Comment Re:Dell, HP, Panasonic (Score 1) 417
You don't get out much, do you? They are firmly entrenched in the enterprise both in the PC and server markets.
You don't get out much, do you? They are firmly entrenched in the enterprise both in the PC and server markets.
He knows what POS means. But calling it a piece of shit isn't entirely the fault of the manufacturer. It's also the fault of the retailer or installer for not changing it to something that is unique to that location or company.
I own a padlock that allows me to set the combination by removing and rotating 4 dials to the letters or numbers that I want. It ships with a default combination of 0000. If I used it straight out of the package, does that make the lock a piece of shit just because it has a easy to guess default password? Or does it make me an idiot for using the lock without changing the password?
FYI, Penn spells his last name with a J, as in Penn Jillette.
Ah, I see they do offer comparable pricing to Boost. 1GB with service is $30. 2GB is $40, but if I use 1.5GB they credit the difference. Sounds like it's worth trying.
You can change his plan too. Boost offers 2GB/mo 4G LTE for $30/mo, which simply degrades to 3G when he hits 2GB.
I don't bother with the higher plans. I play Ingress a lot, use it constantly for mail, and I do a lot of web stuff when not home. Like searching for reviews and price comparisons when I'm out shopping. I also occasionally tether my laptop if I need to do something and don't have wifi available. At home and when I'm in an office, I get on wifi. It's not a bandwidth saving measure though, it's just faster to be on a fat pipe than anything wireless trying to penetrate buildings. When I check my usage, I'm usually only at 1.2 to 1.5 GB per month.
I ran into my first problem with Boost a month ago. They messed up provisioning Visual Voicemail when I switched phones, so it isn't sending transcribed messages to me.
It would seem that they're targeting a small market with this new plan.
Ah, they got their site up. It was throwing an error last night.
If that's the story I'm thinking of, we're not resurrecting the mammoth, we're cloning it. Those are usually introducing the DNA into somewhat comparable modern animals. It's not like the mammoth would wake up and say "Hey, what happened? Last thing I remember was eating frozen grass in the tundra." That's assuming mammoths could talk.
Yet for all that, it still can't fit into your pocket or plug into any HDMI TV without an adapter or cable. Sometimes having less is more...and paying more for less is better.
In this case, Google just can't be bothered supporting their old API any more.
You get what you pay for...
5) If you are physically attacked, either do not resist, or resist in a way that overpowers the cop safely and quickly, no middle ground.
The former suggestion will not end well for the citizen being attacked, and the latter will definitely not end well for the citizen.
Do you have any suggestions or recommendations on how to overpower a cop safely and quickly that isn't going to end up with you in handcuffs in jail, in a fetal position learning how much a nightstick can hurt, and/or dead?
All it will probably do is cause police to take their sweet time writing a citation until the dog gets there.
Fine, what did the chimps ask their representatives?
"I can haz bannanaz plz?"
Chimps today...rats and rhesus monkeys tomorrow!
"Actually works"? More accurately "works better than the only alternative". That's a very low bar, and they don't clear it by much. Using the nVidia driver on Linux is a giant pain in the butt unless your chosen distribution happens to ship with their binary drivers and you're OK using outdated drivers. It's also probably the largest software source of system instability for consumer Linux.
At the time my 5 year old wanted to help and learn how to fix the car so I let him do most of it and he managed to do it in a little more than a hour.
So you basically proved that the incompetent toddlers working at the dealership probably would take 2+ hours to do the job...
Fixing all of the bugs in the world won't stop methods like social engineering. That is why I also included user training. Sure it'll never be 100% because people are flawed and often stupid, but it's an important part of the equation.
Numeric stability is probably not all that important when you're guessing.