Comment As a Canadian ... (Score 1) 344
Manifest destiny would look more plausible when Canada is surrounded by Alaska, US-owned-Greenland, and the contiguous states.
Manifest destiny would look more plausible when Canada is surrounded by Alaska, US-owned-Greenland, and the contiguous states.
Log in to your router and blacklist all Microsoft sites.
There you go - no more Windows 10 updates.
If you should happen to want an update or two, then remove Microsoft sites from the blacklist until you are done.
I assumed that we'd have a nudie button on our TVs by now, where one could press the nudie button and see all the TV personalities in their birthday suits. Well that is what I thought back in the 70's. I'm sort of glad it didn't come to pass yet.
Thanks for pointing out my mistake.
(I did read the article before posting.)
Now that two big companies have been mentioned, I wonder if any employees of either company must follow a code of conduct.
This sort of problem has arisen before and solved by requiring people knowing about big deals (i.e. accountants and lawyers) having to abide by codes of conduct within their professional associations. Even the appearance of a conflict of interest should be avoided to stay onside.
I wonder if Google employees in general have such codes of conduct written into their employment contracts.
Are wobbly windows prankish enough?
Or the cube?
I added Slashdot's RSS feed to Thunderbird because of your post.
I wonder how many coins were generated back in 2010 by students on university servers (with the universities getting no cut). Of course back then the coins were considered next to worthless so maybe it was not a great loss to the universities - just some extra power expenses.
The base of an igloo, which is essentially a circle, follows the formula Circumference = pi * Diameter.
After building several hundred igloos, I am sure an Inuit builder would have empirical knowledge that it takes roughly three times as many steps to go around a circle than it takes to walk the diameter. In this way, the Inuit builder would have a very practical understanding of pi without possibly ever defining pi.
Children may use 3-4-5 triangles in wood shop before ever learning about Pythagoras's Theorem.
Some woodworkers have a very practical understanding of specific right triangles without really thinking the maths through.
I would put the Stonehenge builders in the same lot. Lots of empirical knowledge, but maybe less so on the modern-day mathematical definitions.
His hard drives contain sensitive info that may preclude him from ever getting them back.
Hopefully his other family members get their computers back.
How surprised are you that FB has been caught abusing your data?
A: Hasn't FB always been doing this?
B: Shit! My data is logged and is possibly available to
C: Is Facebook going down? I mean I need my FB apps!!
D: Cowboy Neal read me the fine print, and I'm sure everything is on the up and up.
I was about to post the same idea
Computers are great for predicting where the tight races will be.
Send extra eyes and ears to the tight race locations to help ensure valid procedures are taking place.
Some valid procedures (think gerrymandering) are inherently unfair, but that is not to be dealt with here.
Under no circumstances should a hackable computer (really any computer) be used to register a vote.
I PGP'd all my passwords ten years ago.
They were all super long and difficult to remember.
So long as I remembered my PGP password, I'd be in good shape.
Unfortunately, I made my PGP pass phrase super long and difficult to remember.
Well: I lost all of my passwords.
I tell them to turn to the study of mathematics, for it is only there that they might escape the lusts of the flesh. -- Thomas Mann, "The Magic Mountain"