AndyAhern
AndyAhern
AndyAhern

The government can take any of my data my want. They just can't access any of it because it's 256-bit AES encrypted. I suppose they could brute-force it, given a couple hundred times the lifespan of the universe.

You clearly have never heard of "encryption".

The first crime is walking on the tracks, with the knowledge that there's a tram behind with zero desire to get out of the way.

And they were all destroyed when they understeered going into turn one.

CP all the way around.

That's people trying to cross the train. I wouldn't mind some Darwinian thinning.

Grew up on Cape Cod. There's many houses that were built by retiring ship captains. The roofs are made from the hulls of the repurposed boats. If I knew or remembered what they were called I'd show a picture.

She looks like a poorly rendered animation.

It was 98 feet deep, so there was higher pressures. That air was compressed to the same pressure as the water and vessel around it. That 4 feet had a lot more oxygen in it than the same volume of air at sea level.

If it had a hitch, I might have thought it was actually farm equipment.

Is that Lara Croft?

Is the whole sleeve plastic? I'd be concerned about corrosion otherwise.

If it's from the factory, it's not "modified". It's a different trim level.

SExpand

Yes, then the positive and negative are right next to each other, not miles apart (at PCB scale).

LH request: article describing how to set up client side encryption for Dropbox. Thanks.

The guy's an idiot, but everyone in that town's government should have their asses handed to them for this.

Personally, I'd like to sit on my ass and bitch about how people wealthier than me owe me money.

You forget that the typical American is lazy as hell. Why else would slushboxes be such better sellers than manuals?