Is this about breaches or fraud? If breaches, sure, any large retail company will be subject to breaches. But fraud? Start with the big banks that foreclose on houses that aren't theirs, open unrequested accounts, or launder money for drug dealers. The first two at least meet that category.
Well, sure, but it's a double-edged sword; in this case you can see how technology can protect us against psychopathic super-assholes. All the hackers need to do is fake scans on a bunch of sitting politicians and get more discussion on socialized medicine into the news cycle.
Definitely tongue-in-cheek. Prejudice against obese people, while based on the quantifiable physical property of mass, can only be genuinely associated with the physical property of volume, so GP is definitely kidding.
You can use Google Takeout to download your data and rehost it elsewhere for any of their services. Do other major players make it convenient/possible to do that?
When you work for a union, do you need to socialize these kinds of things with your other union members first? Seems like if you're part of a union and have enough mad skillz to frequent Slashdot, your cash flow/vacation balance may be better than that of your fellow union members.
Is there any sort of guideline/range/fuzzy-logic-set of behaviors or symptoms that indicate that you are definitely not/likely not/maybe/likely/definitely experiencing or approaching burnout? It seems like you'd want to be able to definitely rule it out as something that you're experiencing, unless it's an issue of work/life balance, which never seems to be possible.
One can add to these two "objections" to the Iron Dome system a third, minor quibble: It is costly in terms of dollars as well. Each Iron Dome battery costs about $100 million; Israel currently has nine batteries.
And each Iron Dome Tamir missile that Israel fires — and usually two are sent up to intercept each descending rocket — costs at least $50,000.
Each rocket Hamas fires costs $500 to $1,000 to produce. Hamas had 9,000 rockets at its disposal at the start of the recent conflict. Hezbollah reportedly has 100,000 rockets, including long-range Scuds. Do the math. How Israel might cope economically, not to mention militarily, with such a rocket deluge in a future clash is a very real problem.
- Los Angeles Times
We don't need terrorists to bring down our planes. They can just bankrupt us.
In many cases, you can create a free account, then bookmark the summary or a search for the DOI on PubMed and just wait until the full article is also available on there for free.
Well yeah, because there's nothing wrong with that, as it doesn't actually convey the message to the target audience. It should say "Los Mexicanos no necesitan aplicar" -- *then* there's a problem.
And of those, 33,000 of them were iCloud locked and had to be stripped for parts and scrap metal.
Less, even, if they can reclaim the parts and reuse them for repairs.
Finally, a real-live chimera!
Especially since Hell isn't in Wisconsin in the first place!
You're probably right. Welcome to the beginning of a new age.
I wonder if they hired a new hatchet-wo/man who's doing this to make their mark. Or maybe just cleaning stuff up.
Is this about breaches or fraud? If breaches, sure, any large retail company will be subject to breaches. But fraud? Start with the big banks that foreclose on houses that aren't theirs, open unrequested accounts, or launder money for drug dealers. The first two at least meet that category.
Well, sure, but it's a double-edged sword; in this case you can see how technology can protect us against psychopathic super-assholes. All the hackers need to do is fake scans on a bunch of sitting politicians and get more discussion on socialized medicine into the news cycle.
Comprehensive (whatever that means) health care coverage? That's impressive.
Definitely tongue-in-cheek. Prejudice against obese people, while based on the quantifiable physical property of mass, can only be genuinely associated with the physical property of volume, so GP is definitely kidding.
It sticks to your ribs a lot better.
You can use Google Takeout to download your data and rehost it elsewhere for any of their services. Do other major players make it convenient/possible to do that?
When you work for a union, do you need to socialize these kinds of things with your other union members first? Seems like if you're part of a union and have enough mad skillz to frequent Slashdot, your cash flow/vacation balance may be better than that of your fellow union members.
Can't you sue for something like this? I mean, it was basically falsely advertised.
If there was a way to make it contagious, I bet there would definitely be a push to address it somehow.
Is there any sort of guideline/range/fuzzy-logic-set of behaviors or symptoms that indicate that you are definitely not/likely not/maybe/likely/definitely experiencing or approaching burnout? It seems like you'd want to be able to definitely rule it out as something that you're experiencing, unless it's an issue of work/life balance, which never seems to be possible.
You should have yelled at her for it.
Reminds me of this video of how Las Vegas has changed and keeping focus on what's important to you.
One can add to these two "objections" to the Iron Dome system a third, minor quibble: It is costly in terms of dollars as well. Each Iron Dome battery costs about $100 million; Israel currently has nine batteries.
And each Iron Dome Tamir missile that Israel fires — and usually two are sent up to intercept each descending rocket — costs at least $50,000.
Each rocket Hamas fires costs $500 to $1,000 to produce. Hamas had 9,000 rockets at its disposal at the start of the recent conflict. Hezbollah reportedly has 100,000 rockets, including long-range Scuds. Do the math. How Israel might cope economically, not to mention militarily, with such a rocket deluge in a future clash is a very real problem.
- Los Angeles Times
We don't need terrorists to bring down our planes. They can just bankrupt us.
He's back in the game!
They should put Research and Technology before Science in the Act, instead.
In many cases, you can create a free account, then bookmark the summary or a search for the DOI on PubMed and just wait until the full article is also available on there for free.
Slow news? How about this -- it sucks to get laid off, but what's your opinion on the best month to be laid off in, in the US, from an office job?
I bet there's a lot of people who would like him to take all that data he's sitting on and shove it ... you get the idea.
Well yeah, because there's nothing wrong with that, as it doesn't actually convey the message to the target audience. It should say "Los Mexicanos no necesitan aplicar" -- *then* there's a problem.
I thought Facebookers (and non-Facebookers that Facebook tracks anyway) attention/engagement were the product.