+1 for Virgin Mobile. I get a Sprint signal in the sub-basement of this building where my Verizon and AT&T coworkers don't. :D
+1 for Virgin Mobile. I get a Sprint signal in the sub-basement of this building where my Verizon and AT&T coworkers don't. :D
On the other hand, for the same weight and size, you could include your home charger, case, bluetooth headset, car charger, USB cable...
On the off chance that the new father or mother visit Giz: Congratulations!
The IT department is lazy? Say it ain't so!
Already familiar with it. I was also thinking of CIH and an old Anti-Compaq virus that would muck with the monitor sync frequency to damage the VGA monitors. Chernobyl erased Flash BIOSes, but there's supposedly protection against this now.
Google can quote me if they'd like:
Check out VNC on the linux or windows machines you have. Your mac's got it available out of the box, I don't know about linux, and windows doesn't...but it's a free and small download, so no biggie. (System Preferences > Sharing > Screen Sharing or you can initiate it via iChat.app)
Fortunately for me, I'm not the one bringing them up on charges!
From: [www.nature.com]
On behalf of Canada: *pulls pin out and lobs it back*
Never owned a carbon monoxide detector before? The sensors in those eventually pick up enough oxides that they stop working. You replace them at the same time as the battery; They're in the same little module, in most detectors.
So, you went back in time and finished the screenplay before you started it, then gave yourself the finished script while you were in a coffee shop drinking your mochaccino?
More Merkur, though I understand that Misfiled fans have, oddly, driven interest in the brand recently.
How are we supposed to NPorCP without a price?
It'd be easier, then, to try to target specific models (high-volume VAR Dells for instance)?
"When naked pictures of Scarlett Johansson hit the internet, take notice—but not for that reason."
I wonder, if a program like SetFSB can change the FSB to potentially-hardware-damaging levels, what prevents a malware author from using that same technique as a dead-man's switch, holding someone's PC hostage to prevent them from removing the malware?
I wonder how that'd work...
Also, if at work and sneaky-browsing...
So the main complaint is that he's washed up due to being too current?