I don't really see how this is supposed to help against terrorism. All the items and chemicals you get in a chemistry set, you can also get somewhere else. Even tough I have never had a chemistry set I think it can be a very good learning experience for those who have one. This is like banning cars in order to stop accidents...
When my boss hears about Ajax (which he probably should by now) it will be the Web 2.0 thing all over again. Management-people running around, setting things on fire and screaming "We need to become Ajax-compliant!".
It is kind of funny that you buy your CD's and DVD's from Denmark. Since I am from Norway, I go to Sweden to buy cheap CD/DVD's (and alot of other things), but the things I buy in Sweden often come from Denmark and other European states. (BTW, I know it's off-topic:)
This sounds real smart. I never open any attachments I get in my inbox unless I know exactly what it is and who sent it to me. I also run Linux, so I can't really see any huge problems even if I would open such an attachment.
This was probably proposed by some desk-jockey who has read "Computing for dummies".
In Norway (and, I belive all of Europe) unlocking mobile phones is both legal and common. I have done it once on at Nokia to get an almost free phone from one company and then use it in another companies network.
Since you own the actual hardware, I don't see why you should not be able to do what you want with it.....
European laws are not as strict as the the US one's, and they are not really enforced a lot either. I think this will be seen more often in the future.
I don't really see how this is supposed to help against terrorism. All the items and chemicals you get in a chemistry set, you can also get somewhere else. Even tough I have never had a chemistry set I think it can be a very good learning experience for those who have one. This is like banning cars in order to stop accidents...
No, no, no. It's common knowledge that the russian mob uses pirated copies of OpenOffice, but they do save in .doc-format.
When my boss hears about Ajax (which he probably should by now) it will be the Web 2.0 thing all over again. Management-people running around, setting things on fire and screaming "We need to become Ajax-compliant!".
...but I am still surprised that people are stupid enough to click on random links.
I would like to help, but it does not work in FF on Linux...
have been pissed off if something like that had happened to me. One thing is to steal a copy, but to then try to sell it to others...
In Soviet Russia, TCP packets reset you!
It is kind of funny that you buy your CD's and DVD's from Denmark. Since I am from Norway, I go to Sweden to buy cheap CD/DVD's (and alot of other things), but the things I buy in Sweden often come from Denmark and other European states. (BTW, I know it's off-topic :)
This sounds real smart. I never open any attachments I get in my inbox unless I know exactly what it is and who sent it to me. I also run Linux, so I can't really see any huge problems even if I would open such an attachment. This was probably proposed by some desk-jockey who has read "Computing for dummies".
In Norway (and, I belive all of Europe) unlocking mobile phones is both legal and common. I have done it once on at Nokia to get an almost free phone from one company and then use it in another companies network. Since you own the actual hardware, I don't see why you should not be able to do what you want with it.....
European laws are not as strict as the the US one's, and they are not really enforced a lot either. I think this will be seen more often in the future.