Comment Re:I'm curious to see how many retailers actually (Score 1) 732
I'd love to pay less for using cash at any retailer. As it is, plastic is easier(though I use debit most), but if it was sliightly cheaper, I'd be using cash.
I'd love to pay less for using cash at any retailer. As it is, plastic is easier(though I use debit most), but if it was sliightly cheaper, I'd be using cash.
Right now, I use Debit most, along with occasional Credit and Cash purchases. If any of the three options offered me a cheaper solution somewhere(even 1%), I'd use that one almost exclusively. I'm not too worried about my card being stolen - I take responsibility for my money. If it gets lost or stolen and someone empties my bank account, I will dispute it, but consider it a lesson learned. With cash, if it's gone, it's gone.
What I'd be most interested in is how merchants who run Debit transactions as a Credit(signature) will fair - will they all switch payment processors to someone who does (cheaper) debit transactions, or will they end up charging more for Debit as well? Only time will tell.
Either way, I think this is a good thing.
Only until you create rules for blocking that include it; it won't prevent the ad from
It would block proxy filters and adblockers,
Honestly, you're right. I wish I had mod points.
True. Calibre can do both, however: By default, convert unencrypted
Calibre, which is FOSS and cross-platform btw.
And you can get a drm-stripping plugin for it too.
Well,
While not the best way of doing things, in the case of ODF spreadsheets, well, the code is available to be copied(or data extracted from) for use in a new implementation. I don't think anyone would have minded if MS gave out the source to that part of word, for reverse engineering purposes.
While your opinion may be true, and I'm not refuting it, there are a couple of considerations: One, in the real world, you have problems with students who *aren't* interested, and or *don't* try hard.
Two, just because someone can pass an exam, doesn't mean they know the material or know it well enough to be creative with it.
Mod Parent Up. Simple as that.
Wait... we have Nvidia drivers with specific kernel headers built into them? Isn't that what DKMS is supposed to take care of? Just make sure you have headers for whatever reasonable kernel you want, let it handle the rest.
So far, on my Debian box with Liquorix kernels, it's worked perfectly. Kernels get installed, modules get autobuilt, system works.
"did" well - it's a couple of years old now.
It's a nice machine, though, and I use it for my portable tablet needs -- Including Slashdot posting(like now).
The modem/radio is a seperate chip, with it's own, locked firmware. It communicates with a userspace binary blob driver.
It would be possible to create an open-source driver, but that still wouldn't be a problem - the modem should be able to enforce any radio restrictions and low-level protocol needed.
Think of it this way: Your windows PC has an unlocked bootloader, yet is allowed to have a USB cellmodem attached to it. Why couldn't you do the same with your phone?
And yes, the
Mod parent up. Of
With computers lasting for a number of years, and there being no reason to upgrade...
Of course, mobile devices may be on the rise, but it's sort of a "comlimentary" device, not a replacement. Sure, some can use it to fully replace their desktop, but those are the people who could be switched to a shiny Linux distro as well.
If you think the system is working, ask someone who's waiting for a prompt.