I'm sure someone could create a honeypot wifi network that forces all Android devices that connect to it to install a particular app. Maybe it'll even teach people to stop wardriving.
Yet, this corporation doesn't take into account New Zealand's main bottle-neck: the Southern Cross Cable. Only having one link to the rest of the internet, and that link is owned by a for-profit business, makes for piss-poor international bandwidth. Luckily, there are some people making some noise about laying another cable, just so there's no longer a monopoly and we might actually get some decent speeds.
So almost every developer either:
a) Uses Erlang and a Mac
b) Uses Perl or
c) Uses VS2010?
Is it just me, it would there still be a fair chunk of developers not included?
I've picked up an open source project that doesn't have comments. There's major chunks of it that the code is such a mess that I have no idea what it does, yet I'm supposed to be fixing it.
After all how are you to know whether a site is mearly slashdotted or being blocked?
From the FAQ:
The request is diverted to the filter server which sees that the URL is banned and an “Access is refused” page is returned. The internet address of the requesting computer is logged.
Slightly better one-click system:
- Open your favourite shell (click, sometimes)
- wget the patch file
- read through the patch file if you think it may be an ownage patch
- apply patch file
- ???
- Profit.
Too bad for all those that have to manually apply the patch for lack of patch (or something similar)
The webhost I use (that will remain nameless) has pretty close to (if not more than) 99.99% uptime. This is on a shared host as well. The worst I get is about a minute down each month as the server gets power cycled.
Are you sure that WiX is a web app? Doesn't look like one to me.
Alternatively, just don't wear gloves. Your body (hopefully) has a lower minimum operational temperature than your touchscreen device.
It's not the year 10. It's the year 2010. Surely we've learnt to stop using two digits for our years?
I'm sure someone could create a honeypot wifi network that forces all Android devices that connect to it to install a particular app. Maybe it'll even teach people to stop wardriving.
What about for those of us that don't like the US and definitely don't want to work there?
Yet, this corporation doesn't take into account New Zealand's main bottle-neck: the Southern Cross Cable. Only having one link to the rest of the internet, and that link is owned by a for-profit business, makes for piss-poor international bandwidth. Luckily, there are some people making some noise about laying another cable, just so there's no longer a monopoly and we might actually get some decent speeds.
Because I don't live in the US, so my carrier doesn't suck and allowed me to tether as soon as 3.0 came out, for free.
People don't like developing for the iP[whatever]. I suppose we'll be seeing a new article every time someone somewhere complains about it.
So almost every developer either: a) Uses Erlang and a Mac b) Uses Perl or c) Uses VS2010? Is it just me, it would there still be a fair chunk of developers not included?
For those too lazy to read the article, he scored 41,338,740, with the previous high score being 41,336,440
YouTube
I've picked up an open source project that doesn't have comments. There's major chunks of it that the code is such a mess that I have no idea what it does, yet I'm supposed to be fixing it.
After all how are you to know whether a site is mearly slashdotted or being blocked?
From the FAQ:
The request is diverted to the filter server which sees that the URL is banned and an “Access is refused” page is returned. The internet address of the requesting computer is logged.
.
Orcon's stance seems to be "We're not implementing it, yet." http://twitter.com/Orcon/status/10339783484
I don't find that secure enough. Which is why I use curl.
Which allow a right click, (enabled by default IIRC) by having two fingers on the trackpad while clicking.
Slightly better one-click system:
- Open your favourite shell (click, sometimes)
- wget the patch file
- read through the patch file if you think it may be an ownage patch
- apply patch file
- ???
- Profit. Too bad for all those that have to manually apply the patch for lack of patch (or something similar)
The webhost I use (that will remain nameless) has pretty close to (if not more than) 99.99% uptime. This is on a shared host as well. The worst I get is about a minute down each month as the server gets power cycled.
So what happens when we're all using and relying on Google Voice, then something like this happens to the service?
They also put us contestants up in the Novotel Plovdiv, supposedly the flashiest hotel in Plovdiv.