... or trying to beg me for money, preaching in the street, guarding banks, walking, selling things, socialising, sitting... I killed a LOT of people in that game.
I agree that 31 pages for a 99c app is retarded, or at the very least suspicious. An executive summary of sorts that plain-Englishes the key points that you actually need to know really wouldn't be too much too ask in that case.
My experience with mobile phone T&Cs on the other hand has generally been pretty straightforward - for example, here shows "included data" telling you exactly how much Youtubing you can get away with, and the "additional data charges" under "more details" shows what'll happen after that. I don't think it's unreasonable to expect customers to understand at least that much.
As a teenager I cost my father a few $300+ dialup bills before I convinced him that switching to a $25 unlimited plan was a far superior choice to just yelling at me.
While I agree that corporate malpractice - price-gouging, fraudulent representation etc. - is both rampant and inexcusable, I've been jaded by working in helpdesk and customer support roles. I was constantly astounded by people who treated the (temporary, fixable) malfunction of their broadband/TV/MP3 player/DVR/shaver as an egregious betrayal and insult, and incontrovertible evidence of deliberate and personally directed malice. Consequently I have limited sympathy for people who fall into the sorts of traps that could be avoided by 5 minutes of glancing over the features and pricing information of a phone plan before they signed up, or at least googling for a review by someone who already had.
I think there needs to be a new formal logical fallacy (logicians, feel free to correct me if there's an obvious existing one that covers this) - the Appeal to Complexity (or perhaps Clarke's Third Fallacy): where an argument assumes that any system (especially technological or contractual) whose complexity exceeds the arguer's understanding has implicit benevolent, magical or infallible properties.
I already had a spare wireless mouse that I'd rescued from work as a backup, and I don't yet own any of my own soldering tools (although it's just a matter of time now that I've started playing with Arduino boards). I think I'm going to pull out the Dremel and make a set of memorial dogtags out of each layer of mouse.
The first computer mouse I ever bought for myself in 2001 finally lost its marbles a month or two ago, alternating between intermittent unresponsiveness and randomly darting the cursor off in various directions with a slew of phantom middle- and right-clicks, enough to crash browser windows that had the misfortune to find themselves caught in its path of destruction.
In the last month or two it forfeited Scrabble games, wrecked unsaved paragraphs of my resume, opened and changed system settings and made a right senile nuisance of itself. Before that, however, it stuck with me through eight jobs, seven houses, four PCs, three long-term relationships and, at a rough guess, well over ten thousand hours of use.
So thank you little mouse, you did well. Rest in peace.
Having trouble tracking them down again but I've seen photos of a medical device that was essentially a concave hemispherical head on the end of a small pump, that was used to correct vision for a few hours at a time by suctioning the eyeball into shape. I'm pretty certain they're no longer in use.
Ergh, ignore that link, apparently it was a hoax. I saw the headline ages ago and never bothered to actually read up on it. Still, looks like it was a fairly successful hoax, which still supports my assertion to some extent.
The point of a rear touchpad (and this has been talked about hypothetically for PDAs/smartphones for ages without any actual results AFAIK) is that you have all the benefits of a touchscreen without obscuring your vision of the thing you're touching. It's less of an issue with resistive screens because a stylus is pretty skinny but anyone who's played a game (or typed for that matter) with thumbs on a capacitive screen has experienced the frustration of mistakes made because they can't see what they're doing.
I don't own an i/Android phone yet although I'm sure I will eventually, but my hands are freaking huge and the few times I've had to send sms from a friend's phone have proven frustrating at best. It appears I'm not the only one. A rear touchpad means a clear view of the screen at all times, which will make it a hell of a lot easier to see what you're doing, and to do it accurately.
Exactly. Normal coffee is meant to be consumed at 60C/140F, and no hotter than 70C/160F, and is generally served around 10-15C hotter and allowed to cool.
At 200F, you're looking at instantaneous 2nd/3rd degree burns. Knock 20-25F off that serving temperature and cooling factors such as airborne dispersal and time taken to soak through clothes give you at least a fighting chance of coming out of it without needing skin grafts.
Thanks for that! I thoroughly broke everything sound related mucking around with stuff I shouldn't have in 8.10, so I'll be having another crack with a clean install of 9.10 when the release version comes out.
I've been trying (every now and then, but for longer than I care to remember) to achieve the same thing except with analog speakers and a bluetooth headset. No luck yet...
Is your claim of carbon-neutrality including power use? I've only ever hung out in a recycling mill so I don't know how different that is to a tree-to-paper setup, but the electricity overheads were staggering. Feel free to educate me but I have a hard time believing that the carbon sequestered in the paper is enough to offset that.
Craps is the only game I've ever played, at Star City in Sydney. I went into the casino flat broke one night with my housemates and scored two non-exchangeable $10 betting vouchers (one for signing up for some members' card thing I've never used, the other a prize from the free scratchie that came with it). After 20 or 30 minutes being taught how to play craps I quit with $30 cash, which kept me in food and nicotine until I got paid two days later. Then I got to watch one of my housemates drop almost $100 in a minute on consecutive dumbass $5 and $10 yo bets. No surprise, we found out soon after that he was a compulsive gambler and had lied about his employment, and shortly after that he skipped the state, owing us around $5000.
I love bright colours and flashy lights as much as the next person whose life ambition is to work their way through Erowid in alphabetical order but dammit, there are so many better places to see them. Buy yourself some holospex and come to a rave or something.
... or trying to beg me for money, preaching in the street, guarding banks, walking, selling things, socialising, sitting... I killed a LOT of people in that game.
Repo Men?
I agree that 31 pages for a 99c app is retarded, or at the very least suspicious. An executive summary of sorts that plain-Englishes the key points that you actually need to know really wouldn't be too much too ask in that case.
My experience with mobile phone T&Cs on the other hand has generally been pretty straightforward - for example, here shows "included data" telling you exactly how much Youtubing you can get away with, and the "additional data charges" under "more details" shows what'll happen after that. I don't think it's unreasonable to expect customers to understand at least that much.
As a teenager I cost my father a few $300+ dialup bills before I convinced him that switching to a $25 unlimited plan was a far superior choice to just yelling at me.
While I agree that corporate malpractice - price-gouging, fraudulent representation etc. - is both rampant and inexcusable, I've been jaded by working in helpdesk and customer support roles. I was constantly astounded by people who treated the (temporary, fixable) malfunction of their broadband/TV/MP3 player/DVR/shaver as an egregious betrayal and insult, and incontrovertible evidence of deliberate and personally directed malice. Consequently I have limited sympathy for people who fall into the sorts of traps that could be avoided by 5 minutes of glancing over the features and pricing information of a phone plan before they signed up, or at least googling for a review by someone who already had.
I think there needs to be a new formal logical fallacy (logicians, feel free to correct me if there's an obvious existing one that covers this) - the Appeal to Complexity (or perhaps Clarke's Third Fallacy): where an argument assumes that any system (especially technological or contractual) whose complexity exceeds the arguer's understanding has implicit benevolent, magical or infallible properties.
I already had a spare wireless mouse that I'd rescued from work as a backup, and I don't yet own any of my own soldering tools (although it's just a matter of time now that I've started playing with Arduino boards). I think I'm going to pull out the Dremel and make a set of memorial dogtags out of each layer of mouse.
C64, ZX Spectrum
The first computer mouse I ever bought for myself in 2001 finally lost its marbles a month or two ago, alternating between intermittent unresponsiveness and randomly darting the cursor off in various directions with a slew of phantom middle- and right-clicks, enough to crash browser windows that had the misfortune to find themselves caught in its path of destruction.
In the last month or two it forfeited Scrabble games, wrecked unsaved paragraphs of my resume, opened and changed system settings and made a right senile nuisance of itself. Before that, however, it stuck with me through eight jobs, seven houses, four PCs, three long-term relationships and, at a rough guess, well over ten thousand hours of use.
So thank you little mouse, you did well. Rest in peace.
Universal laptop AC adaptors like this one are all over the place these days, surely that's a better solution?
If she's already bought the new laptop, then a layer or two of extra heatshrink tubing over the stress points wouldn't be the worst idea in the world.
http://www.makeuseof.com/tag/how-to-back-up-and-import-ps3-game-saves/
http://www.vacuumtubesinc.com/Catalog/CatalogDownloadPage.aspx
Having trouble tracking them down again but I've seen photos of a medical device that was essentially a concave hemispherical head on the end of a small pump, that was used to correct vision for a few hours at a time by suctioning the eyeball into shape. I'm pretty certain they're no longer in use.
Rubber-hose cryptanalysis has has a long and ouchy legacy.
stopputtingbutterinyourface?
Ergh, ignore that link, apparently it was a hoax. I saw the headline ages ago and never bothered to actually read up on it. Still, looks like it was a fairly successful hoax, which still supports my assertion to some extent.
The point of a rear touchpad (and this has been talked about hypothetically for PDAs/smartphones for ages without any actual results AFAIK) is that you have all the benefits of a touchscreen without obscuring your vision of the thing you're touching. It's less of an issue with resistive screens because a stylus is pretty skinny but anyone who's played a game (or typed for that matter) with thumbs on a capacitive screen has experienced the frustration of mistakes made because they can't see what they're doing.
I don't own an i/Android phone yet although I'm sure I will eventually, but my hands are freaking huge and the few times I've had to send sms from a friend's phone have proven frustrating at best. It appears I'm not the only one. A rear touchpad means a clear view of the screen at all times, which will make it a hell of a lot easier to see what you're doing, and to do it accurately.
Exactly. Normal coffee is meant to be consumed at 60C/140F, and no hotter than 70C/160F, and is generally served around 10-15C hotter and allowed to cool.
At 200F, you're looking at instantaneous 2nd/3rd degree burns. Knock 20-25F off that serving temperature and cooling factors such as airborne dispersal and time taken to soak through clothes give you at least a fighting chance of coming out of it without needing skin grafts.
Unfortunately male mosquitos don't bite people.
I'd never heard of this but I just grabbed the demo and it's awesome! Buying the full version next paycheque.
Thanks for that! I thoroughly broke everything sound related mucking around with stuff I shouldn't have in 8.10, so I'll be having another crack with a clean install of 9.10 when the release version comes out.
I've been trying (every now and then, but for longer than I care to remember) to achieve the same thing except with analog speakers and a bluetooth headset. No luck yet...
The Kindle charges from USB, doesn't it? Would something like this do the trick?
Is your claim of carbon-neutrality including power use? I've only ever hung out in a recycling mill so I don't know how different that is to a tree-to-paper setup, but the electricity overheads were staggering. Feel free to educate me but I have a hard time believing that the carbon sequestered in the paper is enough to offset that.
But what if you're really really good at killing puppies?
Craps is the only game I've ever played, at Star City in Sydney. I went into the casino flat broke one night with my housemates and scored two non-exchangeable $10 betting vouchers (one for signing up for some members' card thing I've never used, the other a prize from the free scratchie that came with it). After 20 or 30 minutes being taught how to play craps I quit with $30 cash, which kept me in food and nicotine until I got paid two days later. Then I got to watch one of my housemates drop almost $100 in a minute on consecutive dumbass $5 and $10 yo bets. No surprise, we found out soon after that he was a compulsive gambler and had lied about his employment, and shortly after that he skipped the state, owing us around $5000.
I love bright colours and flashy lights as much as the next person whose life ambition is to work their way through Erowid in alphabetical order but dammit, there are so many better places to see them. Buy yourself some holospex and come to a rave or something.
It's a safer jump if the shark is distracted by dog food.