Comment Re:"Knowledge-based" questions are really bad (Score 1) 349
Wow, so getting scammed by former co-workers is easy. As is anyone who knows how to Google LinkedIn.
Wow, so getting scammed by former co-workers is easy. As is anyone who knows how to Google LinkedIn.
Yeah, 'hard'. Take the street address and get the public property record from the purchase and assume a 30-year loan from the date of purchase. Not hard to estimate at ALL unless there was a substantial down payment.
How do you expect people to measure their consumption of goods such as public roadways?
Hardly matters. Commercial trucks do all the damage to roads and that's the reason for the upkeep expenses. But that "stimulates the economy" too much for anyone to try to go after more money from them.
That really doesn't mean it needs quoted.
But they couldn't act on it in advance or they'd risk revealing just how much they know.
What's the point of quoting a single word? Is their word choice relevant?
Being dressed as women has nothing to do with putting 'penetration' in quotes, unless there is some sort of joke I'm missing. Why is it in quotes?
It was a demo of what can be done with the Unity engine. A full demo of a level of Mario64 was just the developer getting carried away.
In fact, another commenter recompiled this via Unity with WebGL support - no plugin required:
https://e309ac2f88e3628091cd5d...
Apparently another commenter recompiled the source through a newer version of Unity to be WebGL compatible - runs in the browser directly:
https://e309ac2f88e3628091cd5d...
Right - it's part of your contract when you become a member at Sam's Club. Better to be banned than sued for breach of contract.
Right - and once you become a monopoly, you behave like one without tight regulation - which we're lacking. That's why it's time for municipalities to start offering Internet along with water, sometimes electricity, contracted group trash pickup, etc. The Internet still needs a backbone and lots of secondary networks, but I think last mile is no longer a viable consumer product thanks to the telcos screwing that up.
Pretty sure just increasing a timeout or two at most
Depends on the company. If they're large enough that this requires changing at the server level - not every employer is just going to change server settings for one employee.
And what about VoIP? The guy works from home. Just Googling over a Satellite link is too high of a latency to maintain your sanity.
because when new homes are built it's not like they are magically added to comcast's database.
That's why their database should be of serviced addresses. That way you're not magically covered when a new address exists.
I would prefer that. I would pay as much as a few hundred just to have that assurance before closing on a house. I just bought a home with no assurances of broadband, but for some of my choices I really wasn't sure and it weighed heavily in my decision.
"Gravitation cannot be held responsible for people falling in love." -- Albert Einstein