A few overplayed artists aren't on Apple, nooooooooooooooooooooooooo!
Also you can't even get good version of, say "The Beatles" on cd since the record companies made them fatal victims of the loudness war after stealing their music.
I buy lots of Dells. But they usually break in the first month and have to be fixed or replace.
I know mine must be an anomalous experience or they'd be out of business. But the do sell a lot of defective electronics. Maybe they don't do any burn in.
Comcast in the Bay Area disables routers when you torrent. You have to go unplug the router and plug it back in. It has nothing to do with legality, I've had it happen when torrenting Linux distributions.
Since I shared a router and didn't have access to unplug it, I had to rent a vpn proxy so I could torrent without tripping this.
It's this generation's Rocky and Bullwinkle. Seriously this is Bullwinkle;)
Time to scale back the pointless spying. Also we spied on Merkel! Did we also spy on Angelina Jolie's shower? Because that would be even more convenient, also useless.
I was 100% sure this would happen. Yes there are a number of ways it could have happened, but in the end they knew who had the keys. You point a gun at the person and say "tell me the password," encryption "cracked." Or you show that person a picture of their niece, father, first love whatever and then a few pictures of people you've torture to death. Encryption "cracked". Or you put a keylogger chip in a keyboard on a computer known to have the codes. Encryption "cracked". Or... who cares. The information was high value, they knew where it was. They knew who had the keys. None of it and no one was protected by serious security.
And maybe the password was breakable. Even if he used 256 bit encryption, if he used a phrase that was too small, then, dummy. Whatever the outcome was assured from the beginning, because Russian intelligence and Chinese intelligence are the sort of people who will spend a million dollars to poison someone with polonium just to make a point.
Getting the computer to do something is the easy part.
Changing the program later, is hard. Communicating with other engineers is hard. Making is so that other engineers can quickly and reliably add new features or complete unfinished ones is hard. Remembering all relevant details of how a program works weeks, months, years later is impossible.
Knowing the correct way to use an API and avoid all problems with it without documentation is impossible. Etc. etc. etc.
I hope you're an underage troll, because if you're an adult that's very sad.
I think they're a step past HSPA+ - that was their 4g not their 4g lte. I'm getting peak download rates of 30 or 40 Mbps, usually more like 20 Mbps. But when the phone switches to 4g it's more like 0.8Mbps.
This is demonstrably false. While one can write good/bad applications in any language, the set of insecure programs in an untyped language is a superset of the set of insecure programs in a typed language of similar syntax.
You really have to be a math nerd to think you've just said anything meaningful about software engineering. You haven't. My God, you haven't!
There are uses for static typing and other S&M limitations on programming. If I had a medical appliance or anything my life depends on, I'd prefer it not even do any memory management - all memory should be pre-assigned.
In academia they're emphasizing proofs of correctness too - they're all mathematicians not engineers.
And a language like Java that not only lacks dynamic types but also lacks all abstraction that could obscure what code does, such as macros or templates or overloading - it's horrible to program in, but it saves companies from the effects of having truly stupid engineers and even more incompetent managers who don't allow programmers to document their code let alone require it.
So horrible Java code has the advantage that it never does anything that can't be understood by reading the code long enough...
It's the "I can't hire competent people to save my life" department's friend. But a good programmer can accomplish a lot more in a more powerful language.
On the positive side Java and.net have better garbage collection, more scalable gc more scaleable multithread support than their competition, so there's a niche in hugeness.
Yeah it was bluray. T-Moble has an unlimited bandwidth plan, but not unlimited tethering. So when I download I have to disconnect from my computer. That would be great since I also have a hotspot for the computer, but I lent that out to an indigent friend who is in a hospital that lacks wifi in his wing. So I actually have to not use my computer on the internet when I'm downloading. Also in this area, it switches from LTE to 4G when I'm on the phone and slows way down. I've only seen it do LTE when talking when I was in the country. And voice over LTE seems a bit buggy - I get weird beeps and noise and have to hang up and redial when it gets out of wack.
I didn't WATCH it on my phone, I DOWNLOADED it on my phone, though samsung phones DO have a couple of ways to connect them to HDMI.
My download speeds vary from 1 megabyte per second to 5(?) megabytes per second (it rarely gets that high but I think it did the other night). 2-3 megabytes is normal. So a 10 gig movie would take an hour or so to download.
After downloading I transferred the memory card to a tablet, hooked it up to a TV and watched it.
auto-disable and minute long startup times, I haven't seen a java web page in years. It's interesting to note that while CS departments are pushing ever more extreme forms of static typing, javascript has won in the most used platform. They never seem to notice that.
the wikipedia article makes it clear that 5g is pure vaporware. It's not even a specific technology it's the expectation that new technologies will be invented.
I'm reminded of writers who called Snowden a coward for not facing trial in the US. I'm just glad he did what he did, courageously or not. But now I have the "Sir Robin's minstrals" song stuck in my head: Brave Sir Robin ran away. ("No!") Bravely ran away away. ("I didn't!") When danger reared it's ugly head, He bravely turned his tail and fled. ("no!") Yes, brave Sir Robin turned about ("I didn't!") And gallantly he chickened out.
****Bravely**** taking ("I never did!") to his feet, He beat a very brave retreat. ("all lies!") Bravest of the braaaave, Sir Robin! ("I never!")
A few overplayed artists aren't on Apple, nooooooooooooooooooooooooo!
Also you can't even get good version of, say "The Beatles" on cd since the record companies made them fatal victims of the loudness war after stealing their music.
I buy lots of Dells. But they usually break in the first month and have to be fixed or replace.
I know mine must be an anomalous experience or they'd be out of business. But the do sell a lot of defective electronics. Maybe they don't do any burn in.
Report them!
Comcast in the Bay Area disables routers when you torrent. You have to go unplug the router and plug it back in. It has nothing to do with legality, I've had it happen when torrenting Linux distributions.
Since I shared a router and didn't have access to unplug it, I had to rent a vpn proxy so I could torrent without tripping this.
etc
You're so full of it!
Can I has understand how exponents work? Kthanks!
It's this generation's Rocky and Bullwinkle. Seriously this is Bullwinkle ;)
Time to scale back the pointless spying. Also we spied on Merkel! Did we also spy on Angelina Jolie's shower? Because that would be even more convenient, also useless.
spies. So if they're still in trouble despite having years to prepare for this, whose fault is that?
I was 100% sure this would happen. Yes there are a number of ways it could have happened, but in the end they knew who had the keys. You point a gun at the person and say "tell me the password," encryption "cracked." Or you show that person a picture of their niece, father, first love whatever and then a few pictures of people you've torture to death. Encryption "cracked". Or you put a keylogger chip in a keyboard on a computer known to have the codes. Encryption "cracked". Or ... who cares. The information was high value, they knew where it was. They knew who had the keys. None of it and no one was protected by serious security.
And maybe the password was breakable. Even if he used 256 bit encryption, if he used a phrase that was too small, then, dummy. Whatever the outcome was assured from the beginning, because Russian intelligence and Chinese intelligence are the sort of people who will spend a million dollars to poison someone with polonium just to make a point.
but not fingernail clippers or water, so SUCCESS! Why do we have security again? Is it all a puppet show?
There's a plan with no data cap as long as you're not tethering!
You're the disgrace.
Getting the computer to do something is the easy part.
Changing the program later, is hard. Communicating with other engineers is hard. Making is so that other engineers can quickly and reliably add new features or complete unfinished ones is hard. Remembering all relevant details of how a program works weeks, months, years later is impossible.
Knowing the correct way to use an API and avoid all problems with it without documentation is impossible. Etc. etc. etc.
I hope you're an underage troll, because if you're an adult that's very sad.
It was a 10 gig mkv.
Kind of badly encoded too, I can't seek in it in a few players.
Well luck of the draw on torrent. No I didn't torrent in my phone I used ftp from another computer that torrented it.
I think they're a step past HSPA+ - that was their 4g not their 4g lte. I'm getting peak download rates of 30 or 40 Mbps, usually more like 20 Mbps. But when the phone switches to 4g it's more like 0.8Mbps.
This is demonstrably false. While one can write good/bad applications in any language, the set of insecure programs in an untyped language is a superset of the set of insecure programs in a typed language of similar syntax.
You really have to be a math nerd to think you've just said anything meaningful about software engineering. You haven't. My God, you haven't!
There are uses for static typing and other S&M limitations on programming.
If I had a medical appliance or anything my life depends on, I'd prefer it not even do any memory management - all memory should be pre-assigned.
In academia they're emphasizing proofs of correctness too - they're all mathematicians not engineers.
And a language like Java that not only lacks dynamic types but also lacks all abstraction that could obscure what code does, such as macros or templates or overloading - it's horrible to program in, but it saves companies from the effects of having truly stupid engineers and even more incompetent managers who don't allow programmers to document their code let alone require it.
So horrible Java code has the advantage that it never does anything that can't be understood by reading the code long enough...
It's the "I can't hire competent people to save my life" department's friend. But a good programmer can accomplish a lot more in a more powerful language.
On the positive side Java and .net have better garbage collection, more scalable gc more scaleable multithread support than their competition, so there's a niche in hugeness.
Yeah it was bluray. T-Moble has an unlimited bandwidth plan, but not unlimited tethering. So when I download I have to disconnect from my computer. That would be great since I also have a hotspot for the computer, but I lent that out to an indigent friend who is in a hospital that lacks wifi in his wing. So I actually have to not use my computer on the internet when I'm downloading. Also in this area, it switches from LTE to 4G when I'm on the phone and slows way down. I've only seen it do LTE when talking when I was in the country. And voice over LTE seems a bit buggy - I get weird beeps and noise and have to hang up and redial when it gets out of wack.
I didn't WATCH it on my phone, I DOWNLOADED it on my phone, though samsung phones DO have a couple of ways to connect them to HDMI.
My download speeds vary from 1 megabyte per second to 5(?) megabytes per second (it rarely gets that high but I think it did the other night). 2-3 megabytes is normal. So a 10 gig movie would take an hour or so to download.
After downloading I transferred the memory card to a tablet, hooked it up to a TV and watched it.
auto-disable and minute long startup times, I haven't seen a java web page in years.
It's interesting to note that while CS departments are pushing ever more extreme forms of static typing, javascript has won in the most used platform. They never seem to notice that.
I just downloaded a 10 gigabyte movie in my phone and watched it last night. I don't have a cap with T-Mobile. :3
They're measured using the CEO's penis
http://www.penny-arcade.com/co...
the wikipedia article makes it clear that 5g is pure vaporware. It's not even a specific technology it's the expectation that new technologies will be invented.
It's fast, I get unlimited bandwidth (when I'm not tethering). I download high def movies with it.
Since we just got 4G LTE in the US and it's awesome enough, I don't expect to see a 5g rollout for decades.
I always felt that way about this demo from 1970... where our ai still hasn't caught up:
http://hci.stanford.edu/winogr...
I'm reminded of writers who called Snowden a coward for not facing trial in the US. I'm just glad he did what he did, courageously or not. But now I have the "Sir Robin's minstrals" song stuck in my head:
Brave Sir Robin ran away.
("No!")
Bravely ran away away.
("I didn't!")
When danger reared it's ugly head,
He bravely turned his tail and fled.
("no!")
Yes, brave Sir Robin turned about
("I didn't!")
And gallantly he chickened out.
****Bravely**** taking ("I never did!") to his feet,
He beat a very brave retreat.
("all lies!")
Bravest of the braaaave, Sir Robin!
("I never!")