Comment Security Issues (Score 1) 55
So, this is so I can leak more of my personal info to them and they can fail more efficiently at protecting it, right?
So, this is so I can leak more of my personal info to them and they can fail more efficiently at protecting it, right?
Oh, and I still have the manual! It's all in good shape.
I started way back when with the ZX81, joined with a TS1000. We moved up to the TRS80 models 2-4, then their PC-type Tandy 1000 series. But the TRS80-100 was great. That was something I could lug to school and show off with. I even (OK, this is hard to admit) built programs to help run role-playing games- things like time to distance at various warp speeds for real stars in our galaxy, tracking various character issues, etc.
I don't use it for much any more. I'm not that kind of hobbyist, I guess. I do have it ready for use when I want to send messages over the ham frequencies. It's part of my emergency kit. I'm proud to say that it isn't some novelty item for me, but still a useful tool. I still love this thing.
And in a few years, they will require an override for the break-override just in case the break-override fails and tries to force the car to stop.
Seriously... There are any number of options for stopping a car that has had an issue supposedly addressed by this expensive, new system. Turn the car off (turn the key- not all they way as that will lock the steering or press {probably hold} the big START button); put it in neutral; pull or step on the parking break, AKA the emergency break. Plowing through a school yard or farmers' market works, too, but is ill-advised; people just don't like all the death and destruction unless it's on TV.
Maybe we'll eliminate all deaths from auto accidents by including a mic in the car so that a bunch of airbags (inside and out- gotta protect the pedestrians and pets) deploy when someone screams, "F**CK," really loud. [I use the F-word simply because of the whole 'first you say it, then you do it' issue and I'd rather f**ck than s**t, especially if I'm about to die.]
Those of us who use all three (IE 'cause I have to at work) are confused.
Tin-foil comes in maroon? Can I get it in purple instead?
On a side note, I agree that it's the doctors' right to see what patients they want (as long as the decision is not based on certain criteria like race/color/religion/gender/etc). Stupidity is not a protected group.
What if I already know how to do many of these things? I learned some interesting chemistry way back when, say 25-ish years ago. Does knowing this stuff, as a civilian, constitute a crime? Or do I need to write it down, by hand or digitally, first? Where do we draw the line?
If knowing this from knowledge gained back before it was illegal is a crime, how can I safely erase this information from my mind without damaging other stuff I know? What would be an 'acceptable' loss if other knowledge might be damaged by this removal?
I think this could become the most used feature since Solitaire!
Not many. When I tell people I used to live in NM, they ask where in Mexico I lived or how long I've been in the US.
This was, actually, my 1st thought.
As a big fan and visitor of the VLA, I actually approve of this.
They're getting better though. They can handle K Y easily enough now, so it's just a little farther down the alphabet.
I already have more friends there than on Facebook. Also, keep in mind that Google+ is new whereas Facebook has been around a little while longer.
Wait.... So you're saying Nancy Grace is a pedophile?
I really empathize with your situation. I really thought I would be medicated for the rest of my life. It just turned out that, even after a decade of playing with dosing and combos, it just didn't work for me. I came to terms with needing to be medicated to function, which was hard at first. In my particular case, things went a different direction and the only medication I'm now on is androgel.
As you are an example of, and I thought I was, some people really do benefit from and even require these medications. Of that, I have no doubt.
That's what makes the debate difficult. We like to make things black-and-white, when, in truth, it isn't so simple. These medications DO help people and are necessary. It's the combo of marketing and weak wills that makes the big money for the industry.
Invest in physics -- own a piece of Dirac!