Comment Re:This is unfortunate. (Score 1) 188
Five to ten minutes a week that isn't a sound-byte, but is someone talking about an issue, would be a massive increase to the information most Americans receive.
We have that, it's called NPR.
Five to ten minutes a week that isn't a sound-byte, but is someone talking about an issue, would be a massive increase to the information most Americans receive.
We have that, it's called NPR.
Agreed. And what's more, even if I don't mind using a second Google account for Google+, it would require me to *logout* of all the other services I'm actively using with my Google Apps account - my email, my calendar, my RSS feed - just so I can login to the Google+ specific account. I'm not going to logout of all that stuff just to access G+, and I'm not going to run an instance of a separate browser just to access G+.
Lonely Planet is an Australia-based company. Maybe this somehow influences prices, perhaps due to tax laws?
Did you read the link? It would be a stretch to say he was being a dick. According to the link he was banned for writing "Have you sold your souls to the EA devil?"
I'd say that the response was very heavy handed.
"The area" is the Chernobyl 30km exclusion zone. It's not like you're imagining. The risk here is with consuming or inhaling particles of irradiated dirt or material.
No, it's a win-win situation. If they cannot solve reCAPTCHA then we get website security. If they do solve it, it means that we can digitize all of that content without any human interaction. This is great news.
Right now, there's no way for the consumer to tell the market what you are looking for. Back when we came up with all this Internet thing, wasn't the fact that it makes bi-directional communication possible one of its best features?
Ah yes, if only we still had that Internet thing. But you're right, this will be better, because it's going to be mobile! Yeah...
If you cannot verify the other party, then you cannot verify your transmission wasn't intercepted. The verification is designed to prevent a MitM attack.
How does something like this differ practically from using sudo, which in many distros grants the user root privileges without any further authentication necessary?
I am surprised to see you describe Netbeans as bloated when compared to Eclipse. I fought with Eclipse for years before trying out Netbeans, and have been nothing but pleased with it. More than anything, it is the bloat of Eclipse that drove me away! Plugins upon plugins upon plugins, all heaped together in some massive directory. Configuration panels that need a search box!
My Netbeans experience has been a breath of fresh air.
The person who makes no mistakes does not usually make anything.