Comment Re: You can (kinda) do stuff with those points (Score 1) 56
Yeah, no doubt. But for all the good they do me, right?
Yeah, no doubt. But for all the good they do me, right?
I use Bing, and I get Microsoft Rewards points for that. Each month, the points I earn are automatically donated to the Wikimedia Foundation. Just sayin'.
Welllll, a bunch of countries use VAT, where you pay whatever is on the label. In the US, what you pay for a product will depend on where you buy it, despite it having the same price on the tag..
"Use" is relative, unless you mean "figure out how to cancel it."
I don't know. From what I can tell, Tizen seems OK. I just don't know how much "software" you really need in a television.
Hell, I don't like it now!
One reason I can think of is that different states and municipalities impose different rates of sales tax at the register. Multiplying a retail price by 8.75% may not always produce an even, round number.
In a web environment, yeah, my understanding is that there still needs to be some amount of glue code to manipulate the DOM.
I'm a backend developer, so that is less of interest to me than WASI, the WebAssembly System Interface.
AssemblyScript might count, but with a WASM target instead of Javascript.
II, too, do not know what he means by "innovation." It sounds like standard CEO conference-speak blather to me. How do you "innovate" in gaming when your staff's top priority is clinging desperately to their jobs?
But the OP says the 32GB was "Not used. Not allocated. Leaked." It's a little hard to parse, but if true, then maybe the actual effect is truly negligible.
So, how does anyone enter the workforce?
One reason for quarterly reporting is that it gives greater transparency and insight into how a business actually works. Many businesses are seasonal. Most obviously, virtually all retail has its best quarter at the end of the calendar year. But many other types of businesses have key cycles each year that are tied to, for example, the buying habits of their largest customers. Suppliers matter, too; if farms have a bad quarter due to weather or other factors, for example, you're going to want to watch how that impacts food producers somewhere down the line.
No one has recommended beta blockers as a first line therapy for hypertension for decades.
Well, somebody recommended them to me. At high doses, too.
I remember hearing, years ago, that the EU no longer recommends beta blockers as a first-line treatment for hypertension (high blood pressure) for a similar reason: They don't seem to do anything. Sure, they lower your blood pressure numbers, but (as I recall) the meta-study showed no appreciable difference in outcomes. That is, people who received beta blockers experienced the same number of heart attacks, strokes, and other hypertension-related problems as the group that didn't take them.
Mystics always hope that science will some day overtake them. -- Booth Tarkington