I like Lady Gaga.
She was my first ever music purchase on the internet. I used Amazon MP3 to buy a a few of her songs.
A good idea, but there's no accounting for poor taste. :hurl:Did someone hack your account? I'll investigate this.
The US has never been the land of the free as much as the land where profit is king.
I used to comment significantly in my local newspaper's web site. Unfortunately, my local newspaper (owned by Gannet) is now requiring Facebook to comment. I refuse to get a Facebook account, so no commenting on stories any more. At least I can still read my local paper on the web for free even if I have to suffer from some really annoying adds.
I won't even visit Facebook's web site. It is my understanding that they track you (and sell that info) at every site that has a facebook +1 link which is an awefull lot of sites now and it totally bypasses any privacy agreements they have with their users. Their privacy agreement pertains to what info you put on their site, not what they track outside of it. Really it is not much different than spywhere or advertising cookies being tracked other than it is more pervasive i.e. Facebook is almost everywhere now.
However, if you don't have a Facebook cookie from visiting their site, they don't track you. So I won't even visit their home page...
Never had a facebook account and it looks like I never will. I am happy when I google my real name and see nothing that is actually me at all, well for things I have control over anyway. Don't know how or if I should kill the LinkedIn thing.
My maxburn identity was almost exclusively me for all results on the first and second pages of google. Then about eight months ago some fat burning exercise thing took all my results, not that I care. When I started using it I could use that identity anywhere but lately I have noticed that there are a lot of imitators that stole my name on various sites, this does vaguely annoy me but what am I going to do? Can't really protect a false identity.
I think the first step to identity protection is to never use your real identity online. Throwaway email accounts etc.
That's why you need DST. Daylight Shortening Time.That's because it's still too hot to eat dinner at 7pm DST, and going to bed at 10pm DST is diabolical (you need to realize that very few houses are fully air-conditioned).
Daylight Saving is supposed to give people more daylight leisure hours, and I've certainly appreciated it in other climates, but here, it's more a case of waiting for the daylight to end. On hot days, I don't venture out for my afternoon walk before 6-6:30pm, meaning I can get back and eat dinner after 7pm. With daylight saving, it would be 5-5:30pm, which can be 3C hotter, so I'd be less likely to exercise.
've had several job inquiries through LinkedIn so far, so it seems to at least be somewhat useful for its intended purpose.
LinkedIn does something besides generate spam?
Strange to hear that feedback as I've have no spam through LinkedIn. What kind of spam do you get?
(Someone I just barely know but might've had a meeting with one time for 10 minutes) has invited you to join LinkedIn!
I have LinkedIn and Facebook invites killed by the same filter rule.
I'm just not interested in quantifying my relationships for datamining purposes or winning popularity contests.
Mountain View is 5 miles from my favorite Audi dealer...that is something
"Washington needs to hear your best ideas about how to clamp down on rogue Web sites and other criminals who make money off the creative efforts of American artists and rights holders," reads Saturday's statement. "We should all be committed to working with all interested constituencies to develop new legal tools to protect global intellectual property rights without jeopardizing the openness of the Internet. Our hope is that you will bring enthusiasm and know-how to this important challenge."
All I can think is: we gave you the Internet. We gave you the Web. We gave you MP3 and MP4. We gave you e-commerce, micropayments, PayPal, Netflix, iTunes, Amazon, the iPad, the iPhone, the laptop, 3G, wifi--hell, you can even get online while you're on an AIRPLANE. What the hell more do you want from us?
Take the truck, the boat, the helicopter, that we've sent you. Don't wait for the time machine, because we're never going to invent something that returns you to 1965 when copying was hard and you could treat the customer's convenience with contempt.
Interesting point on "The President's challenge"
http://radar.oreilly.com/2012/01/the-presidents-challenge.html
I suspect this is an epic tale with which we are all familiar and so I share it with all of you.
Last time I visited my aunt and uncle, I fixed their desktop, removed spyware and reset the screen resolution on their new, widescreen laptop to something other than 800x600, secured their wireless router, added their BD player to their universal remote and got it talking to Netflix, showed my aunt how to import CDs into iTunes again, hooked up a set of computer speakers, and installed a Grace Internet Radio and configured it to work with Pandora.
I'm not the only one that happens to, right?
Read the captain has been detained and was reported to have left the ship with passengers and crew still aboard.
:erm: I just hate it when that happens.And when he fell into the life boat, he had is laptop with him!