Heading into the winter again, NK making threats so they end up with various humanitarian aide again?
Heading into the winter again, NK making threats so they end up with various humanitarian aide again?
To be honest, I’m surprised Google/Alphabet hasn’t tried to get into running their own reactor by this point. Energy seems like the one thing they haven’t touched yet.
For the actual cooking pan, yes that’s what the comment was saying. The tools were specifically mentioned as separate to the pan.
Because the owners have grifted all of that away to private accounts already of course.
Right, but the comment I responded to only mentions cast iron, as if it’s the only or even best alternative.
All this does is make your enemy fight even harder, inflicting even more losses. If they know they will be killed when surrendering, they have literally nothing left to lose and will fight to the bitter end.
Ah yes, cast iron, the perfect material for those with mobility and strength issues. Set it and forget it.
Phantom Liberty is a great expansion in its own right, combined with the 2.0 changes just made the entire experience better.
But then you can’t sell your customer’s data for profit. Even if you don’t now, you still have that option in the future.
Haven’t used Verizon personally, but back in the day Sprint gave a 10 day grace period before charging late fees, even if the documentation said differently at times.
Ah yes, a prorated $3 credit at best. Based on a $90 service bill divided by 30 days.
Most likely they’ll instead give you a coupon for something in a Verizon-owned app you don’t use, if anything.
Amazing what happens with adequate funding. How long until Republicans open some sort of bullshit Congressional investigation that won’t find anything but waste time and money, and as usual try to reduce funding by obviously punitive levels?
Surprisingly fast for a government organization to react to something new.
Oh I’m sure that’s the case for nearly all large social media and network systems based on the US. I’m also willing to bet that for some of these companies, almost no one even knows it’s there, either because a 3 letter agency put it there themselves without being noticed, or an employee implemented it for them without corporate approval.
The US is worried about other countries doing this because we 100% are doing it ourselves. From a national security perspective, it’s basically common sense. Ensure you have access to everything, even if you don’t use it now, you might in the future and it will save time.
A wiretap is different than having something like backdoor access at will for military use.
The problem is that not all of those terminals are being purchased by Ukraine, or supplied through official channels. There are tons of equipment being donated from third parties not directly affiliated, including Starlink terminals.
That’s great if the Ukraine military were the only users in the region, but they aren’t. Regular Starlink service is available in the country, outside military use. Even though the Ukraine military is using it, Starlink is not designed to be a military network. It is a civilian network that just happens to be available and extremely useful in this case, even with the Russian attempts to interfere with signals in the region.
Yeah, but it’s not a government satellite system, it’s an independent Internet provider. It is always possible that the US government/military has access on the back end, but that’s not guaranteed. And since Ukraine is using Starlink, they can’t exactly just disable all access in the region.
Kind of makes sense for Russia to try and use Starlink at least a bit to test the waters and see what sort of Intel the US has access to directly through it.
They do, but Ukraine uses Starlink, so they can’t really disable usage entirely in the contested areas. They could disable the individual terminals, but that would require knowing which ones the Russians were using in the first place.
If they haven’t been negotiating already at this point, their intention is to force the union into a strike. For whatever reason these companies/organizations always seem to think that forcing a union to strike works in their favor somehow, despite it always costing millions of dollars and an agreement being made anyway.
Eh, that’s their software side. Google doesn’t do that with hardware infrastructure like data centers.