Comment Re:Gots to find more ways to avoid taxes (Score 1) 533
unless you really though insurance costs would not skyrocket for the new services they provide
Competition lowers costs, not monopolies.
unless you really though insurance costs would not skyrocket for the new services they provide
Competition lowers costs, not monopolies.
I cite every hellhole third world country in the world as my reference, where this is exactly what happens, with few exceptions
You're citing examples of corrupt governments as reasons why we need to have corrupt governments.
You have an extremely poor understanding of how power works.
See above.
If you truly believe this is the problem, then you clearly have never tried to run a business in that market.
Incorrect assumption. Been there, done that, got the business cards of half the executive branch.
The story I read before this one was about a malaria vaccine that was developed in the early 90's, was known to be effective by '97, and has been awaiting approval since then, while ten million people died from the disease.
Really, though, it was only ten million families who had to lose their loved ones - that's a small price to pay for the paperwork being in order.
Who was the sad f*ck who decided to make up a confusing three letter acronym for Ebola?
But "ebola" has three syllables and "EVD" only has three.
Yeah, uh, because all "cloud" services aren't inherently ridiculous for anyone to consider secure or anything...
Trust the math, not the people.
They tried that with FX-32 on Alpha (NT4). It wasn't worth it.
I think Nadella is talking about a unified codebase, like Apple with OSX/iOS and Linux/*BSD, heck even Solaris (a few poor saps are still using that - those with Stockholm Syndrome might even comment here). It's really unlikely that Microsoft will drop the ARM arch - there are too many opportunities there.
Say what you want, but Nadella seems to be making decisions like an engineer, not a fat marketing stooge or a conniving aspie beancounter.
If you want to bring three hundred people half way around the world, don't try to do it on your bicycle.
If you enjoy bicycling far more than piloting a jumbo jet, then you should be in bicycling, not commercial aviation.
What, you don't like jumbo jets and nobody wants to pay you to ride a bicycle? Maybe you should invent the hyperloop or manage a B&B instead.
I always wanted a backdoor in my browser.
I really did try searching for how this plugin retrieval works but must not have use the right search terms.
To stay license compliant *AND* safe, Mozilla should sign the modules as they become available, and Firefox should only download them if both Mozilla's and Cisco's signatures verify.
That being done, there's very little difference between Mozilla shipping the code to you as part of a Firefox update and having the browser fetch it afterwards.
But if Mozilla is _only_ trusting Cisco's signature, then, yeah, wow, holy cow, back a truck into it.
Links welcome.
Or given that it has to be connected to a TV, the security pairing code can be displayed on the TV as well and the user enters that code in.
Anything the Chromecast can connect to is at least 720p - plenty for a QR code with a fairly beefy key.
Texas has a seaport. The other states would require extensive trucking or rail infrastructure to move the batteries in bulk. But where will the next Tesla vehicle factory be built and does the gigafactory plan to have more capacity than Motors requires?
Nonsense. For example, if you voted for Ross Perot, you're directly responsible for the Republicans losing the White House.
That's silly - exit polls showed more Perot voters would have otherwise voted for Clinton than for Bush.
Either go back to your government as intended; that is to say, without political parties, or accept the fact that there are, in fact, political parties, and change your government setup to work with that.
That right there, though, is some good stuff.
ICANN always argued that regulation / enforcement / policing of the registrars was not their job in response to complaints about many registrar's activities
Even if the activities are illegal (statute or Common Law)? If not ICANN, than who else? This is one of the problems with giving ICANN a monopoly.
"60 day hold/no registrar transfer period" after you renew your domain or change the name of any of your WHOIS contacts
Is that not disclosed in their Terms of Service or is it more like, "big boobs on TV so I didn't bother to read the agreement"?
Not saying it's not scummy, but scummy and fraud are different. If it's not in their ToS but they do it anyway, it's probably illegal as unlawful holding of property (some courts in some jurisdictions have recognized domains as property). Regardless, experienced ski instructors usually advise you're gonna have a bad time if you register with GoDaddy.
Also, for those that don't know, they've been doing this for ten years and ICANN bothered to do something about it a decade or so after their peak.
Up to you whether you think this is good governance or not.
Great generation defeated Nazis, landed on the moon; Baby Boomer generation built Internet and tackled racial and gender issues. What are we doing other that building surveillance state and wealth inequality?
We're trying to deal with the surveillance state and the wealth inequality that was produced by the system the "Greatest" generation created. Likely several generations will be required to dig out from under it.
Real Programmers don't write in FORTRAN. FORTRAN is for pipe stress freaks and crystallography weenies. FORTRAN is for wimp engineers who wear white socks.