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Comment Re:Not me (Score 1) 152

The way this works with British Telecom is that you have multiple SIDs on your router. There's one you connect to that you have control over, and there are also additional SIDs like "BTWifi-with-FON" and "BTWifi-X" with separate IP address and logging that you have no control over. I think that BT internet customers have a free access to these all over the country and if they opt-out of this they can then get it disabled on their own home router. This way BT claims they literally have millions of WIFI access points all over the country, yet the experience is terrible if actually the network is on residential ADSL (upstream capped to 448kb/s for instance).

Incidentally I've wondered whether you could just replace their ADSL or VDSL (FTTC) router with something of your own without these additional access points and still been able to access their national network of access points for free.

Comment Re:Try Australia on for size (Score 2) 940

Isn't rental income taxable, which is presumably why those other things are deductible? Same elsewhere although people to whinge about.

I live in London, and I can tell you that it can get much worse. I suspect it's more about the overseas investors than anything else, who buy knowing that the prices will go up and the returns are good enough that they don't even bother renting them out. Councils around here are reacting by considering laws that will allow them to forcibly use all the empty homes to help ease the housing issue, or by introducing special taxes for non-domiciled owners.

Comment Re:Real culprit is taxes (Score 1) 940

I really hate property tax, it's so offensive. For instance if you live in an area that gentrifies, why should you have to sell your home because suddenly you're paying more tax? Maggie Thatcher got rid of this in the 80s and replaced it with a council tax that everybody pays, irrespective of whether you're a renter or owner. Her first attempts at this caused riots in Scotland, but hey! I think ultimately it's fairer in a "we all pay the same" kind of way, but I suspect that 1) it hits poorer people harder than property taxes did, and 2) it removes a brake that constrained house price inflation.

Comment Re:Look at the UK housing market (Score 1) 940

They start sub-dividing existing properties and turning them in to multiple flats. West London for instance near where I live has street after street of what would appear to be terraced town houses. Grand old buildings that were once individual homes or a home with an apartment underneath for the servants. Now? Six flats at least in each, and each flat selling for more than £400,000. Have a look online for the terms "freehold" and "leasehold", and then you'll know a whole new level home ownership legal issues.

Comment Re:We've only got ourselves to blame (Score 1) 381

The whole healthcare thing doesn't exactly help does it? Talk about a powerful tool for trapping people in work. I don't know if it's still true but a few years ago I heard that Americans were one illness away from bankruptcy. Even though I lived in the US in my early 20s when I was mostly healthy, I felt a weight come off my shoulders when I moved north of the border to Canada. The bills I saw when I broke my arm in the US were outrageous to me as a Briton, especially considering the quality of service I got in the hospital.

Comment Re:Russia's longer hours... (Score 4, Interesting) 381

They get paid for their hours in China though. Our software engineers in Shanghai always asked for permission to work overtime before doing it. Could you imagine the cultural shift in the US if Americans did the same compared with the current situation where there's no hard boundary?

Comment Re:Good luck with that (Score 1) 181

Interesting... it's labelled incorrectly as "2160p" on Keepvid, but it does appear to be 7680x4320.

http://keepvid.com/?url=https%...

 Download MP4  - (Max 480p)
 Download MP4  - 720p
 Download MP4  - 144p (Video Only) - 1.5 MB
 Download MP4  - 240p (Video Only) - 3.6 MB
 Download MP4  - 360p (Video Only) - 4.4 MB
 Download MP4  - 480p (Video Only) - 9.5 MB
 Download MP4  - 720p (Video Only) - 18.4 MB
 Download MP4  - 1080p (Video Only) - 35.3 MB
 Download MP4  - 1440p (Video Only) - 81.9 MB
 Download MP4  - 2160p (Video Only) - 316 MB
 Download MP4  - 2160p-2304p (Video Only) - 158.9 MB
 Download M4A  - 128 kbps (Audio Only) - 1.9 MB
 Download FLV  - 240p
 Download 3GP  - 144p
 Download 3GP  - 240p
 Download WEBM  - 360p
 Download WEBM  - 144p (Video Only) - 1 MB
 Download WEBM  - 240p (Video Only) - 1.6 MB
 Download WEBM  - 360p (Video Only) - 3.2 MB
 Download WEBM  - 480p (Video Only) - 5.7 MB
 Download WEBM  - 720p (Video Only) - 11.9 MB
 Download WEBM  - 1080p (Video Only) - 21.4 MB
 Download WEBM  - 1440p (Video Only) - 66 MB
 Download WEBM  - 2160p (Video Only) - 198.6 MB
 Download WEBM  - 128 kbps (Audio Only) - 1.8 MB
*NEW* Â Download MP3 Â - 64/128 kbps

Comment Re:"stealing just like stealing anything else" (Score 1) 408

Isn't he saying that a bunch of laws were inherited from the UK.

There are still many connections with the old country: look at how various commonwealth nations immediately amended their laws to match the UK when the British Parliament recently changed the laws of succession for the monarchy.

Comment Re:Should've closed in 2013? (Score 1) 422

If France had American-style bankruptcy laws they could've filed for chapter 11 and reorganized, jettisoning the debt owed to former employees or at worst, making them accept stock in the "new" company instead of cash.

That sounds horrendous. Why should the ex-employees get shafted like that? Is the business more important than the people?

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