The outages led to authentication lockouts for gamers attempting to access Overwatch, Hearth Stone, World of Warcraft, Diablo, Heroes of the Stone, and others.
"Watch out, I'm on your left lane!" or 'get the fuck out of my lane, asshole!', or something like that!
Actually, that's similar to something I was thinking about one day.
Like, in some not-too-distant future (Next Sunday, AD?), self-driving cars actually talk to each other. We get in, we program our destinations, they calculate the route to take, and off we go. But when on the roads, commute distances differ. Some people might get on the interstate and get off at the next exit. Others might be on the interstate for 20 miles. But the cars talk to each other.
"I'm getting on the interstate, but I'm going to be here for a while." "Okay, we'll make room for you so you can get into the cruising lane." And then 2+ vehicles adjust their velocities to make room for the car that's got a long way to go.
"Hey, I can see there's a lot of us over in the slow lanes, but my human's exit is coming up in 0.25 miles." "Okay, here's a spot you can use so you can make the exit."
Maybe this would just be some self-driving car equivalent of an ad-hoc wireless network. I don't know. Just seemed like a way to ease road congestion without requiring human intervention.
I've been wondering this myself every time I read a story like this. Either it's like you describe, or I just don't know enough about how these lasers interact with planes to understand what's going on.
None of us leave here alive, and in the end no hobbies amount to anything. Stamp collecting, hiking, logic puzzles, programming, building models, flying RC planes, surfing, falconry, (video/card/board) games - they're all things that people do to pass the time when they're not working or taking care of other necessities. Most people do these things because they enjoy them, because hobbies help people relax and unwind.
Yeah, some people forget that and keep doing them even when those hobbies have lost all enjoyment, but video games aren't unique in that. That your son stopped "collecting colored pixels" doesn't mean the hobby is bad, just that your son stopped enjoying it. I stopped collecting comic books because the stories no longer entertained me. Different hobbies, but pretty much the same motivation for leaving them.
I imagine you can always just make a new account. It's not like email addresses are in short supply, or that a person is limited to one Facebook account per lifetime.
Sometimes the bans or blocks may be at the post-level, rather than the account-level. That would allow the account with the "sanctioned" content to continue to post in other areas.
If you have been blocked or banned from FB for posting Kurdish or anti-Turkish material, please screenshot the image that FB sent when notifying you and post it here (you can black out your name if you want).
This group is solely for material dealing with how FB censors Kurds on behalf of Turkey and to show the world how unjust this policy is. Posts are also welcome that discuss FB censorship policy as it relates to Kurds, and discussions on how to get FB to change this unfair and discriminatory policy.
The most recent post after that is someone saying, "My submission is on the frontpage of one of the largest sites on the Internet!", followed by a link to this/. story.
It seems like slightly more than half of the posts in that group are people complaining about what's alleged in this article, and slightly less than half are people actually posting screenshots of FB moderation.
I'm assuming the statement of "when gas was 45 per gallon" was a typo, and the poster forgot to hit the shift key - "$5 per gallon".
But even if that's the case, I'd still be doubting the claim, as I don't think gas prices hit anywhere near $5/gallon, anywhere in the US, until Katrina.
Definitely a typo of some sort, but I don't know what was intended.
Admittedly I've only had a few jobs in my career (in the US), but I've always been able to negotiate salary before accepting the offer. I think this is what tompaulco was suggesting when saying, "we aren't going to tell you what the position pays until after we have decided to make you an offer." - the job announcements use the handwaving, and salary numbers aren't brought up until the company thinks it wants to hire someone. The salary is listed in the offer, negotiations can be made based on what's listed in the offer, and then the applicant can accept or decline the offer. I'm not aware of any instances where the applicant is unable to find out a salary until (and only) after accepting a job offer.
Do you mean you've noticed an increase in spam getting into your Inbox, or an increase of spam showing up in your spam folder?
If the latter, I've noticed it comes and goes in waves. Sometimes it'll be days between getting a single spam in my spam folder, and sometimes I'll get two or three in one day.
I want to say it's like a sine wave, but I haven't kept a record that would back up that claim.
Not sure. Maybe (and I'm guessing here) because the title of an article could be considered the article's name, and the English language capitalizes names.
Just a guess. A quick Google search gave me the various rules for capitalizing words in titles, but not the origin of the practice.
Will it be imaging and gathering data from the asteroid belt
Unless New Horizons is going to swing back around and come back to the center of the Solar System, NH is well beyond the asteroid belt and won't be able to take any pictures of it in the future.
The dot in the username of the gmail address is used to create a virtual email address. anything sent to fm.last@googlemail.com should have gone to the user that has the mail address of fm@googlemail.com.
Actually, I think that's only for the plus sign. The dot is just flavor that gets ignored by Gmail.
I had something similar happen, except I registered "fmlast@gmail.com", and I got a lot of email (in German) addressed to "fm.last@googlemail.com".
All of Google's help pages insist that the guy should never have been able to register "fmlast", but he did. (That, or he thought he did, and gave it out to friends and other businesses.)
He moved to the US a little while ago. I've started getting car insurance emails now, too.
To add insult to injury, whatever idiot had ordered them got us some new-fangled wide screen monitors. The problem was that while the actual resolution of the monitor was a 4:3 aspect ratio... the actual pixels were flattened so that in its native resolution the screen drew circles as flattened ovals.
I... what?
I just sat and stared at my screen in utter shock after reading that. Can you say where you got that equipment from - who built it, sold it, etc?
Let me see if I'm understanding correctly. (Someone correct me if I'm not.)
The light we're seeing from this galaxy comes from roughly 700 million years after the Big Bang, so on the cosmic scale, it's quite young.
A quick Googling says the universe is 13.8 billion years old. Another quick Googling says the Milky Way is 13.2 billion years old. The galaxy in this article would be about 13.1 billion years old.
Since the summary says this is a "young" galaxy, does that mean most galaxies we see are older than 13.1 billion years?
Looking forward to seeing if it's any good.
Actually, that's similar to something I was thinking about one day.
Like, in some not-too-distant future (Next Sunday, AD?), self-driving cars actually talk to each other. We get in, we program our destinations, they calculate the route to take, and off we go. But when on the roads, commute distances differ. Some people might get on the interstate and get off at the next exit. Others might be on the interstate for 20 miles. But the cars talk to each other.
"I'm getting on the interstate, but I'm going to be here for a while."
"Okay, we'll make room for you so you can get into the cruising lane."
And then 2+ vehicles adjust their velocities to make room for the car that's got a long way to go.
"Hey, I can see there's a lot of us over in the slow lanes, but my human's exit is coming up in 0.25 miles."
"Okay, here's a spot you can use so you can make the exit."
Maybe this would just be some self-driving car equivalent of an ad-hoc wireless network. I don't know. Just seemed like a way to ease road congestion without requiring human intervention.
I've been wondering this myself every time I read a story like this. Either it's like you describe, or I just don't know enough about how these lasers interact with planes to understand what's going on.
Eh, it's just a hobby, like anything else.
None of us leave here alive, and in the end no hobbies amount to anything. Stamp collecting, hiking, logic puzzles, programming, building models, flying RC planes, surfing, falconry, (video/card/board) games - they're all things that people do to pass the time when they're not working or taking care of other necessities. Most people do these things because they enjoy them, because hobbies help people relax and unwind.
Yeah, some people forget that and keep doing them even when those hobbies have lost all enjoyment, but video games aren't unique in that. That your son stopped "collecting colored pixels" doesn't mean the hobby is bad, just that your son stopped enjoying it. I stopped collecting comic books because the stories no longer entertained me. Different hobbies, but pretty much the same motivation for leaving them.
You forgot the sniff. :(
Wait, what's wrong with their cars?
I imagine you can always just make a new account. It's not like email addresses are in short supply, or that a person is limited to one Facebook account per lifetime.
Sometimes the bans or blocks may be at the post-level, rather than the account-level. That would allow the account with the "sanctioned" content to continue to post in other areas.
I'll help out.
Here's the group description:
The most recent post after that is someone saying, "My submission is on the frontpage of one of the largest sites on the Internet!", followed by a link to this /. story.
It seems like slightly more than half of the posts in that group are people complaining about what's alleged in this article, and slightly less than half are people actually posting screenshots of FB moderation.
Yeah, I remember one of the stations near my house (Atlanta suburb) actually had gas at 67.9 cents/gallon while I was in high school. (Graduated '97.)
That was the least expensive I've ever seen gas.
I'm assuming the statement of "when gas was 45 per gallon" was a typo, and the poster forgot to hit the shift key - "$5 per gallon".
But even if that's the case, I'd still be doubting the claim, as I don't think gas prices hit anywhere near $5/gallon, anywhere in the US, until Katrina.
Definitely a typo of some sort, but I don't know what was intended.
Admittedly I've only had a few jobs in my career (in the US), but I've always been able to negotiate salary before accepting the offer. I think this is what tompaulco was suggesting when saying, "we aren't going to tell you what the position pays until after we have decided to make you an offer." - the job announcements use the handwaving, and salary numbers aren't brought up until the company thinks it wants to hire someone. The salary is listed in the offer, negotiations can be made based on what's listed in the offer, and then the applicant can accept or decline the offer. I'm not aware of any instances where the applicant is unable to find out a salary until (and only) after accepting a job offer.
Don't worry. I'm an American, and *I* have no idea how big Rhode Island is.
Ha! I'd mod you up if I could.
Do you mean you've noticed an increase in spam getting into your Inbox, or an increase of spam showing up in your spam folder?
If the latter, I've noticed it comes and goes in waves. Sometimes it'll be days between getting a single spam in my spam folder, and sometimes I'll get two or three in one day.
I want to say it's like a sine wave, but I haven't kept a record that would back up that claim.
But what about those chips bags (or crisps, to those of you east of the pond) that return to their original shape after you crumple them?
Saucer tech!
Considering how often I've seen people driving slowly (relative to the flow of traffic) in the passing lanes, I'd say no.
Clear sign of a conspiracy, amirite?
Not sure. Maybe (and I'm guessing here) because the title of an article could be considered the article's name, and the English language capitalizes names.
Just a guess. A quick Google search gave me the various rules for capitalizing words in titles, but not the origin of the practice.
Unless New Horizons is going to swing back around and come back to the center of the Solar System, NH is well beyond the asteroid belt and won't be able to take any pictures of it in the future.
Did you mean to say Mars, rather than Earth?
Actually, I think that's only for the plus sign. The dot is just flavor that gets ignored by Gmail.
http://gmailblog.blogspot.com/...
I had something similar happen, except I registered "fmlast@gmail.com", and I got a lot of email (in German) addressed to "fm.last@googlemail.com".
All of Google's help pages insist that the guy should never have been able to register "fmlast", but he did. (That, or he thought he did, and gave it out to friends and other businesses.)
He moved to the US a little while ago. I've started getting car insurance emails now, too.
I... what?
I just sat and stared at my screen in utter shock after reading that. Can you say where you got that equipment from - who built it, sold it, etc?
...that the principal was actually a Star Trek fan.
Can't we all just get along?
Let me see if I'm understanding correctly. (Someone correct me if I'm not.)
A quick Googling says the universe is 13.8 billion years old. Another quick Googling says the Milky Way is 13.2 billion years old. The galaxy in this article would be about 13.1 billion years old.
Since the summary says this is a "young" galaxy, does that mean most galaxies we see are older than 13.1 billion years?