Comment Re:Send/recieve well over 100 per day (Score 1) 835
It's HIPAA
It's HIPAA
Put the eel back in the river or ocean. Shut down the aquarium. Turn off the lights. That would be green. This isn't.
go forth and explore.
http://www.scribd.com/doc/21654883/The-Golden-Book-of-Chemistry-Experiments
I would definitely let my kids do this.
Best advice from a friend who travels frequently to China.
1. Get a cheap laptop. Use it. Wipe it when you return. Presume it is compromised at all times.
2. Get a cheap disposable cellphone. Throw it way when you return. Presume that all conversations and messages are being read by someone else. They are.
His company issues him a cell phone and computers expressly for China which are cleaned upon return. He is not allowed to take his usual company issued equipment into China and is strongly advised not to take any personal computing equipment as well.
Leave your good stuff at home. If you insist on taking your good stuff, wipe it clean upon return and restore from a known backup.
As to circumventing the rules in place within China, give it up.
Whatever you take to China will likely be hacked. Get over it.
Photoshop Elements is a good choice. I have over 15,000 images. The windows version is good at organizing. You can tag, group, etc. Once you've collected the tags, etc, you can write the information to the actual images as exif metadata so that you are not dependent upon the embedded Microsoft Access db they use. You can also leave the images where they are in PSE and don't need to move them around or stick them in a proprietary db.
For comparison I've also tried Photoshop Lightroom, Apple's Apperture, and Iphoto (the latter two are os/x only). I found PSE to be superior to any of these and cheaper too.
I've heard that Picasa is good too but I have no experience with it.
Hope that helps.
Nice article.
A waste of time, ones, and zeros.
Neither Adobe nor Apple have any reason to compromise unless and until the Feds get involved and force the issue in which case the solution will be worse than the disease.
Let them both eat cake.
(Disclaimer: I love the closed environment of the iPhone and iPad. It keeps some of the junk out of my way.)
These CEO nuts must come from some place in outer space. Perhaps there is a nebula somewhere that births the likes of Verizon's CEO, CitiBank's CEO, etc. Certainly they never had a mother.
I hate Verizon. If they were the only carrier available to me I would do without. As bad as AT&T (my cell carrier) and Cox (my cable provider) are, they combined and squared could not approach the level of poor service I have experienced with Verizon.
Verizon. Never. Ever. One of the absolute worst companies.
I had a stint of several years without corporate insurance. The situation is grim and I can only tell you what I ended up doing.
I too had a family (3 kids and a wife). I found a private plan with Blue Cross that cost around $1200/month and considered it a steal. (Although I was not affected, I heard horror stories about individuals who were unable to get private insurance at any cost.) The coverage was similar to my prior corporate plan but with higher deductibles and more gate-keeping by our primary care physician.
After a year of this I looked around for an alternative and moved to a high-deductible plan with Aetna (deductibles were $5k/person; $15K/family) and opened an HSA. I contributed the maximum allowed to the HSA each year (note, this is not a FSA!). For the remaining years this was the approach I took and it worked well but no one got seriously ill, we didn't need any hospitalization, and only used a hospital once for my daughter's broken foot. For the duration I was with Aetna's high-deductible plan, they paid nothing, but my cost was only $612/month and I got the tax benefits of the HSA.
Absent a health plan you are paying retail for all medical services vs. the negotiated cost your insurer has obtained. You still end up paying a lot (all?) out-of-pocket but at a reduced rate. The same applies to prescription drugs. This negotiated cost business is the secret sauce of the industry. You go to your doctor and he charges you $100 for the office visit and $300 for an x-ray. But Aetna has negotiated these fees to be $65 and $125 respectively which is what you end up paying unless you've reached your $5K deductible. If you've got the money in your HSA you pay it from there using pre-tax dollars. If you don't have any insurance (or the doctor doesn't take your plan) then you pay the whole retail price ($400 in this example).
We had no dental nor eye care coverage for the duration but both can be paid using the HSA account.
In both policies a pregnancy was specifically excluded but we had finished our family by then so it was not an issue for us.
I hope this helps.
Oh, just noticed the rest of the post. I thought you wanted to play golf at the Masters tournament. Silly me.
Well, if you can't play golf, then keep going to school. It puts off the real work to some later day.
He has not acquired a fortune; the fortune has acquired him. -- Bion