Comment Re:It appears to have been resolved... (Score 0) 93
And you *don't* think that the FBI wants something with a backdoor?
Ples... are you claiming M$ ISN'T evil?
And you *don't* think that the FBI wants something with a backdoor?
Ples... are you claiming M$ ISN'T evil?
Since 47 is saying he wants a cut of the aya-toll-a fees, paying in crypto is great for him to be bribed.
Oh, I see, this is one asshole. Are you getting paid to troll, or are you doing this for free?
I'm 100% positive that you don't give a shit about the people of Iran. Or of anyone other than yourself. In the meantime, do enjoy the high gas prices, and the high price of food (that's due to fuel prices, and fertilizer shortages (20% come through the Strait), and, oh, yes, the ICE-orcs kidnapping farmworkers)).
Both hands on the pistol and aim carefully to shoot yourself in both feet.
to all this crap is what Cory Doctorow's been fighting for years: change the part of the DCMA that makes circumvention illegal, and the company can hit you with up to a half-million dollar fine.
Really, asshole? You accuse of of not having an answer, when you didn't ASK for one.
And you have an answer? Tell us alllll about it. Let's see, start with why you haven't enlisted to invade Iran with your boots on the ground.
ensuring they can't be traced or confiscated due to sanctions
This got me interested. What exactly is he saying there? Does it mean what I think it means - that they immediately shift that money around, possibly through some mixers, to muddle the origin? And, of course, make it better suited to pay their proxies now that Qatar isn't sending suitcases of cash to them anymore?
It's designed to keep people off balance, uncertain, distracted and misinformed
Thank you for writing that. I was starting to think I'm going crazy and I can't possibly be the only one who sees through that.
If you ignore the messaging, and pay attention to what's actually happening
And if you realize that Trump is just the clown at the helm. There's literally an entire bureaucracy underneath him doing most of the planning, deciding and executing.
Douglas Adams was right. The role of the president is not to excert power, but to distract from it. President of the Galaxy, president of the USA, no difference.
This.
You don't need billions to be care-free. Even double-digit millions in some nice safe assets already give you enough fuck-you-money to be good. And while everyone looks at the super-super-rich and they're in various public lists and tracked by not just the tax authorities, barely anyone knows the multi-millionaires. I know three or so that I'm sure nobody on here has ever heard anything about. They stay quiet, comfortable, private.
someone that would prefer a private life. On the other hand, Satoshi supposedly has $138 billion in Bitcoin
Don't you think you have the absolute best reason to not be revealed right there?
Can you imagine what criminals the world over would do for a few percent of that money?
I think it was brought up because a youtuber brought it up recently in one of their videos and it probably went viral.
He mentioned how it was billed as supposedly a relaxing spa type retreat that wasn't, and what was a disaster for some, others found fun and team building.
It wasn't captured as anything other than "CEO misreads room for team building event". All I know is such activities aren't for me so I don't know if those who weren't equipped to do that sort of thing had an alternative thing or they were forced to participate.
This depends considerably on the paper. Acidic paper, widely used because it's cheap, oxidizes in a few decades and degrades as you have seen. Because of this, acid-free paper has become increasingly popular. Your newer books are in fact likely to last much better than the ones dating from the 20th century.
The Courts need to recognize that Internet has become a necessary utility and that the music companies need to deal with the individual directly through the Courts, not in a lazy clandestine way.
The record labels were originally suing individual users back in the Napster days and it was causing a bit bad PR for them.
I also can't help but think that going after ISPs is something of a cash grab, since I really don't know anyone who even bothers trying to pirate music anymore. It's no longer worth the effort with how cheap music streaming services are.
What really scared them was other countries not tolerating that bullshit and in most other countries if you lose a lawsuit like this the other party can come after you for damages. They don't care about negative PR, but a case where they are forced to pay out for having their spurious claims disproved scares the living shit out of them because it sets a precedent.
I read Richard Marcinko's leadership book (Marcinko was the SEAL who founded DEVGRU, the SEAL's most elite unit, aka Team Six). From it, I concluded this: Applying Navy SEAL principles to lead people works best when the people are physically and mentally built like Navy SEALs. Most people are not, not even elite company CEO's and their staff.
It becomes a game of square peg / round hole.
Special Operator type training is far too advanced for a corporate retreat, what they really need is basic. Learning how to march as a unit, work as a unit, understand and follow orders, et al. Shit that a soldier is expected to have down pat long before they ever get advanced training. Training that might actually be useful in helping people work together or improving discipline... However the ego of your average corporate dick will never allow that, they think they're special so they want the special training.
But in reality they aren't getting anything special, just paying to be shouted at by someone who claims they were a SEAL, SAS, et al. but in all likelihood never were.
Totally different business but exactly the same problem. Nordstrom generally has the latest trend clothes in fashion and pretty good quality; it's known for it. But when it had leftover inventory it knew there were people a step down from their target demographic that would love Nordstrom's quality products even if they're a season or two out of fashion for cheaper, so they opened Nordstrom's Rack to sell off the excess inventory.
Nordstrom's Rack got so popular they couldn't keep it stocked, and eventually started developing their own dedicated Nordstrom Rack brands, which sort of defeated the purpose of Nordstrom's Rack as it's entire value was Nordstrom's quality, late season, at a discount, but now it's discount quality with the Nordstrom's name on it.
Law of unintended consequences I guess.
Not really an unknown consequence.
Popular brands know never, ever release your cheap products under your brand. Airlines are famous for this, when QANTAS wanted to release cheap, no frills flights under a LCC model, they didn't brand it as QANTAS CHEAP because that would cheapen the brand QANTAS, they created a new airline called JetStar and even though they are wholly owned subsidiaries. It's not unusual for a budget airline to operate under the parent airlines AOC (Air Operator Certificate... the bit of paper that says you're allowed to carry passengers), LEVEL (Spanish low cost carrier) operated under another AOC until it got it's own (Iberia's I think). The point is, they didn't want to associate the parent brands just in case they got successful.
But this isn't exactly off brand for Apple, they're charging $700 for a $300 laptop and $300 is being generous as we know it's really a $200 phone.
Profanity is the one language all programmers know best.