Comment Re:Regulation of currency (Score 2) 240
Great! Then those people who just stole $400+ million by siphoning BTC from Mt. Gox wallets will be caught! Nothing to worry about at all!
Great! Then those people who just stole $400+ million by siphoning BTC from Mt. Gox wallets will be caught! Nothing to worry about at all!
There was no decision to change it, they are two different terms. Global Warming is a subset of Climate Change. The confusion of terms exists only in the reporting of the general, non-scientific press and the minds of Internet dogs who think checking a household thermometer means they themselves are qualified to hold a valid opinion.
The IPCC was created back in 1988 at the request of WMO (World Meteorological Organization) and the UNEP (United Nations Environment Program).
The UNEP was formed in 1972 to study man's interaction with and impact on the environment.
The WMO was researching "potential global warming caused by the build-up of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere" back in the mid-1970s.
Back in 1956 scientist Gilbert Plass published a study titled "The Carbon Dioxide Theory of Climatic Change".
In a 1975 Science article by geochemist Wallace Broecker of Columbia University's Lamont-Doherty Geological Observatory: "Climatic Change: Are We on the Brink of a Pronounced Global Warming?"
Uh, no. You just read the *headlines* on Snowden articles and not the details, didn't you?
Backdooring Cisco or Juniper equipment required physical access or someone to upload a Trojan firmware.
Huawei has a *remote upgrade* feature that allows remote firmware programming. They are very..."user" friendly.
And how does this differ from the Bluetooth ODB-II connector I use to stream car data to my cell phone? That is wireless and also requires being plugged into the diagnostic port on the car.
I can pull all sorts of data from that. If I spend a little more, I can get a full CAN-bus connection and actually *send* information and control things.
This isn't hacking. It is a product demo for VW.
All judges and anyone working in the Patent Office should be required to have taken the equivalent of a college minor in computer science. (Not IT, but real CS). Just the core courses.
Pfft. Everyone knows it is Bigfoot and JFK who reside on the far side of the moon. Poser.
Your cover is blown! Taco Cowboy is really Donald Duck!
Donald's Happy Birthday (1949)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xIdpIPgLcTU
That's an old Donald Duck cartoon w/his nephews.
I have a set-up where all my media files are stored on a generic Linux file server running Samba for CIFS/SMB and exporting NFS shares. This can be any old box you have laying around, and yes, the Raspberry Pi can do this fine.
My televisions have small boxes mounted via VESA-mount adapters on the back of them. 2 are Raspberry Pis, 1 is a Zotac Z-Box. Two are wired, one is wireless, all have power and HDMI cables. All run OpenELEC as a front end and I use Yatse on my Android phone as a remote.
The downsides are you can't integrate Netflix into OpenELEC (which is really just a skinned, slimmed XBMC) because of lack of DRM support on Linux. I haven't checked on Amazon Prime video or Hulu Plus video support lately. I know it was working before with the BlueCop repository of add-ons.
1. Windows 98se was able to log in to a Win2000/2003 domain. WinME had the ability to log in to a domain removed. Yes, I know it wasn't intended to work in a business environment, but at the time people were using Win98 on Windows 2000 Small Business Server environments. There was a big price difference between ME and 2000 Workstation.
2. Multitasking older Windows & DOS software ( and there was tons of it out there) often caused ME to choke and blue screen as it gave up some backwards compatibility to implement some of it's features.
3. WinME was hyped like crazy as a truly new Windows OS (vs 98 etc) and it really wasn't. It was more or less a tweak of 98 to fill the time/market gap until XP could be finished.
"Protozoa are small, and bacteria are small, but viruses are smaller than the both put together."