Exactly. By having the dogs already IN the cars, there will be no waiting.
Thus, any use of the dog will be allowed or protected and the "search" charade will continue as-is, just without the wait for them to deliver a dog to the scene.
Maybe they are just getting tired of endless upgrade-treadmill running for nearly zero gain in benefits or features. Technology is still interesting, but as we get older we see the "dark side" of technological improvements, including a whole new world of ways corps can fuck people over.
Actually, this sort of happened with NetFlix too. The older WDTV Live Plus box I have has a NetFlix app in it, but they changed their "standards" and the older app doesn't recognize family member segmentation. The newer NetFlix apps ask who is watching so it can keep stats and faves for each family member, the older app did not support this. If I use the older app, anything I watch will affect the tracking for other users in my family. Fortunately, the problem is just an annoyance at worst, since after the "upgrade" it still will play videos. This is good, they didn't completely break compatibility so that the older apps will at least still play, but without the new "tracking" feature(s).
I love books. Well, i love reading them. There are people who do love books, such as an erstwhile coworker that told me she cried when they were lost or damaged, or something like that. She convincingly conveyed to me that she was emotionally attached to her books. She also no longer works here.
Yeah, the prosecution was heavy handed but that completely overlooks the fact that Swartz broke the fucking law and was a total idiot about it.
That completely overlooks the fact that threatening a young man with 35 years in prison is going to put unbearable stress on him
He had - until he took the coward's way out by taking his own life - the constitutional right to a fair trial. He could have defended himself or had an attorney do it for him. It is not uncommon in this country for prosecutors - particularly long before a trial has begun - to suggest that they will shoot for the moon with punishment. However the maximum possible sentence is very rarely handed down.
In the end, though, he knew what he did was illegal. He was never granted access to that wiring closet; the mere fact it was unlocked does not mean he had the right to abuse it. The charges that were going to be brought against him had more to do with the methods he used than the number of papers he was trying to release.
He didn't deserve to die for what he did, or to go to jail for 35 years
Nobody but Aaron Swartz killed Aaron Swartz. Nothing he did was honorable or worthy of being honored.
what basically amounts to civil copyright infringement
No, he did more than just infringe on copyright. His followers try to make it sound as if that was the meat of the charges but that overlooks the more egregious parts of what he did. He opened a closet at the library and connected through there (rather than using the connection in his own office). He then used so much bandwidth in the library that he made it more difficult for other users to access the resources they were there for. The real charges are along the lines of vandalism, disruption, and breaking and entering.
But, YMMV. And by all means go Japan !
I'm sure you had the same level of skepticism towards an article published in Rolling Stone last fall.
Are you referring to the college rape article that they are getting so much flack over now? I don't read Rolling Stone with any regularity so I hadn't noticed it before the coverage of it that came recently..
That said, any article from Rolling Stone is a far cry from any article in National Review. National Review exists to push a political agenda. They were founded by conservatives, they are staffed by conservatives, they provide a voice for conservative beliefs. Rolling Stone may lean a bit to the left (though only on the American spectrum where "left" would be considered "right of center" in any other nation on earth), but the National Review proudly proclaims their lean towards the hard right.
Furthermore, if you are talking about the rape article, what was the political motivation of it? This National Review article - like every other article they publish - is published to further a political agenda. I'm not aware of anyone who takes a pro-rape stance. Yeah, it was irresponsible to publish an article on a rape when the sources were not properly vetted - and some people suffered as a result who should not have - but it did not serve any obvious political purpose or any agenda beyond selling magazines.
Two wrights don't make a rong, they make an airplane. Or bicycles.