It's not about "stopping biases", and stating that a given person is biased is redundant. Everyone's biased.
It's not about "stopping biases", and stating that a given person is biased is redundant. Everyone's biased.
Whatever you say, Zog.
Wow, they're pretty serious about their color scheme.
You aren't putting anything in "the cloud."
The title might be slightly misleading. From what I can tell, they aren't "erasing" the memory of the event, they're just reducing the fear reaction associated with it.
Your solution to this problem is to simply start deporting people under suspicion? Yeah, that sounds like a great idea.
Yes!
So... iPhone 5 -> iPhone 5S -> iPhone 6. How does this say that the iPhone 6 won't be any harder to make?
Dr. Watson, a.k.a. "The Allocater."
Apple's textbooks have a price cap at $15.00. Any other textbook service isn't the responsibility of Apple, so they aren't "more expensive than they need to be." It's the same price as it is for any other device.
Huh? What trend are you following you made that zing with?
So... just as rectangular multitouch smartphones have become mainstream, what happens when this "Glass" becomes mainstream, and Google starts suing people because they apparently have the "curved box" patented?
And people say that Apple patents ridiculous things. "Hi, our invention is.. attaching this thing on the LEFT side rather than the RIGHT." Can someone bother justifying this being a patent?
OK... they got away with the black bars thing on the iPhone 5's elongated screen. How on earth are they going to make this one work?
Nonsense. Performing a local structure check is MUCH faster than sending it off to another system which may or may not have a delay built-in, have it check it against a hash, and then have it send a response back to you for you to interpret. Plus, I wasn't talking about constructing sentences. I was just talking…
That link just describes the idea. Can you post something else that includes homeland security's conclusions?
Time to try all the memetic phrases while applying the xkcd password scheme: negligible. Remember, this only works if the words are at least somewhat random.
SweetJamesJones committed what is known as the "straw man" fallacy, where he attacked a modified version of what Digital_Ninja said to try to either make himself look "victorious" or to advance his own personal agenda that Apple computers are not special. Notice how Digital_Ninja never once mentions Apple computers,…
Like the article says, it was probably an oversight.
You're right. I just spent a bunch of time reading and replying to them, and I'm very depressed.