Comment Re: Yeah, be a man! (Score 1) 608
The same agreement that is provided to every person working with his kind of clearance. You go in there to provide a service and not disclose to unauthorized individuals.
The same agreement that is provided to every person working with his kind of clearance. You go in there to provide a service and not disclose to unauthorized individuals.
The same agreement that is provided to every person working with his kind of clearance. You go in there to provide a service and not disclose to unauthorized individuals.
That's what it is about in its simplest form.
(Note to Apple: Bring back HyperCard, please!)
At least this time around, it might not come with an inbuilt attack vector (courtesy of being able link in application objects).
It is funny you try to claim he is a whistleblower when he made no effort to be a whistleblower. Selling IC secrets to the highest bidder is hardly whistleblowing.
It's even worse when one proves it by using it to gain safe passage between one hellhole(China) and the next(Russia). Those plane tickets weren't free, y'know.
No administration in its right mind is going to pardon him for it is political suicide. They're more likely to pardon/protect someone that "handles" him and all the other loose ends.
That, and good luck trying to get a clearance with your name on that petition.
Nope, but don't let facts get in the way of *your* narrative!
Nice bullshitting by Apple, though.
Given that it's made with a labor market that depends on a constant supply of desperate people, no thanks.
That's a case of being inordinately lucky. On the other hand, the US system doesn't need such good fortune - as education is not locked out like it is in other parts of the world.
What of individuals that routinely get stuck in a low-tier track but show high-tier competence at the wrong time?
That kind of rigidity is worse than the UK system, since it explicitly locks out education for having the wrong number. Any talent or otherwise demonstrated competence useful enough for higher-tier work gets killed off if not supported by The Number. The N-1 approach doesn't help since it throws you far enough behind to be clearly seen as a lower-tier individual and thus only worth lower-tier work arrangements.
UK-style streaming enforces a rigidity that have lifetime implications if someone is unlucky enough to be on the wrong side of the score.
In your system, despite having technical talent, low secondary scores would have shunted me off to a vocationally-oriented school that would provide a very limited scope of highly precarious work opportunities. I would have to possess some favorable peerage status (or be from a very wealthy/influential family) to overcome that in any reasonable amount of time.
On the other hand, the US system allowed me to fix my issues, attend a good university, and graduate at the top of my class. That, and I managed to find good FTE work for a non-agency-based employer during said education - something equally impossible for my UK equivalent.
Mandatory streaming, as practiced outside the US, only makes the problem worse by divining one's entire life based on the performance of a small number of tests. Make the wrong score, get locked out of education save for bottom-tier, perpetually-unskilled vocational schooling.
On the other hand, the US system does not lock in status and concentrates on continual display of merit. It takes anyone and gives them the best opportunity to succeed. In the US system, AP Honors is a nice thing to have but not necessary for entry. Competence is recognized without the rigidity that you want to see in education.
While it is admirable to try to speed-bin people, it makes things worse. For those caught on the wrong side, it amplifies faults while nullifying any gains.
Zoneminder brings in a lot more than just itself. It's heavy enough that one can rule out using it on most embedded devices and lower-end PCs.
On the other hand, if you have something that can keep up with all the camera threads, it's worth a try.
Apparently someone forgot that it was a movie, not an instruction manual.
The moon is made of green cheese. -- John Heywood