He did not commit treason, as he is not a US citizen. He could be charged with espionage, which in the last 40 years or so has resulted in a maximum sentence of life in prison. There is no parole or time off for good behavior as there is in most state correctional systems.
He could also be charged with receiving stolen property or wire fraud, possibly racketeering under the RICO statutes if it's proven he colluded with Private Manning.
The Private, on the other hand, could be stood up against a wall for committing treason while under arms under the Uniform Code of Military Justice.
but I seriously doubt the county has the ability to regulate the installation of meters, smart or otherwise. It's more properly the domain of the California Public Utilities Commission.
Counties have no say in state tariffs.
Of course, California IS about the most heavily unionized state, so they will have something to say about it.
Just because Silicon Valley is in California, doesn't mean that good technology that could save consumers a lot of money should be deployed there.
who learned AppleBASIC, and COBOL, and FORTRAN, I feel the best 'beginner' language is still TurboPASCAL. It's basic enough for teaching concepts, and powerful enough to do advanced techniques before graduating to C++ or Java.
If you want a language that's actually used professionally, there's always VisualBASIC, which again can teach you the basic concepts which you can then build upon.
The Tides Foundation contributes to the World Policy Organization. And who funds the Tides Foundation? Spooky-dude himself, George Soros.
Yet another liberal-skewed 'poll' conducted by a liberal, internationalist think tank, paraphrased by some idiot who gets his news off of Alternet of all places.
Somehow 'less-informed' became 'stupid'. Nope, not biased at all.
Really, people, isn't there some tech news out there in the world someplace that would at least be relevant AND interesting?
I was happily working along on the Dell Latitude E6500 laptop I justed picked up off of eBay (after replacing the hard drive and reinstalling Win7Prox64 of course), when AVG asked to reboot. I did so, and...system restore popped up. Okay, I knew AVG screwed something up, because this just doesn't normally happen.
After getting back into the system and having it happen again, I uninstalled AVG Free 2011 until they get it fixed.
Intel has 12-core Xeon's in the pipeline, and HP (and IBM, and etc.) have quad-socket servers...with Hyper-Threading, that's 96 cores presented to the OS.
I agree. Novell is essentially PlateSpin and Suse with a smattering of ZenWorks. There are some really neat things happening on the Suse side with Suse Studio, and Studio will be adding some Windows support in the future. It's the future of the company. Without Suse, Novell is...a quaint, obscure little company.
In the US at least, there is only one carrier selling the iPhone, and only 4 or 5 basic models, if there is anybody still buying the 8GB 3G and 16/32GB 3Gs past the launch date of the 16/32GB iPhone 4.
All 4 major carriers are selling multiple Android phone models from multiple manufacturers...so I think the sales figures for Apple are artificially low and hence not a solid footing to start touting that Android is killing the iPhone. You might say it's not an 'Apples-to-Apples' comparison (I wouldn't, but you could say that...)
Android is having an impact, definitely, but I think the sales curve, as with any new gizmo, will start to taper off dramatically as soon as everyone that wants one has one. Are they giving Apple a run for their money? You betcha.
I bought my daughter an iPhone 4. My wife has a crackberry, which she barely knows how to use. As for me, I'm waiting to see what Windows Phone 7 goodness comes out of HTC for AT&T to replace my Fuze since they decided the HD2 wasn't worthy. Dammit.
Only a very few, large western companies have unfettered access to the 'real' internet in the PRC, and only the foreign national employees have access to it. If you're going to China as an employee of one of these companies, then you may have access. If you are going as a tourist, then you should pretty much expect that whatever surfing you do is being monitored, anonymizers will either be problematic or nonfunctional, and remember there is no such thing as 'freedom'. I would be extremely hesitant to set up my home or office PC with LogMeIn or RDP or any other kind of remote access solution, as it will most assuredly be targeted for hacking by the PLA, which runs the intelligence apparatus.
You best be happy with the Disney-rated, government approved Red Internet, otherwise if you need your YouPorn fix, or want to check on WikiLeaks or research Falun Gong, you may wind up being 'interviewed' at an undisclosed location at 2AM.
It's not prudent to spit in the eye of your friendly neighborhood communist dictatorship.
I do expect to see the iPad on Verizon; Steve Jobs all but confirmed at launch that the iPad would be available on multiple carriers, and depending on how they've implemented the antennas (I haven't seen the 3G tear-down, so I would assume something similar to a Mini-PCIe card as in notebooks) it should be a relative cakewalk.
Also a possibility, the 3GS will show up in 16GB and 32GB flavors on Verizon...I thought it was pretty much a given that the iPhone was being made in a TD-SCDMA flavor for the Chinese market...they could easily make some in Big Red's flavor on the same line.
...unfortunately gets in the way. Signed in 2007, it doesn't run out until 2012. Which is when we'll probably see the LTE iPhone, which will work on AT&T, T-Mobile and Verizon.
I expect to see an iPhone 4s or 4xt or 4xl in the interim with enhanced video capabilities, 32GB and 64GB memory capacity (16GB goes away) and enhanced speakerphone capability geared towards business users.
The hardware specs are dated....soooooo last decade.......and the industrial design is clunky. Clearly not ready for prime time. It doesn't look any different than the OEM all-in-one's I've seen advertised in the back of eWeek for years.
LGA775? It does use a SATA HDD, but PATA for the DVD, which really should be a slot load. A modem is bad enough, but parallel, serial and PS/2 ports? C'mon, this design's Use-by date has expired.
On their local workstations, yes. On their development boxes, yes. The Release Engineer should have control over the QA environment. It should mimic production as much as possible, so developers shouldn't have admin rights. On production, absolutely effing not.
The world of virtualization has provided new tools and methods to use for development purposes. These should be used to their fullest extent.
Unfortunately, Series2 TiVo's can record two programs through the built-in NTSC tuners, but most security and other video cameras can only use composite video, so you would be probably be limited to one video feed.
This is obviously another Crusader ploy to tear away the largely Christian southern Africa from the primarily Muslim northern Africa. We condemn this despicable act of aggression!
Install a good PortableApp AntiVirus and Anti-Malware program, along with a nice HTML or Flash message with some links to some other good driver update, etc scanner programs...Do yourself and your Christmas Card list a favor - help them help themselves!
Sounds great!
Now, can we make sure we don't have any spies in the Navy or the Military Industrial Complex who will sell the technology to the Israelis, the Iranians, the North Koreans, the Chinese, the Russians or anyone connected to Toshiba?
He did not commit treason, as he is not a US citizen. He could be charged with espionage, which in the last 40 years or so has resulted in a maximum sentence of life in prison. There is no parole or time off for good behavior as there is in most state correctional systems. He could also be charged with receiving stolen property or wire fraud, possibly racketeering under the RICO statutes if it's proven he colluded with Private Manning. The Private, on the other hand, could be stood up against a wall for committing treason while under arms under the Uniform Code of Military Justice.
but I seriously doubt the county has the ability to regulate the installation of meters, smart or otherwise. It's more properly the domain of the California Public Utilities Commission. Counties have no say in state tariffs. Of course, California IS about the most heavily unionized state, so they will have something to say about it. Just because Silicon Valley is in California, doesn't mean that good technology that could save consumers a lot of money should be deployed there.
Apple will be hosting content for the iProducts, including enterprise applications for next years' iPad Pro.
who learned AppleBASIC, and COBOL, and FORTRAN, I feel the best 'beginner' language is still TurboPASCAL. It's basic enough for teaching concepts, and powerful enough to do advanced techniques before graduating to C++ or Java. If you want a language that's actually used professionally, there's always VisualBASIC, which again can teach you the basic concepts which you can then build upon.
Helps you organize everything and put it on the web.
The Tides Foundation contributes to the World Policy Organization. And who funds the Tides Foundation? Spooky-dude himself, George Soros. Yet another liberal-skewed 'poll' conducted by a liberal, internationalist think tank, paraphrased by some idiot who gets his news off of Alternet of all places. Somehow 'less-informed' became 'stupid'. Nope, not biased at all. Really, people, isn't there some tech news out there in the world someplace that would at least be relevant AND interesting?
I was happily working along on the Dell Latitude E6500 laptop I justed picked up off of eBay (after replacing the hard drive and reinstalling Win7Prox64 of course), when AVG asked to reboot. I did so, and...system restore popped up. Okay, I knew AVG screwed something up, because this just doesn't normally happen. After getting back into the system and having it happen again, I uninstalled AVG Free 2011 until they get it fixed.
This was on HGTV two years ago...they have recently been running recycled clips of it on other shows.
Well, yeah, but that's AMD stuff...
Intel has 12-core Xeon's in the pipeline, and HP (and IBM, and etc.) have quad-socket servers...with Hyper-Threading, that's 96 cores presented to the OS.
I agree. Novell is essentially PlateSpin and Suse with a smattering of ZenWorks. There are some really neat things happening on the Suse side with Suse Studio, and Studio will be adding some Windows support in the future. It's the future of the company. Without Suse, Novell is...a quaint, obscure little company.
In the US at least, there is only one carrier selling the iPhone, and only 4 or 5 basic models, if there is anybody still buying the 8GB 3G and 16/32GB 3Gs past the launch date of the 16/32GB iPhone 4. All 4 major carriers are selling multiple Android phone models from multiple manufacturers...so I think the sales figures for Apple are artificially low and hence not a solid footing to start touting that Android is killing the iPhone. You might say it's not an 'Apples-to-Apples' comparison (I wouldn't, but you could say that...) Android is having an impact, definitely, but I think the sales curve, as with any new gizmo, will start to taper off dramatically as soon as everyone that wants one has one. Are they giving Apple a run for their money? You betcha. I bought my daughter an iPhone 4. My wife has a crackberry, which she barely knows how to use. As for me, I'm waiting to see what Windows Phone 7 goodness comes out of HTC for AT&T to replace my Fuze since they decided the HD2 wasn't worthy. Dammit.
Only a very few, large western companies have unfettered access to the 'real' internet in the PRC, and only the foreign national employees have access to it. If you're going to China as an employee of one of these companies, then you may have access. If you are going as a tourist, then you should pretty much expect that whatever surfing you do is being monitored, anonymizers will either be problematic or nonfunctional, and remember there is no such thing as 'freedom'. I would be extremely hesitant to set up my home or office PC with LogMeIn or RDP or any other kind of remote access solution, as it will most assuredly be targeted for hacking by the PLA, which runs the intelligence apparatus. You best be happy with the Disney-rated, government approved Red Internet, otherwise if you need your YouPorn fix, or want to check on WikiLeaks or research Falun Gong, you may wind up being 'interviewed' at an undisclosed location at 2AM. It's not prudent to spit in the eye of your friendly neighborhood communist dictatorship.
FAT32, NTFS, perhaps ZFS...and following up to the HIPAA remars above, I would use TrueCrypt as well.
I do expect to see the iPad on Verizon; Steve Jobs all but confirmed at launch that the iPad would be available on multiple carriers, and depending on how they've implemented the antennas (I haven't seen the 3G tear-down, so I would assume something similar to a Mini-PCIe card as in notebooks) it should be a relative cakewalk. Also a possibility, the 3GS will show up in 16GB and 32GB flavors on Verizon...I thought it was pretty much a given that the iPhone was being made in a TD-SCDMA flavor for the Chinese market...they could easily make some in Big Red's flavor on the same line.
...unfortunately gets in the way. Signed in 2007, it doesn't run out until 2012. Which is when we'll probably see the LTE iPhone, which will work on AT&T, T-Mobile and Verizon. I expect to see an iPhone 4s or 4xt or 4xl in the interim with enhanced video capabilities, 32GB and 64GB memory capacity (16GB goes away) and enhanced speakerphone capability geared towards business users.
The hardware specs are dated....soooooo last decade.......and the industrial design is clunky. Clearly not ready for prime time. It doesn't look any different than the OEM all-in-one's I've seen advertised in the back of eWeek for years. LGA775? It does use a SATA HDD, but PATA for the DVD, which really should be a slot load. A modem is bad enough, but parallel, serial and PS/2 ports? C'mon, this design's Use-by date has expired.
All right, I've HAD it! Who's been buggering the poor, cute little koalas?
I'm sorry, I don't speak elvish.
On their local workstations, yes. On their development boxes, yes. The Release Engineer should have control over the QA environment. It should mimic production as much as possible, so developers shouldn't have admin rights. On production, absolutely effing not. The world of virtualization has provided new tools and methods to use for development purposes. These should be used to their fullest extent.
Unfortunately, Series2 TiVo's can record two programs through the built-in NTSC tuners, but most security and other video cameras can only use composite video, so you would be probably be limited to one video feed.
This is obviously another Crusader ploy to tear away the largely Christian southern Africa from the primarily Muslim northern Africa. We condemn this despicable act of aggression!
I've never worked for a more dysfunctional, management-laden organization than Perot Systems. God help Michael Dell.
Install a good PortableApp AntiVirus and Anti-Malware program, along with a nice HTML or Flash message with some links to some other good driver update, etc scanner programs...Do yourself and your Christmas Card list a favor - help them help themselves!
Sounds great! Now, can we make sure we don't have any spies in the Navy or the Military Industrial Complex who will sell the technology to the Israelis, the Iranians, the North Koreans, the Chinese, the Russians or anyone connected to Toshiba?