Comment Re:Comcast Business Class (Score 5, Funny) 291
If I had only two bullets and was locked in a room with Comcast, Hitler, and Osama Bin Laden... I'd shoot Comcast twice.
Well, yeah, because the other two are already dead.
If I had only two bullets and was locked in a room with Comcast, Hitler, and Osama Bin Laden... I'd shoot Comcast twice.
Well, yeah, because the other two are already dead.
potentially turning every coffee consumer's device into a tracking beacon
Sensationalize much? Maybe it's just to tell which Starbucks you're closest to so it know where to place the order or narrow down the nearby store results? That would be the more likely reason.
Do people seriously think that any app requesting location services is turned into an always-on tracking beacon sending their every move back to Big Data(tm)?
Reactor Online, Sensors Online, Weapons Online, All Systems Nominal.
Don't just update the existing crumbling infrastructure, build better infrastructure!
If you're going to raise the Federal Gas tax by $0.10, you might as well use it to build Hyperloop infrastructure that individuals could ride for free:
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> because they are low priority for them
If they are such a low priority for them, why bother taking the statements and filing the report?
> I don't really see no moral problem
I guess someone should have graded your essays a little more closely instead of relying on a robot.
You mean like the ASUS Chromebox?
It's also possible he just collected a few different but similar questions and consolidated them into one question.
If they were really concerned about spying, shouldn't they go with a Nexus that runs stock Android?
Did she bequeath the iPad or the apps/data on the iPad and the iTunes account to go with it? I'm pretty sure that even if the device is locked, that you can still do a factory reset on it and then have access to the iPad. Granted you would lose all the apps and data on the device, but you would still have the device to use as you wish.
If she bequeathed the iTunes account, then the account email and password should have been in the will or related documents, if not, then it's reasonable to assume she just left the hardware which you can reset and then have full use of.
Since it's unlikely to get 45% of all internet subscribers, consider a reasonable subset of them such as just America/Europe subscribers. However, if it were $50 and I had access to every movie/TV show ever made, I'd pay that every month, and they would probably only need the America/Europe market. Maybe an extra $20/mo for access to 'new releases' provided they were available on the standard plan after maybe 60 (90?) days. They could even do an extra 'HD' surcharge of $20-$30/mo I used to pay more than that for cable and only got access to whatever the channels were running at that time (maybe time-shifted with a DVR, but still required them to run it at some point while my DVR was recording and still had to deal with commercials). I would definitely pay that for access to everything that I could easily search and select from a list and instantly start watching something.
Netflix Instant is nice and all, but it doesn't have the best selection. I've found most of the streaming sites (Netflix Instant, Hulu Plus, and Amazon Prime), all have about the same stuff. I stream a lot from home, but we always run the risk that the streaming provider could drop a show I like at any point. I think paying a premium to ensure it's always available and that everything ever made is available, is worth it.
Obviously, this is an amazing idea that would revolutionize media content for this new internet age, which means it will never happen.
My guess would be the code in 'System Idle Process'.
The hardest part of climbing the ladder of success is getting through the crowd at the bottom.