Comment Re:Careful (Score 1) 94
When was the last time USA extradited someone in China for hacking? They just blame it on the Chinese government, say boohoo, no sanctions for you, because we need you more than you need us.
When was the last time USA extradited someone in China for hacking? They just blame it on the Chinese government, say boohoo, no sanctions for you, because we need you more than you need us.
If you read the article, there is an existing procedure that uses a dissolvable magnesium alloy mesh tube that expands to keep an artery open.
That's all good, the human body actually uses magnesium.
The additional electronics they're adding, who knows...
My first thought is I hope the patients kidneys/liver don't have issues removing the dissolved electronic device from your blood, and the thing doesn't dislodge while still dissolving and damage a heart valve or cause some other blockage.
That's cool. I'm not under the jurisdiction of USA. Neither is 95% of the worlds population.
I'm pretty sure the Chinese Government doesn't care if it's citizens hack in to American companies websites. Not that this really counts as hacking.
Shitty programmers write shitty code, regardless of language.
No, it will just reset to a previous point in time.
If it's a fraudulent charge, contact your card issuer to reverse the charge.
If they get enough of them, their processing fees will increase. If they keep getting more, visa/mastercard/etc will refuse to do business with them.
It's more code to maintain.
Do you think Microsoft likes having to maintain backwards compatibility? Apple isn't forced by its customers to do so with iOS.
So if they stop including the Objective-C runtime libraries in iOS, what happens to Objective-C code?
There's a shit load more "conventional programs" than there are operation systems
Java also solves your libraries and compile problem.
Last project I worked on the build server was Windows 2008, my dev PC was Windows 8.1 and test and production ran Linux. I don't even think prod was x86.
No cross-platform issues at all with ~ 100,000 lines of code.
First paragraph of article
A Central California woman claims she was fired after uninstalling an app that her employer required her to run constantly on her company issued iPhone—an app that tracked her every move 24 hours a day, seven days a week.
First paragraph from TFA
A Central California woman claims she was fired after uninstalling an app that her employer required her to run constantly on her company issued iPhone—an app that tracked her every move 24 hours a day, seven days a week.
Not only was it not her phone, she removed pre-installed software.
I didn't think the government bought data. I thought they demanded it.
You mean charge everyone $5 per month, because changing a free service to a paid one could well cut the user base by a factor of 15.
They were tracking the iPhone, which they own.
He who has but four and spends five has no need for a wallet.