Uber have been shut down in cities in the following countries:
That's the problem today with too much damned govt. rules, regulations and stranglehold on innovation.
Geez, if we had the amounts of rules and regulations a 100 years ago that we have today, we'd certainly NOT likely have all the inventions and businesses we have today.
No, that pollutes too much. No you need a permit for this, and this, and this...and well, we don't permit that at all. Are you diverse enough in your company? Do you have medical? Well, you need a license to even think about building and testing that and certainly not around here. You want to sell what across state lines? You want to drive what across state lines? I'm sorry but we have to tax that. Etc.
Shit....Henry Ford couldn't have done business today as a start up.
But I do try to make damned sure I double check my directory I'm in, as well as the command before I hit enter.
I've blown stuff up before, but mostly as other users...likely that I wasn't being as careful when in as those users as I was when I'm wielding root around.
I used to think she was pretty hot back on the old Star Trek days....
Well, sounds like she had a full life....say hello to Leonard, Deforest and James for us all!!
Seriously, the unrest is brewing in our towns. The powder keg is filled to the brim, all it takes is a spark, and any kind will do, to blow it up. You're getting close to a critical mass of people who are severely unhappy with how things are going, the only thing missing is a focal point for this anger. As soon as a justification is found to vent that anger, you have a riot.
Seriously? Critical Mass? Seriously?
I kinda doubt it...this is pretty isolated. Seems mostly to just be a problem in the few highly packed urban centers in the US. You don't see this type of behavior, or even sympathy to it in most of the US.
And for the most part, I think the 24/7 news channels blow it up to much more than it actually is. They often choose camera angles to try to make it look like more people than it is.
The majority if folks in the US rarely if ever have a personal encounter with the police in their cities. The majority of US citizens while concerned that these isolated events are coming to our attention, they also don't see it as much a problem in their local areas or states.
However, there are limited limits. The old "you can't yell fire in a crowded movie house" comes to mind.
I should think the same rules apply to social media? I mean, that tweet that went out saying "there's going to be a PURGE at 3pm..etc" could the powers that be not have that taken down, blocked, etc?
I"m guessing no mechanism now..but shouldn't be hard to figure how to put filters on there, no?
I don't say this type thing lightly either, it is a slippery slope...in that righteous expressions that may be controversial, political and all could be in jeopardy, but I think it is something to be discussed.
You have plenty of rights to free speech, but incitement to riot isn't one of them.
At the very least...track down the folks that tweeted to riot, and throw the book at them. Maybe just use existing law to get those doing this would be better than a censorship method like I first proposed...it might not STOP a riot as well, but after awhile people *might* actually start getting wise that it isn't smart to incite a riot on social media of any form.
Compare the policies of the Democrat party with those of the Conservative Party in the UK. The Tories are left of the Democrats, that makes the Democrats a right-wing party and the Republicans further out than Genghis Khan.
And that comparison has exactly what to do with US politics?
We're talking left vs right here in America...not the rest of the world which leans far enough left to be socialist in so many ways.
I consider Obama to be very left in his views, and if he'd not gone checked by congress, would take us down the European path.
I figure if you want to live European style, move to Europe. The US broke off from Europe many moons ago because we did not want to be European. The majority of us still don't.
Most of the idiot Apple 'Geniuses' I've encountered have near full-sleeve tattoos going to damn near their palm.
I haven't ever seen this at the Apple Store here and this is New Orleans, where anything goes...??!?!
...I have not voted R or D since 2004, except when Elizabeth Warren ran for Senate.
So, as of this point, neither of the parties is currently Left enough for you?
Were there no American companies at all they could consider FIRST?!?!?!
Not sure about that, all the Apple Stores I've been in there was no shortage of full sleeved tattooed clerks.
Wow..where do you live?
I mean, hell, I live in New Orleans...where pretty much ANYTHING goes, and I rarely see people with that much tattoo work done on them.
Most people that could afford an iWatch are gonna have 'real' jobs...and you generally can't be all painted up from head to toe, with piercings galore and work in an office, etc.
So, even in a town where wild and different is the norm...folks with enough tattoos to make it in a circus show are very much in the minority. And like I said, generally...those folks are not the market for an expensive toy like the iWatch.
I've never seen any of the Apple Store employees here with any noticeable ink on them.
Yes let's completely ignore that a $10,000 smart device should have taken that into account during development.
Honestly, I'd not have thought about it either....such a fringe thing that it likely wouldn't have been thought up.
I don't know that many people that have so much of their skin painted up that it would cause interference. I'd guess most professional folks, like the IT folks at Apple aren't all painted up from head to toe with tattoos.
Sure, lots of folks these days may have one or two, but usually they're somewhere what is hidden while wearing at least business casual clothing which would generally mean not running down your arms onto and past your wrists....?
I thought the Obama administration promised to be the most "transparent" one to take office?!?!
I can't see it being any more transparent than by basing their studies on data that everyone can see and independently confirm or debate...no?
What am I missing here?
Kim Berry, president of the Programmer's Guild, said Congress should protect American workers by mandating that positions can only be filled by H-1B workers when no qualified American â" at any wage â" can be found to fill the position."
You know.....I really like what Ken has to say. I wish our congress critters would listen to him. After all, they are supposed to be there to help US citizens' needs above all others. *sigh*
And btw, I also can setup a website within 20 minutes for free, but with a CMS that even the most skilled hacker will have a hard time with to hack.
Which one are you talking about? I'm seriously interested in exploring other options!!
Thanks!!
Happiness is twin floppies.