Comment Re:So.... (Score 1) 130
"Less than" - it's the lowest my router's monitoring will display. This was after five or six loads. I agree that it shouldn't need much data, though I suppose the handshaking and TLS involves some overhead.
"Less than" - it's the lowest my router's monitoring will display. This was after five or six loads. I agree that it shouldn't need much data, though I suppose the handshaking and TLS involves some overhead.
It's not and has been shown to not be the case. It's an Asus router misidentifying the traffic. I have an LG washer that is connected, and it sends less than 1MB/day on days it's in use.
I have a lot of electronic items that have USB-C ports for charging, but that won't charge when connected to a USB-C power supply. Instead, they require the use of a USB-A to USB-C cable. Europe already requires USB-C charging ports, but apparently doesn't require working with USB-C supplies. I am not sure this is an improvement.
In early 2020 I left a three-star review for some wireless headphones. The seller deluged me with escalating bribes to delete or revise it. When I declined all, they took to forging my email address in requests to Amazon to "help me delete the review". Amazon's replies (form responses with directions as to how to edit or delete a review) went to me, of course, which is how I knew about it. This persisted over six months! I reported each attempt to Amazon - they didn't care.
I can't read the paywalled article, but I know this happens a lot.
The CNBC article says "Intel currently operates four factories, called “wafer fabs,” in the United States. In addition to its site in Arizona, which is being expanded, it also has fabs in Massachusetts, New Mexico and Oregon. It also makes chips in Ireland, Israel and has a single fab in China."
The Hudson, Massachusetts fab was once DEC's, where Alpha (and VAX) processors were made. DEC sold the site to Intel as part of a patent infringement settlement. Intel ran the fab for many years later, even though it was not a "copy exactly" operation, it did very well. Eventually it became unworkable to keep updating the Hudson fab and it was demolished a few years ago. Intel still has engineering offices there.
I plan to do these all in Fortran, as I did last year. Day 1 was easy.
The Amazon blog post announcing the service now has at the end:
Credits: CloudWatch Synthetics Recorder is based on the Headless recorder.
I don't know when it was added.
My wife plays Solitaire on her Kindle. She loves it so much that I had to buy a "refurbished" 6th-gen Paperwhite when hers died (later generations didn't support Active Content.) At least then I was able to re-load the game from the Kindle store. I gather this means that I won't be able to do that again.
I was a PLATO IV user in college in the 70s, and it consumed my life - a bit much so for my education. But I learned a lot developing "lessons" (what PLATO called programs) and tools for other lesson developers, and also the sort of hijinx, problems and friendships that reappeared many years later in online communities. Later I would work alongside PLATO systems developers at DEC. I still fondly remember That Friendly Orange Glow.
If you are a DirecTV satellite customer, call or chat and ask about the unadvertised "PREFERRED Xtra" package, which is cheaper than CHOICE, has more channels, and NO RSNs. (It does have ESPN, however.)
In my case, it's the local telephone company, from which I buy gigabit fiber service. I don't use them for telephone.
Can confirm - ran into the same problem when I set up Venmo.
Even more irritating is that while I have a Paypal security key (generates a token), I cannot disable text message authentication.
Amazon used to allow one to rate a review as "not helpful", known in the reviewer world as "negging". While this was useful at times, most often it was used to punish a reviewer whose opinion you didn't agree with, and that option was removed.
Amazon, like many other retailers, doesn't care about the quality of reviews, only the quantity. And I say this as a "Top 1000" (used to be Top 500) Amazon reviewer and "Vine Voice", who takes care to write useful reviews for everything I can.
If you don't know then why the fuck are you posting a reply?
Because Amazon prompts them to do so. Amazon sends emails to people who bought or reviewed a product (or sometimes a completely different product made by the same company whose listings were combined later) asking if they can answer the question, and there's a "I don't know" button which, when clicked, leaves those useless responses. It frustrates me too.
"The only way I can lose this election is if I'm caught in bed with a dead girl or a live boy." -- Louisiana governor Edwin Edwards