TheStitch626
TheStitch626
TheStitch626

Thus far, only high school textbooks get the $15 pricing. They haven't mentioned college textbook pricing.

Who wants Honeycomb when you can have Ice Cream Sandwich? :-P Nom nom!

The Jobs apple logo is the new Jesus on toast.

No, but they have all the flour you can eat in various forms!

It'll be a series of one-on-one interviews with members of the team you're interviewing with and possibly some non-team employees you may end up collaborating with. This is how most tech companies will do on-site interviews. Before you get to this point, you'll have to go through a couple of phone screens too -

@dpac.mittal2: "Session hijacking on other hand means getting hold of user's cookies and replaying them so you are literally him for that session and you can do anything with his account"

@dpac.mittal2: If you can make the user do stuff he isn't aware of, aren't you controlling his account? In extreme cases, you can literally control the account by changing the password, resetting the email for the account, i.e. changing the credentials to something that you have access to without need of these

@dpac.mittal2: CSRF does do session hijacking. It takes advantage of pre-authenticated sessions, for example, and performs actions the user is not aware of.

Sidejacking sounds like CSRF (cross-site request forgery) attacks.

There's an app called ShopSavvy that will scan the barcode for you and pull up reviews as well as prices for both online and in local stores. However, in my experience, only the online part works really well. It will also let you save items in lists for later.

Fake Bob Ross is using a google tv unit!

@Iceman B.: If you poison the DNS caching, then you can send people to YOUR version of the bankofamerica.com site (e.g. the URL resolves to an IP address of your choice) - with or without a valid certificate. Most people probably ignore certificate errors anyway, so you can process the data they input through the web

@bluecardinal: I think encrypting everything is still quite an expensive operation. For webservers with high traffic and very dynamic pages, encrypting everything could be a computational cost that they simply cannot afford.

@CBronsonSmile: Half the stuff in the Da Vinci is barely crypto. I think the most complex they get are variations of shift ciphers. And anagrams? Don't make me laugh...

@KiwiLord: "Rotoscoping is an animation technique in which animators trace over live-action film movement, frame by frame, for use in animated films." — Wikipedia

What a beautiful mix of textures!! I didn't care too much for the narration but animation and art is lovely.

How sad that his words "but we have not learned the simple art of living together as brothers" still rings true today.

@Gynostar: My point isn't really about cultural differences; it's about what defines "strict." I don't know so much about Chinese parents, but lots of American parents yell and scream at their kids; they have extremely limiting rules and try to control every aspect of their kids' lives. But their kids are still badly

@bluebears: Thank you for the link to that article. I would venture to say that it's akin to some sort of brainwashing. I admit that my upbringing and the constant chorus of relatives telling me, without fail, to "listen to your parents" every conversation has brainwashed me to some degree, so that even as an adult, I

@Sterling Stupor: Her book is supposed to be a memoir though, so anecdotes are quite appropriate.