Comment Re:Including air pressure (or lack thereof)? (Score 1) 9
Not forgetting inconsequential things like temperature and radiation as well....
Not forgetting inconsequential things like temperature and radiation as well....
Surviving Martian soil is the easy part. Being able to survive at near zero air pressure is the hard part.
FVWM2
In newer Dell BIOS you'd have to enable Advanced BIOS settings (to the upper left in the BIOS setting screen) in order to get full BIOS control.
Then you can disable Secure Boot and set the hard drive to be AHCI instead of RAID just to make sure that you have best compatibility.
In the two hours I have used it, it crashed on me twice, each time requiring a reboot. One was the file-explorer crashing. Same software, same hardware was rock-solid with win10 before. Win11 is a lemon.
No. It is real security experts at work and these people are pretty immune to hype.
Why does this even need to be stated? These things are grossly insecure and that cannot be fixed. It does not get more "broken by design" that that.
"Secure" boot is not about security for the user. It is DRM, plain and simple. And it serves so that Linux and other non-Windows OSes are harder to install, because Microsoft holds the keys.
Has nothing on the "savings" of 2T that a certain space cadet promised in January, which somehow turned to an extra $220B spent.
https://www.techdirt.com/2025/...
Go figure.
You really do not understand what you are talking about. You want to place requirements that makes sense for enterprises with lawyers on regular customers. That is insane.
Yes. But the US is in 2nd place. Do you think being in 2nd place means "it cannot be done"? That would be insane.
Just kidding, please don't kill me!
Did anyone else see this as "DirecTV Will Soon Bring Aids to Your Screensaver"?
Somebody predicting an AI product category is FUBAR instead of wonderful magic productivity?
Because that $2,000 is consideration for the other party providing something. If the penalty clause is the entire remainder of the contract fee, then the other party should also be compelled to provide service for the remainder of the contract term, or some equivalent consideration. Otherwise, it isn't really much of a contract.
I agree. And they will! You're free to use the service until the expiration of the contract. Whether you actually use it or not is up to you.
That's not what a cancellation fee does, though. By definition, when you pay a cancellation fee, they are no longer providing service.
COBOL is for morons. -- E.W. Dijkstra