to try new things or market to those niches.
When you're private, you can take as big of a risk as your cash reserves permit.
We are getting undercut by those wanting to live the same life as us. What these people don't understand is that they are lowering said life style.
Who's going to stand up and say so, when everyone is so focused on climbing higher in the world themselves to escape the "not as good as it used to be" level they're at now?
A person who wants a lifestyle of "more", for example everyone ever to exist, doesn't really know what that lifestyle of "more" is actually like, so they have no frame of reference to know if they are damaging it. They just know that it's "more" and therefore must be better than what they have now.
In their eyes it doesn't matter how much of that cliff crumbles on the way up, because they are still higher up in the world when they get to its summit. Who cares if it's a foot shorter and everyone standing on it is now a foot lower and angry with you, as long as you can see over the heads of your former peers, right? But wait, there's always another plateau just a little higher up.
That pesky greed thing is innate to human beings. Left to its own devices, it overrides any regard for the wellbeing of others.
It's already part of EMACS. Scientists just have not yet discovered the sequence of keystrokes to enter that mode.
AMD went full-on for DisplayPort as well. The EyeFinity system uses mini DisplayPorts to give you that many ports on a 2-slot card.
My HP monitor has it and lacks an HDMI input.
Many laptops have a "DP++" connector that is a dual-function DisplayPort + HDMI depending on what you plug into it.
Not a failure in the least...
Do you have an example of this fake ECC memory that interested parties should avoid?
This is the best comment I've read on the whole mess.
Not if you bought your Play credits in the form of a gift card at a physical store. They have them even at grocery stores where I live.
The biggest problem with these contactless payments, bigger even than trust, is that it separates you mentally from your money. It makes it easy for people to fail to develop and maintain responsible financial habits. It softens the blow of spending money. If that blow doesn't hurt, then you can imagine what happens to the thought of security. The closer you are to the cash, the more you pay attention to its security! Someone takes $20 out of your wallet, you get upset. Someone skims your card, you don't even notice, and if you ever find out, you hope the card company will just reverse the charge. What incentive do you have to care anymore?
When you pay cash, you see the actual money leave your hands. A check is still symbolic in that you're giving them something permanently. When you pay with a debit card, you start to really lose the connection to your money. You put it back in your wallet when you're done. We have had contactless payments for a while and when you use it, you don't think, just buy. I used to have a Paypass enabled debit card and all I had to do was wave my wallet towards the payment terminal to pay. Or if it was in my coat pocket, just wave my coat at the terminal.
The overwhelming message from retailers is: Don't think about your money, just spend it! We'll make it easy! Consumers like easy.
Of course any mobile device manufacturer is all too happy to get involved with that. If banks made cell phones, they would be playing in this space too.
I'm preaching to the 4-digit choir here, I know. Let me issue the disclaimer that I am not a teacher but a bunch of my friends are, and my job does depend on staying up to date.
You're right, the gap cannot be mitigated. It's how kids' lives and brains work. We were the same way at one point, too. You'll never have as much time to learn new stuff, nor the same neuroplasticity, as you did when you were a bored junior high schooler with all those summers and weekends and snow days and such. It was nice to be so free from responsibility that I could drop a whole week's evenings into writing a DOS game in BASIC or C or assembler, or whatever else, learning while I did it.
Staying ahead of the kids requires a LOT of effort and an independent adult with all of the relevant things to take care of might not be able to stay ahead of the most dedicated ones. You may have the wisdom and specialization of years of experience (I'd like to see those kids build a robust enterprise network, or spec out an IVR soup-to-nuts) but being up to speed on all of the new stuff? Forget it. Grading assignments and planning lessons around an existing curriculum takes a lot of time and you just want a break when you're finally done at 10pm. You have time for some of the new stuff but not all of it.
I do think there should be in-service days, decent salaries, ongoing education benefits, etc for computer teachers. Attract some real talent.
After all: The new hires we work with today were those kids in a computer class just a couple years ago, so maybe schools can make better coworkers for the rest of us.
Still a few Android flagships to choose from if you don't want any of those:
Motorola Turbo
LG G3
OnePlus One (if you can get an invite)
Sony Xperia Z3
Coming soon to headlines near you:
The number of STDs this celebrity has will shock you! Now with the names of the partners they got it from!
You'll never guess who has herpes! Online dating, now with health background checks (including identifiable previous partners) on each potential match.
Parents, find out if your grown children have had a pregnancy test with this one tool.
Media leaks from the hack suggest that my opponent has mental health issues, so clearly you should vote for me instead.
Sorry, we can't hire you. HR investigation pulled up your medical records and told us to invent a reason not to hire you, because they think with your conditions you will be taking a lot of medical leave.
It looks like it was compiled from "average viewer" survey data after showing people a movie clip, not static computer graphics like text and menus on a website.
NetHack is pretty great, in that it doesn't engender video card manufacturer fanboy wars!
Great. Now all the mobsters and thugs and crooked cops will know to blare Top 40 to prevent evidence from being posted online.
There's an interesting concept.
What happens if some big media company's automatic audio fingerprinting bot issues a DMCA takedown on one of these videos?
I want to know if my ELM327 is a clone or not. Is there any way to tell?
The problem with that, as I understand it: On Windows, you can change the drivers' INF files to use PID 0 with any text editor. You could do something similar on any OS. The problem is, the OS won't even try to load drivers for devices with PID 0. So you can't write a driver for that unless you intend to write a new driver for the USB chipset itself that remaps PID 0 devices to something else.
Image editing.
Audio production.
Design.
Page layout.
Video editing.
You know, a lot of professions.
Why is Apple even responsible for tracking that kind of information?
Can I sue them if they get it wrong, rendering my mail client unable to connect to the correct server (or revealing my credentials to a third party) because it followed their instructions instead of mine? No, that wasn't a typo, but thank you for redirecting my login credentials to the wrong server, which then stole them and used them...
Some guy gets bit by a kangaroo at the end.
Oh United, you so whimsical.
There's about 1 blue receptor to every 60 of the others.
Wellllll... kind of. When you're publicly traded, it's all about risk and paring down excesses. Shareholders don't want you to take risks. They want you play it safe so their share values don't go down. They want to see that you've cut operating expenses by X in every report. This limits your ability to try new things or market to those niches.
When you're private, you can take as big of a risk as your cash reserves permit.
You can't always, but you can prepare a recovery disk and also burn a copy of HBCD before your inevitable power cycle or reboot.
This system did not have a recovery partition, so no recovery mode on the HD, and it won't boot a restore disc... it was the perfect storm of garbage.
Otherwise I absolutely would have done a system restore.
Yep. That partition didn't exist on the affected machine because end user reasons, or I definitely would have tried it.
Indeed.
You could also boot with the install media and do a System Restore since Windows Update generates a checkpoint when you install updates.
If you don't have that option, my original solution will get you up and running, inconvenient as it may be.