Comment Re:Why you work for Google (Score 1) 349
I am 41 and would want to work for Google to ruin everyone's (I'm talking the entire Earth here) mapping experience...
I am 41 and would want to work for Google to ruin everyone's (I'm talking the entire Earth here) mapping experience...
Almost all of the best music ever is about 50 years old (The Who, Rolling Stones early stuff, Led Zeppelin, Beatles, etc.). I would even include the Beach Boys (Good Vibrations, 1964, 51 years old, I've listened to it twice in the last week, God Only Knows was 1966, 49 years old)...
Everything done in the mid-1960's and prior is 50 or older. The best time for music ever to me was 1965-1975. And 1965 was 50 years ago.
There is a metric shit-ton of money being made off this stuff.
One of the coolest movie experiences I've ever had was watching Hot Water (1924) starring Harold Lloyd in a church with live organ accompaniment.
The link I provided was to the current Music Freedom offering.
I don't use it but was aware of it when I signed up with T-Mobile last year.
T-Mobile offers music streaming without it impacting your data usage, "from your favorite music services like Pandora, iHeartRadio, iTunes Radio, Rhapsody, and more."
https://t-mobile.com/offer/fre...
So the profit incentive is not based on data usage, but in using music services (I'm assuming there's a kick back at some point from the service providers, otherwise the business model makes no sense).
I was wondering about this also. I think the people targeted participate in the social features of Steam. I have 300 or so games (Corporate Lifestyle Simulator is my current burn time game) and have used Steam for many years. I have two "friends" on Steam.
Not one piece of spam or scammer contact, ever.
There are obviously sublevels of interaction I was not aware of. Until now.
Slightly interesting actually.
With regards to flying in the US, everything changed in late 2001.
Flying in America was awesome back in the 1990s. In 1998, I flew to my honeymoon without ID (left it in the car) and we were able to catch an earlier flight at the overlay point. I was even allowed to go back on the first plane to find my ticket voucher which had dropped between the seats. And they asked two basic questions (Did you pack your bags? Did you accept items from strangers?).
I hate flying now. I imagine it's a lot like being processed jail, but more intrusive.
The first 15 minutes of that movie were solid Gold (I loved the belt).
I don't think the concept was flexible or deep enough for anything over short skits, certainly not a full length movie (A Night at the Roxbury is also in this category).
I thought Zoolander would also fall into this category and avoided it for a couple of years. But once I saw it and realized the comic genius that it is, it became one of my favorite movies.
This sounds quiet dangerous:
truck oil change/chassis lube/tire rotation rope climbing courses
But also quite exciting.
Actually we'll go camping a lot, the kids are only five.
This is way off topic, but I have reset things and tried others. Slashdot can be difficult to navigate at times.
I attempted to but I can't figure it out, and I'm sick and tired of the pure HTML posting and moderating interface (it sucks wiffle balls).
I have enabled Slashdot.org in NoScript.
Thanks for the info. I understand and can appreciate the implications of the OFAC lists (basically a simple form of economic warfare against specific individuals and parties, preventing them from using certain global financial companies).
But, OFAC checks are supposed to be performed before any funds are transferred (prior to contract entry in my experience). So they generally can't be seized or impounded by the US financial system, because letting them in at all is illegal (I'm sure they are at least frozen if a company, such as Paypal, performs transactions for a restricted party).
In less than a century, computers will be making substantial progress on ... the overriding problem of war and peace. -- James Slagle