Comment Duh (Score 2) 70
some of the original pre-orders "are now shipping out significantly ahead of the initial delay estimates provided by Oculus."
Presumably because of all the cancelled pre-orders from people trying to jump the queue.
some of the original pre-orders "are now shipping out significantly ahead of the initial delay estimates provided by Oculus."
Presumably because of all the cancelled pre-orders from people trying to jump the queue.
NVS isn't a "high-end graphics" card, it's specifically designed for driving lots of low-end displays such as in digital signage or systems monitoring. Yes, it's ~$700 for the new card and if you want to dick about with configuring, cabling and managing 16+ Pi's then you're quite welcome to, but if you want something straightforward for a showcase center then it's well worth looking at.
Wow, you're funny. As tools which are part of the Android SDK, if you don't trust them then you probably shouldn't have an Android phone in the first place.
Right, so we'll have an American Backdoor for the Americans, but they don't just anyone accessing their data so they won't share it with everyone, which means we'll also need a German Backdoor for the Germans and a French Backdoor for the French and obviously multiple law-enforcement agencies in each of those countries will need access and frankly even assuming that by some miracle none of the agencies in any of the countries have anyone on staff who is either corrupt or incompetent there's somewhere around a 100% chance that other people with (more) malicious intents will gain access to said backdoors.
Meanwhile these supposed terrorists that these backdoors are designed to stop are either a) already too stupid to properly secure their communications or b) smart enough to "manually" encrypt the message itself and not simply the envelope, which means all this is for naught anyway.
It's hardly a new word, it's been in active use for the best part of 10 years.
This is America, we don't let "governments" set "rules", we let the free market decide. If people don't want to pay fines from clearly rigged red light cameras then they're free to use one of the other road providers instead.
Vote with your wallets, people.
Clearly the best way to combat the supposed corruption and unethical behaviour in the games media is to encourage their advertisers to demand editorial changes or risk having their funding removed.
For the love of God, if you think your games (or any media you consume, frankly) don't have any politics in them then it simply means they have politics that you already agree with. The number of truly apolitical games out there is vanishingly small.
This idea of "just let games be about the games" is as bullshit as saying "why can't my music just be about the music".
While reading this story I accidentally peak stupid.
...leaving citizens in the dark on what privacy protections, if any, are in place...
I'll give you a hint, there aren't any.
Utilities can really only have neutral or negative reputations.
Think about it, how often do you go "Wow, that was some amazing electricity I used this morning! It came right out of the socket when I needed it and didn't electrocute me at all"? You don't, because you expect those things as a basic requirement of the service and there aren't really many added extras they can provide to help you view them in a positive light. On the flip side, if there are outages or faults you almost automatically acquire a negative view of them and again there isn't really a lot they can do to counteract it.
That still doesn't excuse shoddy IPMI implementations and not fixing vulnerabilities when they're discovered.
But apparently blindly repudiating it is fine.
Pocket change for them, maybe, but it's slightly more significant for the people having to pay it.
That explains why the government is always trying to defund them.
Credit ... is the only enduring testimonial to man's confidence in man. -- James Blish