Comment AbracadaBra (Score 1) 299
Comment Kill the server side (Score 1) 104
Comment What About EMI separation between them? (Score 1) 96
it doesn't appear he did anything to accommodate EMI separation between the two motherboards? Did I miss that part?
Comment Llano (Score 1) 184
Comment New Number (Score 4, Funny) 238
Fermilab Confirms Evidence of 4th Flavor Neutrino 122
OpenOffice.org Declares Independence From Oracle, Becomes LibreOffice 648
Review: Civilization V 399
Marvell Launches First Triple-Core Hybrid ARM Chip 117
Michael Jackson Themed MMO In the Works 180
The Doctor's Every Journey 97
Ted Stevens and Sean O'Keefe In Plane Crash 512
Comment Re:uhhh (Score 1) 545
IANAL, Even if that is true, the router is rented, so it belongs while he pays his connection. In my country and I think in most countries, a landlord can't enter in any of his rented houses without consent of the people who live there. By your way of thinking Verizon could enter your network even if you protected it, just because they own the router.
Verizon still owns the router. To use your apartment analogy, just because you rent an apartment, does that give you the right to change out the locks and not give the landlord a copy of the new key?