Comment Re:100 year old survival knowledge in PDF files??? (Score 1) 272
Pfft, just the corners off. That way you'll be prepared when the robots come to kill you.
Pfft, just the corners off. That way you'll be prepared when the robots come to kill you.
True, but it's unlikely that even after The Great Cataclysm(tm), that you'll ever have to build everything from scratch again. There's instruction manuals.
Foxfire has been doing this the mid 1960s. How to raise and slaughter animals. How to grow crops. How to bootstrap iron working, including gunsmithing. Everything you need, and with all the mammy-pamby crap from "urban homesteaders" and preppers. Practical knowledge from people that were doing it daily.
And then you drop it...
Learn Cowboy Neal's Secret for
Couldn't the government just take down the DNS entries of those sites, rather than install malware?
Not if you want to track the people visiting the site.
It makes more sense that this was done by script kiddies with an agenda.
A little from column A... A little from column B...
Given today's job market, I'll bet a lot of CS grads would be happy to maintain a business critical COBOL code base.
I've never been a great FPS player, but I do enjoy the genre, or at least I used to. (Apparently, kids these days think camping at spawn points is cool. In my day, that would get you kicked.) I really liked BF2. I liked hopping in anti aircraft batteries and gibbetting whole groups of people until inevitably someone stuck a bomb on the back on detonated it. Loads of fun. When I got BF3, I thought, "What the fuck is this?" Every gun, every add-on had to be unlocked. It was stupid, and made an already frustrating game, unplayable. I was a goddamn sniper, without a goddamn scope! WTF?
Even the single player campaign was boring and by the numbers. It was almost as bad as a rail-shooter, that I couldn't bother to finish it. And that's when I realized that I'd probably never play another FPS. (Well that, and the stupidity of the COD Black Ops demo where I had to walk to a U2, climb up a latter, turn on the plane, fly up, then watch a cut scene. Pointless.)
I'm surprised they didn't mention the bird in Mary Poppins - the one that sings sitting on Mary's fingers. I always thought that was the first use of Anamatronics. That and the Parrot Head on Mary's umbrella.
you trusted your BC to some yahoo that ran a fricking Magic:The Gathering trading club...really?
What? You don't do all your banking at the comic book shop?
"That's libertarians for you â" anarchists who want police protection from their slaves."
-- Kim Stanely Robinson, _Green_Mars_
The USPS has a history of supporting OCR research, as part of its need to quickly and accurately route mail to its intended destination. That's main reason why ZIP codes and their later evolution of ZIP+4 came about.
That said, the National Security Complex has used the this system to institute the Mail Isolation Control and Tracking, which is a program to expand what used to be law enforcement surveillance technique (mail covers), as part of mass warrantless surveillance.
thanks. I'll have to check this out.
This service is already available. It's called Your Momâ. It's free to use, but they do ask you to log in from time to time.
Wow, with the exception of the names of planets, that's a whole lot of meaningless fan service cameos.
But fan boys are cheap right?
Top Ten Things Overheard At The ANSI C Draft Committee Meetings: (5) All right, who's the wiseguy who stuck this trigraph stuff in here?