Comment Four candidates. (Score 1) 138
Ahem. Four candidates.
Paul
Romney
Santorum
oh
and Gingrich. Everyone forgets him.
Ahem. Four candidates.
Paul
Romney
Santorum
oh
and Gingrich. Everyone forgets him.
It kinda sounds like you're getting to the point at which you need to monetize, if you can legally do so.
All it takes is another SKU. Stores that do price matching do it by SKU, right? So, by each store having their own SKU, no one has to match. Moreover, adding a store-specific SKU adds another layer to any ShopSavvy or Amazon PriceCheck style apps that look up prices across multiple stores by SKU. Those apps will have to find some kind of "master product" and identify all of the SKUs associated with it and ensure that the end-user understands the differences.
I want to download a car!
What's the Bitcoin Mhash/sec?
Back when the G1 came out, I'd just moved to a big city and didn't know my way around. Within *days* of getting the phone, it paid for itself with Google Maps Navigation.
I don't use it as much any more since i know my way around, but it helped more than any GPS device would when I was searching for a house. I could load up Zillow and Trulia and find every house around me that was for sale and go check them out.
Other commenters have already cited the value it brings in being able to check email and whatnot. Some folks say that they don't want to have email on their phone -- especially work email -- because they don't want to feel obligated to check it. It's more of willpower check -- if you can't discipline yourself, then don't add the account.
But yeah, it's probably worth it if you find yourself spending "hours" getting caught up on your digital lifestyle each day, when you could spend 1-2 minutes once or twice an hour and spread your tasks out over the day.
How much is cached? Yeah, initial page load sucks terribly, but how much has to be loaded on subsequent page requests?
How many copies of jQuery and etc. do people have cached on their machines?
It almost feels like we need dependency managers for browsers! I mean, I know there is the Google hosted stuff and other projects urge you to use their hosted version and fallback on a local copy.
Cutting cable was one of the best things I ever did! So much more time to code, game, hang out with friends, watch movies, etc.
Imagine if you could only put Campbell's Soup in your soup bowl, or only put Folgers coffee in your Folgers-branded coffee mug.
If there's no reason for a restriction on what I can do with the hardware I buy, other than restricting consumer choice, there's no reason for the restriction. If I can make something do what it wasn't intended to do, and it's not negatively harming others, why should I be deprived of my right to make it do that thing it wasn't meant to do?
IIRC, NARA didn't end the effort, it just stopped further development because it considered it complete.
I can assure you that it's not goatse. I just tuned the Apache settings, too, so it shouldn't be getting as hammered now.
I work from home every now and then (more often, recently). Last year, I wrote my own rules for working from home. Are there any other solid ones I should include?
I'll bet most of that cash went into the rounds and rounds of planning and back-and-forth that come with ANY government project planning process, followed by user testing and compliance analysis. The actual coding process was probably less than 10% of the cost. That's still high, but gov't contractors are very well compensated.
I came here expecting an eye-opening discussion regarding some some emerging theory of systems administration regarding "data romance".
Son, I am disappointed.
Good day to avoid cops. Crawl to work.