Comment Re:Thunderbolt (Score 2) 392
Isn't Thunderbolt related to mini-Displayport?
they use the same port geometry http://www.cnet.com/uk/news/co...
Isn't Thunderbolt related to mini-Displayport?
they use the same port geometry http://www.cnet.com/uk/news/co...
The driver works and pays for the upkeep of the car and pays a weekly or monthly fee to the taxi company.
Not quite.. the driver pays what is called(in Scotland anyway) a "weekly weigh in". this covers the rental of the car and the rental of the tech by which they will the clients(meter and bookings equipment)
The mechanical upkeep of the car is in the hands of the owner of the vehicle and not the driver
the cleaning of the car is the drivers responsibility as is fuelling it.
Linux has 2,000 new developers and gets 10,000 patches for each version Linux recently saw "busiest development cycle" in its history.
The new developers are helping fuel an ever-bigger Linux community, according to the latest Linux Kernel Development report, which will
be released today by the Linux Foundation. The report is expected to be available at THIS LINK.
"Spaced out on their pot"? Methinks we have found one of those drug warriors.
"Why, it's even worse when them kids is hopped up on the goofballs!"
ooooh lucky I had my "BRASS EYE" in to catch that reference
And how the fuck would you suggest that Uber "find a way to stop this from happening?"
Oh.. say they have to go through the same checks that licensed taxi drivers go through.
In Scotland that includes criminal records checks.
Some ISPs have their own equipment in the local exchanges (LLU)
In reality they lease equipment from BT and it's maintained by BT Openreach engineers
Yeah, but this is how it was with ADSL too.
Back when ADSL rolled out, and people only got 512kbps, there were no limits. You could literally download constantly at maximum speed for the entire month.
Then along came ADSL Max and people got bumped to 1 - 2mbps. Suddenly caps started getting introduced, so low that your speed had gone up but the amount you could download had literally declined by several orders of magnitude.
So whilst with the advent of basic FTTC unlimited has once again become the norm, don't count on currently unlimited bandwidth meaning perpetually unlimited bandwidth. It wouldn't be the first time in the UK that increases in speed have seemingly paradoxically meant decreases in the amount of data you're actually allowed to download. That's exactly what happened last time.
ummmmmm... nah , speeds went up to 1024 down
I have NEVER had anything other than unlimited with DSL.. EVER.. there have always been options for unmetered bandwidth.
so it's not what happened "last time" at all
Three owner agrees to buy O2 for £10.25 billion
http://www.cnet.com/uk/news/th...
I am aware that the competition commission bods will want assurances as they did when Three bought out O2's Irish business however........ it seems to me that perhaps Sky is betting on Three
FORTRAN is not a flower but a weed -- it is hardy, occasionally blooms, and grows in every computer. -- A.J. Perlis