Comment WGU (Score 0) 370
As someone already mentioned. Both regionally and nationally accredited. Also very affordable.
As someone already mentioned. Both regionally and nationally accredited. Also very affordable.
Politicians are quick to say the NSA has gone too far, but none of them have the balls to say Snowden should be pardoned. Grow some balls. He apparently tried several times to bring his concerns to his superiors, only to be shut down. If he didn't do what he did, we would not know what we know, or even be having this discussion. There's no need to make him a martyr. He did what was right.
You'll find the scanner titled "Secure Update Scanner" in the Play store.
A direct detection of a gravitational wave moving the mirrors of a large scale interferometer is up next. In the next few years, Advanced LIGO (US), Advanced Virgo (Italy) and KAGRA (Japan) will come online with the hope of directly detecting gravitational waves from sources such as supernovae and coalescing binary star systems. With this kind of network, it will then be possible to coordinate both electromagnetic and gravitational searches of our sky. This is useful for many reasons, one of which is that it lets us listen to the sound of black holes colliding where no light escapes.
Exciting times!
Plus we'll finally be able properly calibrate that DHD we found...
Wow - I'm not sure you should be using the sample of bad existing code as an argument against PHP and FOR perl. Yikes.
Classification as common carrier, and true net neutrality rules (the level of net neutrality most people actually want) based on that are two different things.
And what, exactly, is the difference?
There is the classification of ISPs as common carriers - which we don't have.
Once you have the classification, you have the rules that govern common carrier ISPs - which we also do not have.
We need both. Simply reclassifying them as common carriers isn't going to do much, because we need the rules that govern them to specify exactly what they are and aren't allowed to do, and how to measure and enforce this, and what the penalties are for violations.
Until ISPs are classified as common carriers, the FCC will not have the authority to enforce any level of net neutrality - which a former FCC chairman has recently stated. I have not said, and do not believe, that we have ever had any level of net neutrality.
We had exactly that until 2005 when the FCC reclassified DSL and CATV ISPs as "information services" (not common carrier) from their previous classification of "telecommunications service" (common carrier) which they had held since the inception of the internet.
Classification as common carrier, and true net neutrality rules (the level of net neutrality most people actually want) based on that are two different things. We've never had both of those at the same time. And unless and until they're reclassified as common carriers, net neutrality is a non-starter.
I very much disagree that simply because we don't now, and have never had true net neutrality, that means we can't ever have it. We can have it, but we have to fight for it.
Because it would be illegal
Why?
What was the rule or regulation or law from Net Neutrality that made what Verizon is doing illegal?
I want someone to be specific because my point is this Verizon action has NOTHING to do with Net Neutrality, and would not be stopped by any Net Neutrality rules that the FCC put forth before they were told to stop.
So I repeat; HOW WOULD VERSION NOT BE ABLE TO DO WHAT THEY ARE DOING?
There is no current authority by the FCC (which they recently admitted) that allows them to enforce net neutrality. Even before that admission, what they had in place would not have worked as net neutrality, and was certainly never legally challenged and upheld in any court to cement it. Until ISPs are classified as common carriers, the FCC will not have the authority to enforce any level of net neutrality - which a former FCC chairman has recently stated. I have not said, and do not believe, that we have ever had any level of net neutrality. I am advocating FOR true net neutrality. That doesn't mean that what Verizon is supposedly doing doesn't violate the spirit of what people want net neutrality protection against, however.
Because it would be illegal, and they would be subject to legal repercussions, unlike now. What part of this do you find confusing?
The entity Snowden is blowing the whistle on is the same entity responsible for deciding if he should be prosecuted (or persecuted). This is an egregious conflict of interest that doesn't happen when someone blows the while on a corporation.
The first step towards the inevitable anti-Hydrogen Economy, yay!
I am tired of chrome not implementing W3C standards without using the -webkit to get it to work properly. I am not the only once concerned it is the next IE 6 but thankfully there are only a few sites which only work well in Chrome.
You seem to have no idea why IE6 was the big problem it was. It's not possible for Chrome to be "the new IE6", since:
1) It's not tied into Windows
2) It auto-updates silently, and new version adoption is VERY high among Chrome users.
3) vendor prefixes are not much of a problem compared to not implementing features at all, or implementing them badly.
Nice troll attempt, though.
Yeah, 7-digit lusers are the worst!
Wild guess: He's mixing a cheap off-line UPS with a horrible PC PSU that can't do the required hold-up time.
Ah, good point. I haven't skimped on the PSU in 15 years. It's the dumbest piece of a machine to skimp on.
Arithmetic is being able to count up to twenty without taking off your shoes. -- Mickey Mouse