Last I checked Cable VOIP is not considered a utility. At least not in Vermont
Last I checked Cable VOIP is not considered a utility. At least not in Vermont
You mean...the RIAA? Which literally does all of the things you mention? The issue is that YouTube is the one with the product to sell. Their name and audience allows them to broker low rates because ultimately their audience is vastly larger than all the other services. In this case the artists don’t hold the power.
“because political correctness”
I’m not sure what you’re attempting to point out. It’s a semantics game, no he didn’t sign a law stating you had to hold a funeral. He signed a law stating that a burial or cremation had to occur and the person on whom the abortion was performed had to have input on it.
“They just choose not to for whatever reason. If you had those 4 set ups and optimized for them the chances are HUGE you would cover like 90+% of the current gen PC base”
“Your job is to write a name on the cup”
“America did pretty good for two and a quarter centuries without this position.”
They knew because this hasn’t really been a secret, its been suspected for ages given the nature of the building being a giant information hub. It’s also a windowless building that happens to be self sufficient. It can go up to a month with absolutely no need to interface with any public utility systems. It has it’s…
“The “loss” doesn’t occur until resale or use of the generated item”
It is not a weak case. Your example, while logical at face value, is not how the legal system works. You do not get to steal something with a defined manufacturer value, but then claim the theft is less than the defined value because the items likely would not have all sold through normal channels. Somehow people…
They aren’t teens. Also millions of dollars flowing into a bank account through multiple EFT transactions, is considered business as usual, unless the money is being deposited via cash deposits. These were not cash deposits, they were EFT transactions from business accounts.
“Well, you’re kind of ignoring the fact that developers are often asking for more cash for DLC and season passes. So yes, the price has technically stayed the same, but from a limited viewpoint.”
Accounting for inflation, in 1996 $1 would equate to approximately $1.50, so you were spending the equivalent of ~$80 per game compared to today.
I’m curious, Lifehacker can simply say its “evil week” and that means its suddenly acceptable to run articles on how to steal services from another company?
The problem is its not even a programming feat. Nothing they did was fundamentally new. They did not create or advance any existing procedural generation techniques in any appreciable way. All they did was extend the same old concepts to more objects
It’s not. In this case your fingerprint for all intents and purposes is acting as a physical key object. You can be ordered to hand over keys, you can’t be compelled to provide information that only exists in memory.
I’m gonna go practice my internetting. Please tell “Amanda” to go practive better at pretending to be a woman.
Trump is allowed to insult whoever he wants, as are you. The difference is you’re not running for president and it’s very unusual to see someone who is running for president constantly insult people and situations while at the same time throwing around that he is the only one who can fix these things.
The issue is that its not a far cry. It’s a security issue that they don’t feel like writing the test cases for. Depending what you know about the system at hand it is feasible to craft a texture file that in actuality is not a texture file and ends up running code when loaded into memory.
That and it doesn’t have to be about landing some giant gig at an existing large developer. It’s the equivalent of an artists portfolio in that when you are applying for jobs and asked about experience you can point to that work.