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Comment Re:Personally? (Score 5, Interesting) 702

Last time I went to the DMV I walked in, picked up a number, waited about 5 mins, talked to a teller and was out the door all on my lunch break.

Last time I tried to buy high speed internet it took 2 hours on the phone, 3 customer service reps, and 2 canceled installer appointments (I got the self install kit) to get my cable modem registered. After all of that they didn't even remember to bill me for it. When they did remember to bill me for it several months later they sent some installers to put filters on the line. They didn't do it right and disconnected me instead. They sent another 2 installers over to fix it but those two forgot to put the filters on the line so it was all for nothing anyway.

Comment Re:This is BS (Score 1) 484

At the moment being the key word. My company built 6 computers a few years ago that had this cap problem. One of them failed at 2 years all of the rest failed by 4 years with 3 all failing in the same month. Looking at the motherboards the vented cap was easily visible. You might get lucky but chances are if you have a defective cap it will fail within a few years if you use the computer regularly.

Comment Re:Well then, (Score 1) 780

Actually there is no Constitutional Requirement for a secret ballot but there is no requirement for a public ballot either. Up until 1880 most US elections were by public ballot. The decision to use a secret or public ballot is left up to each individual state. Most states now use a secret ballot that is specifically designed to be untraceable to a specific voter but that is not a requirement. All other records are generally public information including your voter registration records and whether you voted or not. Since a petition only supports one view point it is not possible to have a secret petition that is in any way verifiable.

Apple Orders 10 Million Tablets? 221

Arvisp writes "According to a blog post by former Google China president Kai-Fu Lee, Apple plans to produce nearly 10 million tablets in the still-unannounced product's first year. If Lee's blog post is to be believed, Apple plans to sell nearly twice as many tablets as it did iPhones in the product's first year."

Comment Re:Ridiculous privacy revealed. We should say NO (Score 1) 262

How about if it were illegal to publish my personal information without my express consent? Oh wait, it is. Do you know why? Because unless you live in a tent, keep all your money in cash, get payed in cash, and don't file your taxes there is no way to keep your personal information hidden. Privacy laws exist because it is not reasonable to expect a person to live like that.

Comment Re:Ridiculous privacy revealed. We should say NO (Score 1) 262

I am sure you would love to have all your personal information published. Where you shop, what you eat, what you buy, who you call, what you read, what you watch on TV, what websites you browse. After all your ISP knows your entire online history, they should be able to act freely with that information. You phone company should be able to do whatever they want with your phone records. Your credit card company, perfectly fine for them to sell your shopping history. Its their information after all. Hey, even Uncle Sam can get into the act and sell your tax returns to advertisers. That would raise billions of dollars. Budget deficit solved! You are so smart.

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