Comment Re:biz.Nazi accident-prone (Score 1) 418
Naturally a disrespected & dis-satisfied COMCAST customer can simply take their money elsewhere. take away their profits
Comcast might be the only high speed internet available in many locations.
Naturally a disrespected & dis-satisfied COMCAST customer can simply take their money elsewhere. take away their profits
Comcast might be the only high speed internet available in many locations.
Where the books aren't licensed?! I didn't know there was such a thing.
Too bad on the subscriptions.
It's also neat that you just let them have the address. Let's hope they remember you when they become world famous.
I also have a few names that i want to use but am too lazy to. Maybe we can get another site: LDNHA (Lazy Domain Name Holders Anonymous). Um, and is HTM really a tag?
As long as you subscribe, even if you don't use the ads features (set it to 0), you still see the mysterious future.
I've had it like that for years.
I'd let you use mine, if i could.
Nearly half of the software developers in the United States do not have a college degree. Many never even graduated from high school.
What? I pored over the article and the US BLS link in it to find the source of these statements. Aside from a pull quote that appears as an image in the article but isn't even in the article itself and is unattributed, could someone find me the source of this statistic?
Because I'm a software developer in the United States with a Masters of Science in Computer Science. All of my coworkers have at least a bachelor's degree in one field or another. And my undergrad very much so started with a sink-or-swim weed out course in Scheme and then another in Java. Yes, they were both easy if you already knew how to code but
The only way I can see the misconception spreading is that people who use Wix to drag and drop a WYSIWYG site (for you older readers that's like FrontPage meets Geocities) erroneously consider themselves "software developers".
by our I mean our little(r) circle here
Ah, how the FortKnox circle has shrunk.
the drive I found in the office is throwing some errors too
I have a subscription, but i never use it.
Too bad the drive died. I know how that feels. Norton Ghost saved me once.
There are some solutions though, including placing the drive in the freezer for a couple hours and trying again. Though, a search just found this that warns against it.
On a side note, i have mod points. Should be coming to a JE near you. (Someone seems to have modded us all up recently as it is.) Everyone, please point me to your posts even if your rating isn't less than stellar.
but most are actually very carefully aimed at a majority of users
Pandering to the public seems so fickle. Popular today means it'll require changing tomorrow.
Is the constant change really helpful, or are these studies done with blinders on, looking only for short-term gain?
UIs are just getting worse and worse. Things are now bigger and larger, colorized even. "We really think you want to click this" has taken precedence over usability. I feel like i need to be an idiot to use such software.
I wouldn't touch WD.
WD basically invented the hard drive and used to be awesome. Then they started selling garbage. After having a number of their drives fail and seeing online reports of the same, i no longer consider them an option. Same story with Epson for printers. It make me wonder why these great companies decided to destroy the one thing they had: A brand that stood for quality.
What a pane glass can be.
Luckily, you had she.
Broke the phone unknowingly,
Now you're happy as can be.
"The one charm of marriage is that it makes a life of deception a neccessity." - Oscar Wilde