People, like me, are lazy. I don't want to have to take my RFID card out of my wallet to scan at the front door of the office building to get in. I also don't want to take it out again for the security at the front desk. I also do not want to take it out for the elevator to get to my office's floor. I also do not want to take it out a 4th time to get into the office.
Having RFID pass through your wallet makes things a lot quicker (at least for me). Nothing sensitive is stored on the RFID card, and if someone did manage to steal the contents, they wouldn't know what it goes to. Its like dropping my house key on the street when i'm 20 miles from home. No need to rekey the house, they dont know where I live.
He may be better qualified, indeed. However, he may be less qualified, single, and able to survive off of a low income... while you have a wife and kids to take care of.
Your complaint of the dupe is a dupe of all the other complaints of the dupe. My complaint of your complaint is a dupe of people complaining of your complaint that dupes previous dupe complaints. My god, WHERE DOES IT END?!?!
ICANN is not a US government organization. It just happens to be on US soil (just like the UN).
ICANN encourages government representation, which includes any country. They even have meetings all across the world, there's no excuse for these concerned countries not to participate.
People seem to think that because ICANN agreed with the US on the.xxx tld, that the US made the decision. They just happened to agree that its unenforcable and stupid.
$100,000 per violation. Does that mean that the texans who purchased one of these CDs each get $100,000 (minus lawyers fees and such)? I really don't suspect so. Who's getting this money?
If you found out you had HIV, would you ask for a retest just to be sure it wasn't a mistake? Or would you be all cool about it: "Oh, that sucks. Thanks for your help doctor, I have a hot date I have to go cancel now. See you at my next checkup."
With the IPv6 address space using more than 4 bytes, the packet headers will increase in size, there by limiting the data space. So with IPv6, less data can be transfered, which means slower downloads. I don't know about you, but I'm a speed freak (no, I'm not a drug addict). Unless they can find some way to compensate for this, I'll resist it as much as I can... and fail miserably.
Have 1 correct finger for accepting a payment Have 1 alert finger, placed automatically in a position which is hard to screw up. Have the other 8 be invalid, and give an error.
Perhaps treat the first alert as invalid, so they have to screw up twice in a row to make an alert go off.
Apparently the dictionary contains the contents of thousands of books, and they just rearrange a couple words. I think we should all get together and start a class action law suite against the dictionaries of the world for illegally redistributing our work. While we're at it, lets sue them for slander. They called me a "dumb fuck bitch who eats babies on friday mornings". They were a little tricky about saying it, again some of the words were mixed up in different places, but we all know what they meant.
Google... pfft, its dictionaries we need to worry about.
The subject says there is evidence. The article only points out that there is a "gravitational tug", and then gives us a theory on why. Don't present something as evidence when it isn't.
"My power supply stopped working, therefor the power company is sending me too much electricity." The power supply not working is the problem, not the evidence. The "gravitational tug" is the problem, not the evidence.
How much do you have to have to justify a copyright? A word? No, that's a trademark. A phrase? Nah. A sentence? Not quite. A paragraph? A page? A book? A series? A library? At which point is there enough content to justify a copyright?
I should copyright a sentence fragment on my site, and then sue everybody who says it for illegally redistributing my original work.
The problem isn't that dsl is now an "information service". We need to have some of the same rules that are in "telecommunications" apply to "information service", so that the switch won't negatively affect competetion. Reclassifying it is fine, but if you're going to reclassify it, do it right.
People, like me, are lazy. I don't want to have to take my RFID card out of my wallet to scan at the front door of the office building to get in. I also don't want to take it out again for the security at the front desk. I also do not want to take it out for the elevator to get to my office's floor. I also do not want to take it out a 4th time to get into the office.
Having RFID pass through your wallet makes things a lot quicker (at least for me). Nothing sensitive is stored on the RFID card, and if someone did manage to steal the contents, they wouldn't know what it goes to. Its like dropping my house key on the street when i'm 20 miles from home. No need to rekey the house, they dont know where I live.
He may be better qualified, indeed. However, he may be less qualified, single, and able to survive off of a low income... while you have a wife and kids to take care of.
Your complaint of the dupe is a dupe of all the other complaints of the dupe. My complaint of your complaint is a dupe of people complaining of your complaint that dupes previous dupe complaints. My god, WHERE DOES IT END?!?!
ICANN is not a US government organization. It just happens to be on US soil (just like the UN).
.xxx tld, that the US made the decision. They just happened to agree that its unenforcable and stupid.
ICANN encourages government representation, which includes any country. They even have meetings all across the world, there's no excuse for these concerned countries not to participate.
People seem to think that because ICANN agreed with the US on the
Anti-virus? You mean, they finally added the ability to uninstall Windows from "Add and Remove Programs"?
$100,000 per violation. Does that mean that the texans who purchased one of these CDs each get $100,000 (minus lawyers fees and such)? I really don't suspect so. Who's getting this money?
I have Comcast, but I don't dare use their nameservers. I run my own.
If you found out you had HIV, would you ask for a retest just to be sure it wasn't a mistake? Or would you be all cool about it: "Oh, that sucks. Thanks for your help doctor, I have a hot date I have to go cancel now. See you at my next checkup."
With the IPv6 address space using more than 4 bytes, the packet headers will increase in size, there by limiting the data space. So with IPv6, less data can be transfered, which means slower downloads. I don't know about you, but I'm a speed freak (no, I'm not a drug addict). Unless they can find some way to compensate for this, I'll resist it as much as I can... and fail miserably.
Shouldn't they be allowed to charge whatever price they want?
Just because something isn't spelled out as a right, doesn't mean it isn't.
Yes, and I have the right to pee on you while singing Marry had a Little Lamb...
Don't think so.
I can't find anything in the first amendment which addresses a right to speak anonymously.
Although I do agree with the court ruling.
Fairly easy to way to cut down on that...
Have 1 correct finger for accepting a payment
Have 1 alert finger, placed automatically in a position which is hard to screw up.
Have the other 8 be invalid, and give an error.
Perhaps treat the first alert as invalid, so they have to screw up twice in a row to make an alert go off.
Take your warrant to the service provider, have them tap you in.
Shouldn't the leagues be the ones who pays for the stadiums? Either that or the teams... but most likely the leagues.
Why do we pay to build a for-profit structure?
Apparently the dictionary contains the contents of thousands of books, and they just rearrange a couple words. I think we should all get together and start a class action law suite against the dictionaries of the world for illegally redistributing our work. While we're at it, lets sue them for slander. They called me a "dumb fuck bitch who eats babies on friday mornings". They were a little tricky about saying it, again some of the words were mixed up in different places, but we all know what they meant.
Google... pfft, its dictionaries we need to worry about.
It costs well over 30 cents to raise a cat, and wait for it to die.
Thank you for posting this very nerdy article. I like how it covers stuff that matters.
"... seeking 'monetary damages'"
What kind of company seeks damages?
The subject says there is evidence. The article only points out that there is a "gravitational tug", and then gives us a theory on why. Don't present something as evidence when it isn't.
"My power supply stopped working, therefor the power company is sending me too much electricity." The power supply not working is the problem, not the evidence. The "gravitational tug" is the problem, not the evidence.
OK, seriously. Yes it's all well and good to go Mach 2 but this sounds like another pork barrel (rice basket?) project on the part of the Chinese.
Who said anything about the Chinese? Talk about off topic...
How much do you have to have to justify a copyright? A word? No, that's a trademark. A phrase? Nah. A sentence? Not quite. A paragraph? A page? A book? A series? A library? At which point is there enough content to justify a copyright?
I should copyright a sentence fragment on my site, and then sue everybody who says it for illegally redistributing my original work.
The problem isn't that dsl is now an "information service". We need to have some of the same rules that are in "telecommunications" apply to "information service", so that the switch won't negatively affect competetion. Reclassifying it is fine, but if you're going to reclassify it, do it right.
A company like cisco is unable to manage something as simple as encrypting stored passwords?
you just want microsoft to get slashdoted, we see you're plan!