It sucks that this happened to you. But you allowed it to happen, when you chose convenience over security. I guess now you know why that's a bad idea.
At that time, it was. The point of the suit is that it isn't anymore, and yet the companies are still saying it is, and using that lie to justify charging it.
I was thinking a similar thought, but backwards. Why don't they implement whatever Ethernet requires, over this USB 3? Properly designed, this new USB could replace the Ethernet connector in home desktops.
I hope you see the irony in pointing out the 'great' third party support, on an article about how Apple had locked down the new iPod for that very thing.
APPLE wants to put the parking meters in the basket Sara Champagne
The Press
The APPLE giant, who projects to open his doors with the downtown area of Montreal soon, tried in vain to make remove parking meters in front of his future store. Concerned of its image design, the American firm offered to the Town of Montreal the equivalent of the receipts of these apparatuses considered to be not very aesthetic, is nearly 35 000$ per five years, learned the Press.
Waste of time and effort. The district of City-Marie, who confirms to have received the demand for last March, refused this preferential treatment considered to be "unacceptable". The three electronic terminals, located opposite 1321 Sainte-Catherine Ouest, and close to the Ogilvy house, are thus there to remain.
"We are opened with certain compromises, as to transform a terminal of parking doubles in simple terminal, but from there to remove them completely there is a margin which one cannot cross", explains Jacques-Alain Lavallée, in charge of communication of City-Marie. It adds that APPLE Canada did not give sign of life since this end not-to receive, also approved by Stationnement of Montreal, which manages the spaces tariffed on street, to 3$ the hour, the downtown area.
The arrival in Montreal of the future flagship APPLE became an open secret in the world of the aces of data processing and the Mac products. The room, rented in the District of the museums, has a surface of 9300 square feet, and rises on two stages, with a mezzanine out of glass. The place is occupied at present by the Mens shop, which moves its home in November, boulevard De Western Maisonneuve, close to the street Stanley.
"I know that APPLE already visited the room with architectural plans, known as Boujmada, manager of Lie, who confirms to have yielded his lease to the data-processing firm. But I do not know when their opening is envisaged."
Motus, stops bent!
Faithful to its tradition, APPLE Canada did not want to comment on its establishment in Montreal, nor the presence of the terminals on the front of its room. The giant did not indicate either that following the refusal, it planned to find a site more "aesthetic" for his new store.
"APPLE never makes comments on its projects of businesses, explains the spokesman of the company in Quebec, Jean-Guy Rens. We speak only about our products. There will be thus no comments."
According to information's on MacQuébec and APPLE insider, of the sites of bitten APPLE products, the store of Montreal will open its doors the next summer or with the autumn 2008, and will become the shop headlight of the giant in Canada, with the image of APPLE Store of the 5e Avenue, in Manhattan.
On his side, the spokesman of the company Parking of Montreal, Michel Philibert, adds that the parkings tariffed on street are used to ensure the rotation of the vehicles, and by the fact even a bearing of the customers which attend the trade.
"I think that the district did not have to study a long time the demand for APPLE before refusing to withdraw the terminals, Mr. Phillibert says. These spaces belong to the public domain, and cannot become of exclusive use. That is not done quite simply."
Where'd you hear that? I have two relatives who work for Wal-mart...one has been with the company for quite a few years, and now makes 55 cents over minimum wage, and the other has been with them over a year and makes 15 cents over minimum. As for benefits, they give out a page to the employees every year or so, delineating all the 'benefits' they provide (such as government pension plan contributions and vacation pay...all of which they are obligated to pay by law) as if they're doing some kind of favour for you. I don't think Wal-mart is the devil incarnate like some, but they're hardly as saintly an employer as you seem to think.
This seems ludicrous to me, not that he has to use Windows, but that they are depending on a program under his complete control to monitor him. What's to stop him from subverting the monitoring...sending back 'all clear' messages to the government and doing whatever the hell he wants? If they really want to monitor him, they should install some kind of locked packet-trapping box on the line coming in to his house...anything less than that is simply untrustworthy, especially considering the person has already shown an ability to do stuff with computers that they'd rather he didn't.
Interesting. Now, get yourself a time machine and go read that paragraph to Chaucer, and see how much he understands. He spoke English, right...should be exactly the same.
I really don't understand why this is considered insecure. My front door gets much fewer intrusion attempts than my firewall, and I have a very secure system in place there to restrict access (a deadbolt). If someone did break into my house and stole my password list, I'd know as soon as I got home, rather than having to wait until I see suspicious activity on my accounts. I get why keeping your work password on a sticky-note in your cubicle is a bad idea, but I don't see why it would be so bad for home users, where physical access is already restricted.
I don't particularly like his music, but I'm inclined to buy a CD just to support him
If you really want to support him, don't buy this CD. Prince wants to give it away...you'd be supporting the music industry people if you bought it, kinda the opposite of what you intend.
I thought the article might have something to do with virtualizing HDCP to fool Vista-VM into thinking the DVR connected to it was a proper protected video path. Now that would have been interesting.
Why stop there? The current parliament session is over...all the MPs are going home. Go down to your local constituency office and make an appointment to speak to him or her in person, and lay out your concerns face to face. I doubt your MP will tell you straight to your face that he or she intends to fuck over you and your interests.
(same password because I have poor memory)
It sucks that this happened to you. But you allowed it to happen, when you chose convenience over security. I guess now you know why that's a bad idea.
Ten years ago called. They want their acronym back.
The article also specifically states that she had a hoax device. I suspect that if you asked her, she'd disagree.
The Canadian court of law recognizes Facebook as a venue for legal actions, now?
At that time, it was. The point of the suit is that it isn't anymore, and yet the companies are still saying it is, and using that lie to justify charging it.
I was thinking a similar thought, but backwards. Why don't they implement whatever Ethernet requires, over this USB 3? Properly designed, this new USB could replace the Ethernet connector in home desktops.
Actually, they locked those down now, too, although that's another article.
I hope you see the irony in pointing out the 'great' third party support, on an article about how Apple had locked down the new iPod for that very thing.
No, but I can stream from it.
There are only a couple of open source licenses
Really?
Yes, I really felt that spoke to the crux of the issue.
APPLE wants to put the parking meters in the basket
Sara Champagne
The Press
The APPLE giant, who projects to open his doors with the downtown area of Montreal soon, tried in vain to make remove parking meters in front of his future store. Concerned of its image design, the American firm offered to the Town of Montreal the equivalent of the receipts of these apparatuses considered to be not very aesthetic, is nearly 35 000$ per five years, learned the Press.
Waste of time and effort. The district of City-Marie, who confirms to have received the demand for last March, refused this preferential treatment considered to be "unacceptable". The three electronic terminals, located opposite 1321 Sainte-Catherine Ouest, and close to the Ogilvy house, are thus there to remain.
"We are opened with certain compromises, as to transform a terminal of parking doubles in simple terminal, but from there to remove them completely there is a margin which one cannot cross", explains Jacques-Alain Lavallée, in charge of communication of City-Marie. It adds that APPLE Canada did not give sign of life since this end not-to receive, also approved by Stationnement of Montreal, which manages the spaces tariffed on street, to 3$ the hour, the downtown area.
The arrival in Montreal of the future flagship APPLE became an open secret in the world of the aces of data processing and the Mac products. The room, rented in the District of the museums, has a surface of 9300 square feet, and rises on two stages, with a mezzanine out of glass. The place is occupied at present by the Mens shop, which moves its home in November, boulevard De Western Maisonneuve, close to the street Stanley.
"I know that APPLE already visited the room with architectural plans, known as Boujmada, manager of Lie, who confirms to have yielded his lease to the data-processing firm. But I do not know when their opening is envisaged."
Motus, stops bent!
Faithful to its tradition, APPLE Canada did not want to comment on its establishment in Montreal, nor the presence of the terminals on the front of its room. The giant did not indicate either that following the refusal, it planned to find a site more "aesthetic" for his new store.
"APPLE never makes comments on its projects of businesses, explains the spokesman of the company in Quebec, Jean-Guy Rens. We speak only about our products. There will be thus no comments."
According to information's on MacQuébec and APPLE insider, of the sites of bitten APPLE products, the store of Montreal will open its doors the next summer or with the autumn 2008, and will become the shop headlight of the giant in Canada, with the image of APPLE Store of the 5e Avenue, in Manhattan.
On his side, the spokesman of the company Parking of Montreal, Michel Philibert, adds that the parkings tariffed on street are used to ensure the rotation of the vehicles, and by the fact even a bearing of the customers which attend the trade.
"I think that the district did not have to study a long time the demand for APPLE before refusing to withdraw the terminals, Mr. Phillibert says. These spaces belong to the public domain, and cannot become of exclusive use. That is not done quite simply."
Not bad for Babelfish.
When did poor planning become a good excuse?
Perhaps that's why they won't publicize an official limit.
Where'd you hear that? I have two relatives who work for Wal-mart...one has been with the company for quite a few years, and now makes 55 cents over minimum wage, and the other has been with them over a year and makes 15 cents over minimum. As for benefits, they give out a page to the employees every year or so, delineating all the 'benefits' they provide (such as government pension plan contributions and vacation pay...all of which they are obligated to pay by law) as if they're doing some kind of favour for you. I don't think Wal-mart is the devil incarnate like some, but they're hardly as saintly an employer as you seem to think.
This seems ludicrous to me, not that he has to use Windows, but that they are depending on a program under his complete control to monitor him. What's to stop him from subverting the monitoring...sending back 'all clear' messages to the government and doing whatever the hell he wants? If they really want to monitor him, they should install some kind of locked packet-trapping box on the line coming in to his house...anything less than that is simply untrustworthy, especially considering the person has already shown an ability to do stuff with computers that they'd rather he didn't.
Probably not. Maybe if you convince your girlfriend to walk the dog and get the groceries, then you might have something.
Interesting. Now, get yourself a time machine and go read that paragraph to Chaucer, and see how much he understands. He spoke English, right...should be exactly the same.
Write them all down? Thats a big no-no.
I really don't understand why this is considered insecure. My front door gets much fewer intrusion attempts than my firewall, and I have a very secure system in place there to restrict access (a deadbolt). If someone did break into my house and stole my password list, I'd know as soon as I got home, rather than having to wait until I see suspicious activity on my accounts. I get why keeping your work password on a sticky-note in your cubicle is a bad idea, but I don't see why it would be so bad for home users, where physical access is already restricted.
what I found most freeing is that anonminity. Since nobody knows who I am, I was free to make mistakes.
"the terror of the blank canvas" is real. My paints, brushes etc all sit unused.
Sorry, but you already admitted to being an anonymous coward. Kinda late to take it back now.
I don't particularly like his music, but I'm inclined to buy a CD just to support him
If you really want to support him, don't buy this CD. Prince wants to give it away...you'd be supporting the music industry people if you bought it, kinda the opposite of what you intend.
I guess you'll need to have Windows or a Mac somewhere to have a fully functional iPhone...
I thought the article might have something to do with virtualizing HDCP to fool Vista-VM into thinking the DVR connected to it was a proper protected video path. Now that would have been interesting.
Why stop there? The current parliament session is over...all the MPs are going home. Go down to your local constituency office and make an appointment to speak to him or her in person, and lay out your concerns face to face. I doubt your MP will tell you straight to your face that he or she intends to fuck over you and your interests.
When did that happen?