Having been in the path of totality for a total solar eclipse last year, lunar eclipses just don't stack up. Still neat to see, but probably not even worth getting up early for.
Well, a good place to start "reigning it in" would be the Trump trips to Mar-a-Lago. He's got a place in D.C. already paid for. Tighten the belt. Stay in D.C. and work.
Oh wow, you think everyone donating a can of spare lima beans and corn once a month is going to feed all the hungry? Do you proselytize too? At least they'll go to heaven after they starve.
Actually, what really happened is that you looked at blender A, looked at blender B, and decided blender B might somehow turn out to be a vagina despite being a blender. You put your penis in... and well... now it's being chopped up. Hopefully you're not shocked.
Well let's see... I've got 1 TB of OneDrive space, my e-mail with 50GB and 100GB archive, task planning tables, OneNote, decent anti-spam, and PKI certificates to sign my e-mail. For $8.
*Clicks on over to Google Docs to check the price of 1TB -- $9.99*
Atlassian puts their own bug database online. When you find a problem with Atlassian software you can search for it there. You will likely find that other people have found this problem before you, and opened tickets on it, which Atlassian has since closed, explaining either
- yes, it is broken, but fixing it would be hard, so we're not going to
OR
- no, that's the way it is supposed to work, and we're not going to change it
Agree. There are so many feature requests that would make the tool more useful that they flat out reject because... I guess they don't feel like doing work?
"It’s easy to see how Trello fits into Atlassian’s overall suite of productivity tools, which have increasingly targeted non-developers, too. At its core, Atlassian’s own JIRA project management service already features a Trello-like Kanban board, for example. That’s only a small part of what JIRA does, however, and for many potential users, a board is really all they need to keep track of their projects. JIRA also features a full-blown issue-tracking service, reports, and an on-premise version that enterprises can run on their own servers."
So, hypothetically... if someone were to shoot and kill you in this private world of yours... who would care/pay for the trial? Your family and their "private police" may argue it's murder, but the person who killed you may argue it was self-defense. Who will force them into court? Your family's private police force? What if theirs is larger? What if they just decide to wipe out your entire family? Who will care/pay for that trial? If no one does, does that not make it murder anymore?
It seems what you're advocating is going back to the 6th century where might makes right and every lord controlled acres of land and dealt with infrastructure. You'll easily be crushed by a larger, more organized, and civilized nation.
You think the US numbers are garbage, but the Chinese numbers aren't? You seriously think the Chinese don't cook their books? How much contribution to the GDP does an empty Chinese city generate exactly? http://therealdeal.com/2016/02...
Besides that, the Chinese monitor everything. There is NO privacy in China. So what exactly is it you're advocating for if you think the Chinese are doing it better? The poor in China still live in shitholes. By moving to capitalism, they didn't all just magically become rich. There are more poor people in China than there are people in the US... threefold! https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
Ayn Rand makes the same argument in Atlas Shrugged. Reardon builds a metal industry far better and more efficient than any competitor, so then the "have-nots" come in and demand that it be controlled and shared for their benefit despite having done nothing to develop it or expand upon it.
That's exactly what you're advocating. Governments and people who had no hand in building this great achievement want to come in and take control despite having done nothing to build upon it, while a relatively benevolent entity has controlled it for decades. What gives you that right?
You do realize that by opening ICANN up to other countries and businesses, that just increases the number of organizations who can "meddle" right? Countries like Iran, Russia, Egypt, China, and Venezuela.
In both cases, the parent and grandparent to whom you were replying were talking from the standpoint of an open source developer, not a company employee.
Sounds like you work for a great company though. Other than the constant pressure to perform and the low pay...
Having been in the path of totality for a total solar eclipse last year, lunar eclipses just don't stack up. Still neat to see, but probably not even worth getting up early for.
Well, a good place to start "reigning it in" would be the Trump trips to Mar-a-Lago. He's got a place in D.C. already paid for. Tighten the belt. Stay in D.C. and work.
Oh wow, you think everyone donating a can of spare lima beans and corn once a month is going to feed all the hungry? Do you proselytize too? At least they'll go to heaven after they starve.
Actually, what really happened is that you looked at blender A, looked at blender B, and decided blender B might somehow turn out to be a vagina despite being a blender. You put your penis in... and well... now it's being chopped up. Hopefully you're not shocked.
Guess you should have tried option C.
You should copy and paste your little bit about being assblasted whenever you lose an argument.
Oh, you're already doing that.
Cyberfox usage has now doubled from 6 users to 12. Plans for more releases in the works!
The cap for an Office 365 user running Outlook is 150MB.
That means they can only send it to another Office 365 user running Outlook...
https://technet.microsoft.com/...
Because you're sending documents to important people with Office installed and you want to be professional and be sure they can view them correctly?
Well let's see... I've got 1 TB of OneDrive space, my e-mail with 50GB and 100GB archive, task planning tables, OneNote, decent anti-spam, and PKI certificates to sign my e-mail. For $8.
*Clicks on over to Google Docs to check the price of 1TB -- $9.99*
Well that seems worth it.
It sounds like you were abusing the feature if you were putting backups on OneDrive...
Atlassian puts their own bug database online. When you find a problem with Atlassian software you can search for it there. You will likely find that other people have found this problem before you, and opened tickets on it, which Atlassian has since closed, explaining either - yes, it is broken, but fixing it would be hard, so we're not going to OR - no, that's the way it is supposed to work, and we're not going to change it
Agree. There are so many feature requests that would make the tool more useful that they flat out reject because... I guess they don't feel like doing work?
FTFA.
I guess you didn't read it very well?
We are also a small company, and JIRA runs on a virtual machine with just two cores. I think you're doing it wrong.
But those people who don't have jobs now won't be able to eat at McDonald's, and I'm pretty sure the robot doesn't eat...
In regards to the subject... wouldn't that be "Yes, and no" you gibbering moron?
If it's practically an easter egg to do it, then it probably needs to be redesigned.
Or at the very least, you might be able to kill a few people in the crossfire!
So you want governance but not government? That makes no sense.
So, hypothetically... if someone were to shoot and kill you in this private world of yours... who would care/pay for the trial? Your family and their "private police" may argue it's murder, but the person who killed you may argue it was self-defense. Who will force them into court? Your family's private police force? What if theirs is larger? What if they just decide to wipe out your entire family? Who will care/pay for that trial? If no one does, does that not make it murder anymore?
It seems what you're advocating is going back to the 6th century where might makes right and every lord controlled acres of land and dealt with infrastructure. You'll easily be crushed by a larger, more organized, and civilized nation.
You think the US numbers are garbage, but the Chinese numbers aren't? You seriously think the Chinese don't cook their books? How much contribution to the GDP does an empty Chinese city generate exactly? http://therealdeal.com/2016/02...
Besides that, the Chinese monitor everything. There is NO privacy in China. So what exactly is it you're advocating for if you think the Chinese are doing it better? The poor in China still live in shitholes. By moving to capitalism, they didn't all just magically become rich. There are more poor people in China than there are people in the US... threefold! https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
You are naïve and... you fail.
You should try using cash sometime to pay for something. It's amazing what you can do without a computer. And so simple!
Ayn Rand makes the same argument in Atlas Shrugged. Reardon builds a metal industry far better and more efficient than any competitor, so then the "have-nots" come in and demand that it be controlled and shared for their benefit despite having done nothing to develop it or expand upon it.
That's exactly what you're advocating. Governments and people who had no hand in building this great achievement want to come in and take control despite having done nothing to build upon it, while a relatively benevolent entity has controlled it for decades. What gives you that right?
You do realize that by opening ICANN up to other countries and businesses, that just increases the number of organizations who can "meddle" right? Countries like Iran, Russia, Egypt, China, and Venezuela.
I'm good with where we're at.
Probably not.
In both cases, the parent and grandparent to whom you were replying were talking from the standpoint of an open source developer, not a company employee.
Sounds like you work for a great company though. Other than the constant pressure to perform and the low pay...