As a proud owner of multiple Apple™ products I can assure you this report is totally trivial. Apple™ has never and will never do anything wrong!
Then how do we have the examples?
It's true, gay people only come out as a sweet status symbol to own all the hets. /s > If I work as a disability officer, it's probably somewhat important my email byline has a disability It's not.
You can tell when someone's broken your window
Realistically tens of millions at best. Assuming the Bloomberg campaign hires 200 people for this strategy (the article states "hundreds") it would take 167 years for him to spend $1 billion on it.
I'm familiar with the off-label discussion, but what number of these off-label uses were discovered by treating coinciding conditions in patients? How many were last ditch attempts when other treatment options either…
Are you suggesting when a new drug hits the market doctors should just try it out on a few patients to see if actually does what it says it does? If only there was some way this sort of trial and error could be…
This has to be some of the thinnest gruel I've read in a while. The entire premise of the article is that the "dark side" of WebAssembly is that "security" products can't do string matching against compiled code. Case…
Like perhaps a gauge that could indicate how much fuel is remaining in your tank? They could even include a little light next to the gauge that comes on when you're really low.
It's absolutely a text book loss leader. A loss leader doesn't need to be sold below cost, only below its minimum profit margin. Leaving money on the table is effectively losing money.
Except, as others have pointed out, there are documented cases of ISPs hijacking DNS traffic, even for people who have configured their client to use resolvers other than their ISP, which is possible because of DNS's…
Reading the first article I was left with the impression that the author's team switched to Kotlin just for the sake of switching to Kotlin, tried their darndest to write it like it was Java, and then was just upset…
That's just stupid. Obviously the product has some value for you or you wouldn't be using it, and telemetry is a practically zero effort way for you to help improve it. Note, when we're talking about telemetry we're not…
I've left a comment on your github issue, but the tl;dr is that the encryption document doesn't seem to reflect the code. The comment in the ruby test case suggests that the actual step is 'E = hash( Z2 + R )' instead…
Let's not forget that the commentor is named 'dmcahelper' with a profile description which reads 'Help all parties understand and resolve DMCA issues efficiently and effectively to minimize file and repository impacts.'…
Before you get too defensive consider that they said they'd 'recommend' the author remove the joke, not that it has to go. That's how constructive criticism works. I think the comment can be better interpreted as 'the…
As a proud owner of multiple Apple™ products I can assure you this report is totally trivial. Apple™ has never and will never do anything wrong!
Then how do we have the examples?
It's true, gay people only come out as a sweet status symbol to own all the hets. /s > If I work as a disability officer, it's probably somewhat important my email byline has a disability It's not.
You can tell when someone's broken your window
Realistically tens of millions at best. Assuming the Bloomberg campaign hires 200 people for this strategy (the article states "hundreds") it would take 167 years for him to spend $1 billion on it.
I'm familiar with the off-label discussion, but what number of these off-label uses were discovered by treating coinciding conditions in patients? How many were last ditch attempts when other treatment options either…
Are you suggesting when a new drug hits the market doctors should just try it out on a few patients to see if actually does what it says it does? If only there was some way this sort of trial and error could be…
This has to be some of the thinnest gruel I've read in a while. The entire premise of the article is that the "dark side" of WebAssembly is that "security" products can't do string matching against compiled code. Case…
Like perhaps a gauge that could indicate how much fuel is remaining in your tank? They could even include a little light next to the gauge that comes on when you're really low.
It's absolutely a text book loss leader. A loss leader doesn't need to be sold below cost, only below its minimum profit margin. Leaving money on the table is effectively losing money.
Except, as others have pointed out, there are documented cases of ISPs hijacking DNS traffic, even for people who have configured their client to use resolvers other than their ISP, which is possible because of DNS's…
Reading the first article I was left with the impression that the author's team switched to Kotlin just for the sake of switching to Kotlin, tried their darndest to write it like it was Java, and then was just upset…
That's just stupid. Obviously the product has some value for you or you wouldn't be using it, and telemetry is a practically zero effort way for you to help improve it. Note, when we're talking about telemetry we're not…
I've left a comment on your github issue, but the tl;dr is that the encryption document doesn't seem to reflect the code. The comment in the ruby test case suggests that the actual step is 'E = hash( Z2 + R )' instead…
Let's not forget that the commentor is named 'dmcahelper' with a profile description which reads 'Help all parties understand and resolve DMCA issues efficiently and effectively to minimize file and repository impacts.'…
Before you get too defensive consider that they said they'd 'recommend' the author remove the joke, not that it has to go. That's how constructive criticism works. I think the comment can be better interpreted as 'the…