Comment Re:Haunting of Hill House (Score 1) 185
We enjoyed watching it but felt the ending was a little disappointing.
We enjoyed watching it but felt the ending was a little disappointing.
Apparently you have to sell your soul to Microsoft to view the contract. Looks like gibberish in LibreOffice.
Please be kind to editors for whom English is not their primary language.
I bought a touch free kitchen faucet from Amazon because the local big box store did not have one in stock and estimate for arrival was longer than Amazon's delivery time. When I got the box and opened the instruction booklet, there was a post-it note stuck between the pages describing some kind of drip problem. I foolishly started to install (removing my original kitchen sink faucet) and then discovered that a number of parts were missing. I contacted the manufacturer and they overnighted me the missing pieces. I completed the installation only to discover that the unit was not functioning properly. I contacted the manufacturer and they offered to send more parts, but I was not really sure which parts were bad so I went back to Amazon, communicated with customer service and ordered a replacement. That arrived and I was able to complete a working installation. Amazon discounted the first unit they shipped because it was obviously a returned and defective unit but following the return they refunded the discounted price. In the end I was unable to use my kitchen sink for about a week due to the problem with an Amazon purchase and got no compensation from them despite repeated assurances that the price for the second unit would be discounted.
It was about a month before I bought from Amazon again. And ever since I've done everything I can to purchase from other sellers when prices are not too far apart.
Apple et. al. are not stupid clucks, they went over motherboards with a microscope.
Are you certain about that? Can you provide a citation that backs that up?
I'm sure that Apple goes over their products that carefully, but they are not selling Supermicro boards. It is more likely that they are providing a specification that details what they want (and hopefully a set of test specifications it must meet) and then asking for quotes.
$16 at ebay (with 512GB RAM) And no HDMI.
No.
$5US for a Pi Zero W at my local Micro Center. But I can only buy one at that price. $15 for 2-5. $20 for 6+.
It's really hard to beat the price/performance of the various Pi boards.
Thanks for the specific reference.
>Apps that browse the web must use the appropriate HTML and JavaScript engines provided by the Windows Platform.
I wonder if that's TOS speak for "other browsers need not apply" or if there is a valid reason for that exclusion.
It wasn't there yesterday when I looked. I didn't bother looking for chrome.
For those of us not familiar with node.js, what happened? I avoided node.js because I didn't want YAPM on my Debian install. Some of the headlines about npm installing malware, breaking half the web and rewriting directory permissions have convinced me that it was a dumpster fire and my reluctance to use it was well advised.
I'm just curious how this relates to the present subject (and nothing I know about it likely matters in this regard.)
I thought about replying and canceling.
For a while I was getting some kind of statement from what looked like a job shop in England. No contact info and of course a non-working return address.
The funniest one was one that went to a group of women in Australia arranging a girls night out. (I'm in the US.) I replied to all that I had no idea where that was but it sounded like a lot of fun and I was quite looking forward to it.
We all know that Apple is operating on the thinnest of margins.
What I wonder, and what I didn't get from the essay is what the author hoped to accomplish.
I see no mention in the article for blockchain. And whereas support for WiFi and USB 3.1 is probably going to benefit manufacturers (fewer components to make a PC) blockchain would have a much bigger impact on Intel's stock price.
Don't?
If all else fails, lower your standards.