I’m trying to come up with something for jackalope and failing...
I’m trying to come up with something for jackalope and failing...
We should be celebrating Tau Day anyway:
Supposedly, you can pack a Kalashnikov with mud, and it will still work, while getting a couple grains of sand in an M-16 will bork it.
Oh, wait, your *clients* are all assholes to begin with? Nevermind.
“You put them under some pressure in the interview to see how they respond.”
There might be a few false positives caught with this method, but I’m guessing it’s a small enough percentage that it’s still better to flush everybody who climbed in a known toxic environment. I’d agree that somebody who *didn’t* climb in that environment is likely not tainted.
Most big company cultures include very explicitly stated codes of business ethics. Whether or not they strictly adhere to them is obviously a different question, but generally they will all tell you that they want people who will speak up and report any unethical circumstances that they find at the company, and…
“Oh, you worked at this company, you’re probably an asshole”
Somebody help me understand: Feminists are or aren’t the people who used to burn bras and who still to this day occasionally engage in topless (or in some cases, completely nude) protests?
Epoxy is an even better USB firewall...
You know, there are a whole lot of people who could learn something from the movie Soul Man...
Gigabit LTE is live in Australia. Attach whatever marketing label you want to it.
I have a friend who is in Iceland to celebrate his 50th birthday *right now*. Of course, I just sent him this...
And this is any different from what the Harlem Globetrotters do in exhibition games how?
Once the number of anecdotes reaches a statistically significant number, it is. Example: X anecdotes of Galaxy Note 7 phones blowing up became the raw data which ultimately drove shutting down production of that product completely.
THRL;CR?
The CBP exemption to the 4th Amendment isn’t new, and the EFF has written up an extensive document on the issue and what you can do about it as a U.S citizen re-entering the country:
During the decade-and-a-half of international work travel I did (around 4 calendar years on the road, over that time), the craziest local bar I’ve ever seen was the Hungry Duck in Moscow. Specifically, the Hungry Duck as it existed in ‘98-’99 (not the reincarnation that opened in 2012).
Pretty much same here in San Diego. I swapped in a Docsis 3.0 modem, and am getting about 120Mb down for the same price I was getting 20Mb previously.
1KW? Dr. Hathaway is not impressed.