but even if he (Trump) doesn't go senile in office,
Why wait to worry about that. He (conveniently) can't remember saying things that are -- literally -- on video tape *now* -- like supporting the war in Iraq (video w/Howard Stern) and military intervention in Libya (video w/Matt Lauer). Though, to be fair, even Matt Lauer didn't remember Trump supporting the latter, despite The Daily Show Uncovers Video with Trump Telling Lauer He Supports War on Libya
“When I was making a World War II movie called ‘Fury,’ we did this boot camp for a week, and Logan Lerman, who was the youngest actor of the bunch — I think he was 21 — was given grunt detail. We gave him a watch and he had to keep track of how long it took us to eat and get in and out of our gear. One day he came to me and said the watch has stopped, and I said, ‘You’ve just got to wind it.’ He came back literally 15 minutes later and said, ‘Wait, how do you wind it?’"
Nearly 70 percent of survey participants also said they were more worried than enthusiastic about the possibility of synthetic-blood and brain-chip implants.
Future Apple enthusiasts will get brain-chip implants and ditch their ears -- to make themselves more water resistant.
Several phones have already been released (eg: Sony Z5) with exposed headphones sockets without compromising water resistance. Poor justification is poor.
My Kyocera HydroVIBE (released in 2014) has an exposed 3.5mm headphone jack is "Certified dust resistant and waterproof for IP57 (IPX5 and IPX7) - protection against dust and water immersion for up to 30 minutes in up to 3.28 feet (1 meter) of water." So, what is Apple trying to achieve?
Fortunately for them, Google chose to cut them a break and ignore those requests.
Pretty sure Google doesn't get to pick and choose. They should have complied and make WB follow the process to get things restored -- like the rest of us would have had to do. No pain, no gain.
One Twitter user jokingly suggested that the suspect should also be charged with copyright infringement -- for using the police department's photo without their permission.
Copyright infringement - Jesus. Now the FBI's going to get involved and he'll probably get life or the chair -- because, that's an easy fish for the FBI to fry. (Hmm... is that where that expression came from?)
This happened with Walter S. Taylor and his (now) Bully Hill Vineyard. His grandfather started the Taylor Wine Company in New York. Walter joined the company as Exec VP and was disturbed by various legal practices (below):
Walter became growingly concerned with the direction Taylor was taking under the protection of New York law—protection that let wineries deceptively make their wine under a veil of secrecy. Wineries could add dozens of chemicals, concentrates, water, and “foreign” juice to their wines without informing the consumer on the label. Deep in the middle of the night, under a veil of secrecy, wineries would receive deliveries of juice from California in “Tank Cars” to add to their wines. They could even still call their bottle of wine a New York wine!
He spoke out, was eventually fired and started Bully Hill Vineyards. In 1977, Taylor Wine was bought out by Coca-Cola and they filed an injunction preventing Walter from using the name "Taylor" on any of his products or making any implications that he / Bully Hill was ever associated with Taylor Wine.
When I visited the winery in the 1980s, all the labels said "Walter S. [blacked out]" and featured a picture of the company mascot - a goat. Underneath it said, "They got my name, but they didn't get my goat."
I'm a huge proponent of some sort of basic income solution, but I fear you're right. And it's not just the 1% who oppose it. There are a lot of working-class people who have a visceral opposition to "freeloaders" sponging off of their hard work. It doesn't matter if you can show that such a system makes sense, it feels wrong to a heck of a lot of people.
My mother, who is *not* in the 1%, is like that. She's in her 70s and doesn't want to pay any taxes anymore because of all the freeloaders -- she watches a LOT of Fox News. She relents a bit when I remind her that taxes also pay for the Police, Fire Department, road crews, etc... Still, she bitches about Obamacare, even though she's on Medicare and my step-father is on Tricare (retired Air Force and Navy). They enjoy (if that's the right word) their single-payer health care, while begrudging me any attempt at the same.
Never going to happen in this country. The status quo hangs on to their ideology like a junkie and his heroin. When the pitchforks come out then maybe, but I suspect the 1%, once they finish strip mining this country, will flee leaving us to rot.
Perhaps it's because people often try holding out for the best deal rather than accepting a reasonable deal, and I mean on both sides of the equation. Some of that is greed or competitiveness, but some is probably due to uncertainty about the future, so companies/people focus on the now.
How will you pay for what you need to live without a job, exactly? Or do you think we'll be living in some idealistic world where everything, including housing, is free?
If robots are doing all the work, what other alternative could there be?
Months and months of planning went into the initial effort,...
Into the take down or recovery? 'Cause the former just requires pulling a cable of some sort.:-) TFS says the team would take down a site and try to migrate the traffic, but wouldn't it be better if the disaster group and the recovery group were different teams for a "real world" stress test?
There are multiple large companies that straight out ban LibreOffice on their premises because of the risk that macros and document data will have to be released as GPL.
Then they deserve to have higher costs for retaining idiotic lawyers. I hope they keep it up, it'll make my company more competitive.
I interviewed for a SysAdmin position at a government contractor way back in 1998 and asked about flexible working hours. The manager said their lawyers said it wasn't allowed. I said my current company, also a contractor at the same facility, had flexible hours. The manager said, "I don't know how they can do that." and I replied, "Perhaps we have better lawyers." They offered me a job, but I (obviously) didn't accept. Besides that stupidity, they only had 1 computer with Internet access, on a desk in a common area.
but even if he (Trump) doesn't go senile in office,
Why wait to worry about that. He (conveniently) can't remember saying things that are -- literally -- on video tape *now* -- like supporting the war in Iraq (video w/Howard Stern) and military intervention in Libya (video w/Matt Lauer). Though, to be fair, even Matt Lauer didn't remember Trump supporting the latter, despite The Daily Show Uncovers Video with Trump Telling Lauer He Supports War on Libya
“When I was making a World War II movie called ‘Fury,’ we did this boot camp for a week, and Logan Lerman, who was the youngest actor of the bunch — I think he was 21 — was given grunt detail. We gave him a watch and he had to keep track of how long it took us to eat and get in and out of our gear. One day he came to me and said the watch has stopped, and I said, ‘You’ve just got to wind it.’ He came back literally 15 minutes later and said, ‘Wait, how do you wind it?’"
More importantly what the FUCK is wrong with people like you who should be embracing technology, being steadfastly against any change?
Not all technology or change is good or desirable.
Nearly 70 percent of survey participants also said they were more worried than enthusiastic about the possibility of synthetic-blood and brain-chip implants.
Future Apple enthusiasts will get brain-chip implants and ditch their ears -- to make themselves more water resistant.
'improve device's water resistance'
Several phones have already been released (eg: Sony Z5) with exposed headphones sockets without compromising water resistance. Poor justification is poor.
My Kyocera HydroVIBE (released in 2014) has an exposed 3.5mm headphone jack is "Certified dust resistant and waterproof for IP57 (IPX5 and IPX7) - protection against dust and water immersion for up to 30 minutes in up to 3.28 feet (1 meter) of water." So, what is Apple trying to achieve?
Apple Hikes Order Volume For iPhone 7 Parts ...
Okay it's way louder, but can't hear it 'cause no compatible headphones...
... Chrome now comes with a battery to boost performance.
Rescue mission!
But does it really work for consumer's vehicles overseas for nonstop weeks? I need proofs of that.
Try it out. Text us from the middle of the Atlantic.
Where do we get snorkels for our vehicles?
Seriously? Google: can snorkel. Here's one result: 4x4 Snorkel
Fortunately for them, Google chose to cut them a break and ignore those requests.
Pretty sure Google doesn't get to pick and choose. They should have complied and make WB follow the process to get things restored -- like the rest of us would have had to do. No pain, no gain.
How oversea?
Snorkels
Now in summer 2016, the TSA recommends arriving three hours early instead of a mere two.
Drive to your destination -- even if it's overseas.
One Twitter user jokingly suggested that the suspect should also be charged with copyright infringement -- for using the police department's photo without their permission.
Copyright infringement - Jesus. Now the FBI's going to get involved and he'll probably get life or the chair -- because, that's an easy fish for the FBI to fry. (Hmm... is that where that expression came from?)
After looking at John McAfee ... perhaps he can follow a similar path as Walter S. Taylor.
A picture of his face and underneath it says: John D. [blacked out] -- They got my name, but they didn't get my goatee.
Walter became growingly concerned with the direction Taylor was taking under the protection of New York law—protection that let wineries deceptively make their wine under a veil of secrecy. Wineries could add dozens of chemicals, concentrates, water, and “foreign” juice to their wines without informing the consumer on the label. Deep in the middle of the night, under a veil of secrecy, wineries would receive deliveries of juice from California in “Tank Cars” to add to their wines. They could even still call their bottle of wine a New York wine!
He spoke out, was eventually fired and started Bully Hill Vineyards. In 1977, Taylor Wine was bought out by Coca-Cola and they filed an injunction preventing Walter from using the name "Taylor" on any of his products or making any implications that he / Bully Hill was ever associated with Taylor Wine.
When I visited the winery in the 1980s, all the labels said "Walter S. [blacked out]" and featured a picture of the company mascot - a goat. Underneath it said, "They got my name, but they didn't get my goat."
Same as don't stick an unknown usb drive into your computer.
Or, more generally: Don't stick an outie part into an innie part if either is unknown.
I'm a huge proponent of some sort of basic income solution, but I fear you're right. And it's not just the 1% who oppose it. There are a lot of working-class people who have a visceral opposition to "freeloaders" sponging off of their hard work. It doesn't matter if you can show that such a system makes sense, it feels wrong to a heck of a lot of people.
My mother, who is *not* in the 1%, is like that. She's in her 70s and doesn't want to pay any taxes anymore because of all the freeloaders -- she watches a LOT of Fox News. She relents a bit when I remind her that taxes also pay for the Police, Fire Department, road crews, etc... Still, she bitches about Obamacare, even though she's on Medicare and my step-father is on Tricare (retired Air Force and Navy). They enjoy (if that's the right word) their single-payer health care, while begrudging me any attempt at the same.
guaranteed minimum income
Never going to happen in this country. The status quo hangs on to their ideology like a junkie and his heroin. When the pitchforks come out then maybe, but I suspect the 1%, once they finish strip mining this country, will flee leaving us to rot.
Perhaps it's because people often try holding out for the best deal rather than accepting a reasonable deal, and I mean on both sides of the equation. Some of that is greed or competitiveness, but some is probably due to uncertainty about the future, so companies/people focus on the now.
How will you pay for what you need to live without a job, exactly? Or do you think we'll be living in some idealistic world where everything, including housing, is free?
If robots are doing all the work, what other alternative could there be?
Camouflage?
Apparently, the test track will be orange with banked curves and an actual loop.
Months and months of planning went into the initial effort, ...
Into the take down or recovery? 'Cause the former just requires pulling a cable of some sort. :-) TFS says the team would take down a site and try to migrate the traffic, but wouldn't it be better if the disaster group and the recovery group were different teams for a "real world" stress test?
NASA's Impossible Propulsion EmDrive ...
The output of which would be the Impossible Propulsion Force. Tom Cruise is ready and waiting.
After all, the law of conservation of momentum says that a rocket cannot accelerate forward without some form of exhaust ejected backwards.
Perhaps it's more of a guideline.
There are multiple large companies that straight out ban LibreOffice on their premises because of the risk that macros and document data will have to be released as GPL.
Then they deserve to have higher costs for retaining idiotic lawyers. I hope they keep it up, it'll make my company more competitive.
I interviewed for a SysAdmin position at a government contractor way back in 1998 and asked about flexible working hours. The manager said their lawyers said it wasn't allowed. I said my current company, also a contractor at the same facility, had flexible hours. The manager said, "I don't know how they can do that." and I replied, "Perhaps we have better lawyers." They offered me a job, but I (obviously) didn't accept. Besides that stupidity, they only had 1 computer with Internet access, on a desk in a common area.