I identify strongly with vast swaths of your post, which reaffirms my plans to begin some medication management within the month. (My psych provider was a bit concerned about my blood pressure, so he/she had me visit a…
Spoken like someone who has never really had to deal with severe focus problems. That's a lot like telling someone who is learning to walk again after an injury that they don't need those fancy "crutches" or "slings"…
No more than shutting down Lavabit violated whatever NSLs/court orders were directed at it.
Speaking as someone who spends a big chunk of his working life auditing others code, having a consistent style makes it a lot easier to spot problems.
What new products of the last 200 years have been 100% original? Vanishingly few, I'd wager. Almost every "invention" is an iteration.
The entire email transation between a sender and a recipient usually looks like this: Sending Client [--A---> Sender SMTP Server [--B---> Recipient SMTP Server [--C--> Recipient IMAP/POP server <---D----] Recipient…
This makes the assumption that these users were using the Reader web interface. I'd bet a good number were using it simply as a sync backend.
I identify strongly with vast swaths of your post, which reaffirms my plans to begin some medication management within the month. (My psych provider was a bit concerned about my blood pressure, so he/she had me visit a…
Spoken like someone who has never really had to deal with severe focus problems. That's a lot like telling someone who is learning to walk again after an injury that they don't need those fancy "crutches" or "slings"…
No more than shutting down Lavabit violated whatever NSLs/court orders were directed at it.
Speaking as someone who spends a big chunk of his working life auditing others code, having a consistent style makes it a lot easier to spot problems.
What new products of the last 200 years have been 100% original? Vanishingly few, I'd wager. Almost every "invention" is an iteration.
The entire email transation between a sender and a recipient usually looks like this: Sending Client [--A---> Sender SMTP Server [--B---> Recipient SMTP Server [--C--> Recipient IMAP/POP server <---D----] Recipient…
This makes the assumption that these users were using the Reader web interface. I'd bet a good number were using it simply as a sync backend.