So where are SoCal and Cal going to get their water and electricity? The agreements were for the full state and I'm sure Oregon and Nevada would love to renegotiate.
Early adopters sometimes want things to be 'quirky' (see Prius, Linux...), but generally mass market does not. These tiles may not be the most efficient but they will get people to say 'Hey I wouldn't mind these on my roof'.
Actually, no I don't and that's why I don't use any *nix anymore. After years of dealing with BSD and others, I like a system where I don't have to build or configure every last item that I need to do my job. Linux is great for servers and all kinds of backends, but as a desktop day to day usage OS I hate it and having to maintain it.
I don't blame Akamai at all and it sounds like Krebs doesn't either. There were a ridiculous amount of resources used on the attack and that shit gets expensive to block.
First terminals I ever used for 'real' work were a DECWriter, an NCR portable, and a Silent 700. Running through a timesharing system and loading and saving programs on paper tape and cards.
I got my techphobic mom an SIII and she hasn't had any issues with it (I would have heard the instant there was any hint of a problem). She doesn't have anything but the basic ggogle/android apps installed and all the Samsung bloatware removed.
I got it done in 2000 at the age of 36. Now I'm almost 50 and I need reading glasses. That said it gave me a 12 year reprieve not five and I am happy every day that I had it done.
I'd put Becky Holmberg up there. She's been writing fantastic code since the Apple II. She doesn't got a lot of recognition outside the industry, but burgerlib is fucking amazing.
by Daniel O'Malley. Urban fantasy with considerable comedy set in the UK.
So where are SoCal and Cal going to get their water and electricity? The agreements were for the full state and I'm sure Oregon and Nevada would love to renegotiate.
The history of Australian exploitation cinema.
...and login permissions to the University of Wisconsin-Madison's time sharing system
An Audio Newspaper for a Visual World.
Cheap, reliable, does what I need it to.
Early adopters sometimes want things to be 'quirky' (see Prius, Linux...), but generally mass market does not. These tiles may not be the most efficient but they will get people to say 'Hey I wouldn't mind these on my roof'.
Very handy (no pun intended) good battery life, only has a few functions but does them well.
Actually, no I don't and that's why I don't use any *nix anymore. After years of dealing with BSD and others, I like a system where I don't have to build or configure every last item that I need to do my job. Linux is great for servers and all kinds of backends, but as a desktop day to day usage OS I hate it and having to maintain it.
I don't blame Akamai at all and it sounds like Krebs doesn't either. There were a ridiculous amount of resources used on the attack and that shit gets expensive to block.
If they're brandishing they're not a good guy. Brandishing means to draw and display to give the impression of intent to use.
Goddamn he's still nuts.
I have a PC emulator on my phone and have both 95 and 98SE volumes on it just to mess with people.
and paid too much.
First terminals I ever used for 'real' work were a DECWriter, an NCR portable, and a Silent 700. Running through a timesharing system and loading and saving programs on paper tape and cards.
AMD Phenom 3.5 (I think that's what's in it right at this moment)
8GB RAM
Radeon 7730
A bunch of Samsung 850 Pros
Win 8.1
I got my techphobic mom an SIII and she hasn't had any issues with it (I would have heard the instant there was any hint of a problem). She doesn't have anything but the basic ggogle/android apps installed and all the Samsung bloatware removed.
Oh are you sensative?
But not the one they paid for access to which was the question.
That ten dollar charge stops a hell of a lot of trolling, so I'd say yes. You get banned you lose ten bucks.
Private citizens are under far more accountability and surveillance than law enforcement.
Used to be, many car companies did this with Remote Unlock fobs. The hardware would be installed but wouldn't be enabled.
I got it done in 2000 at the age of 36. Now I'm almost 50 and I need reading glasses. That said it gave me a 12 year reprieve not five and I am happy every day that I had it done.
I'd put Becky Holmberg up there. She's been writing fantastic code since the Apple II. She doesn't got a lot of recognition outside the industry, but burgerlib is fucking amazing.
Battery required for a 14" Screen I guess. I like the idea actually. Quick booting and not using ChromeOS are pluses in my book.