the thief-turned-victim has your home address.
Not necessarily, especially if they were going around and stealing packages from multiple houses like some of the thieves in the video were doing, He purposely put a fake label with fake names and addresses on it, so the thief might not remember which house he stole that particular package from.
That's not a very good example, because all of the streaming services aren't really competing in the same sense. There is very little overlap of content between Netflix, Hulu, etc and each service has their own exclusive content which they view as "premium content", so they charge premium prices for it. If these streaming services were all forced to license their original content to the other services for a reasonable fee, then we could see real competition.
This new game store will be closer to real competition, since there is nothing stopping the developers from publishing their content on both platforms to maximize their audience. This competition likely will improve things for consumers.
I have to say that it was awful nice of the Russians to give us this demonstration of how easily everything form simple navigation to weapons targeting can be disastrously disrupted due to our over-reliance on GPS
My guess is that they wanted to test the equipment to gauge NATO's ability to deal with the disruption. No point in using jamming equipment if it's not going to be effective (i.e. if they already have redundant systems to prevent this kind of jamming), and you'd want to go back to the drawing board and come up with something more effective.
It makes no sense. If Russia has the ability to do this, of course they wouldn't show it during a NATO exercise.
It makes perfect sense that Russia would run their own exercise to test their jamming equipment and gauge NATO's ability to deal with it.
And purchasing something from it often means taking a gamble dealing with someone who is halfway around the world and only wants your money - he is not interested in building his store's brand nor product quality.
To some extent, that is true, but the reviews mean that a lot of seller in fact do care a great deal about product quality, and making you happy. If they get bad reviews on Amazon, they're not going to sell very much. Unless it's some sort of really niche product, people will tend to buy a similar product that has better reviews.
My wife reviews almost everything she buys on Amazon, and as a result she gets contacted by various sellers who offer to reimburse her for the cost of their products if she writes a review (and it doesn't have to be a good review to get the reimbursement). She once wrote a bad review of a product that she bought herself and the seller contacted her and offered to refund her if she removed the bad review, but she declined.
and then use Javascript to render a JPEG of the message text on a HTML5 canvas using WebGL GPU rendering in a manner where the Operating System won't see the content
So what are visually impaired people that rely on screen readers supposed to do?
It's a naive, domestic operating system without any breeding, but I think you'll be amused by its presumption.