I provided that link for your convenience, it's a lot faster to click than to type into the location field. Some might not know about it, and in the case of one of them reading my post they might want to check what it is about. Sorry for not adapting my post to your personal experiences.
Even if it was Google's fault, I doubt anyone (except Microsoft staff) would blame them. Google is the hero and Microsoft is the villain, it's always been like that. Nobody would blame the goverment if the terrorists had a valid reason.
It wouldn't surprise me if Microsoft sued Google (or vice versa) for this. If not, they might start blocking Google's search bar like they blocked msn.com from Opera.
Another article (or its comments) says they are going to enforce it, or at least give the sites a time to change domain before they would fine XXX.com sites. I doubt that would ever work, though.
I wouldn't say this would bring abuse. Rather, it might bring corrupt companies, but as long as the system is technically unexploitable abuse wouldn't be a problem.
E-mail is very useful as long as you aren't online 24/7. Even if you are, it might be convenient if someone wants to tell you something when you're rebooting.
Thunderbird is great, I'd say it would beat Outlook on every point (except the calendar) if it wasn't so damn slow. Or is it just the coffe-refill time?
You're right, and the character is #256;.
According to the article, the name is BlÄk, not BlAk.
So, this will be their counter to Jolt Cola?
And so I did.
"They claim to already have an 80% success rate in production"
Judging of the article's language use, 80% seems to be quite good. Anyway, they're apparently still developing.
Anyone who knows about this stuff, is 20% lost CDs much at this stage of development? How were the other companies at this point?
Even? Non-powers of two should be forbidden. Note for instance that this message contains exactly 128 characters. Long live two
According to Wikipedia, it does.
"Xbox 360 is a triple core, which is a pretty good indicator that this configuration is viable"
Wasn't XBox crashing constantly?
This is India's great opportunity to get modern. They've got a lot of potential sites with the .asia top-level domain.
The discovery of this IE flaw is new, don't blame slashdot.
I provided that link for your convenience, it's a lot faster to click than to type into the location field. Some might not know about it, and in the case of one of them reading my post they might want to check what it is about. Sorry for not adapting my post to your personal experiences.
Even if it was Google's fault, I doubt anyone (except Microsoft staff) would blame them. Google is the hero and Microsoft is the villain, it's always been like that. Nobody would blame the goverment if the terrorists had a valid reason.
It wouldn't surprise me if Microsoft sued Google (or vice versa) for this. If not, they might start blocking Google's search bar like they blocked msn.com from Opera.
I guess they the honeypots wouldn't catch them. It's just a guess, though.
Our parents might be logging keyboard input and searching the logs. Yes, I know I'm paranoid.
Another article (or its comments) says they are going to enforce it, or at least give the sites a time to change domain before they would fine XXX .com sites. I doubt that would ever work, though.
Why not give every person one, using their SSN?
My mom said she wanted something for Christmas that would make her happy, I'm planning to build a dopamine molecule with toothsticks.
I wouldn't say this would bring abuse. Rather, it might bring corrupt companies, but as long as the system is technically unexploitable abuse wouldn't be a problem.
This Internet will never work. I'm going to start my own.
E-mail is very useful as long as you aren't online 24/7. Even if you are, it might be convenient if someone wants to tell you something when you're rebooting.
Not at all. Google is known for researching everything with their army of employees. It wouldn't surprise me if Google actually managed to kill spam.
Thunderbird is great, I'd say it would beat Outlook on every point (except the calendar) if it wasn't so damn slow. Or is it just the coffe-refill time?
"taking your PC in for a tune up at the service station" was just a metafor to describe the feeling of using your PC afterwards.