john galt
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- john galt
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Just put it in the microwave for a few seconds. Problem solved.
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dysamoria said: $129 for a disposable keyboard (with painfully sharp edges at the front, if it's like the prior "magic keyboard") is bad business. Disposable? Battery replacement is $29, same as the MTP2, and probably won't be required for …
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So Andy Zaky was right after all...? http://appleinsider.com/articles/12/10/16/analysis-apple-stock-headed-for-1000-per-share
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Gatekeeper "goes too far"? Hardly. An effective security strategy is a multilayered one, and Gatekeeper is just one part of an overall mindset that any computer user must adopt in order to avoid inadvertently installing malware, or just simply jun…
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Come on Apple. We can trust our government. They never lie to us about anything. Don't worry! If you like your encryption, you can keep your encryption!
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sflocal said: This clown reminds me of one of the best sheriffs ever to wear a badge. I was thinking more along the lines of J.W. Pepper:
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"The CEO of Apple needs to know he's not above the law, and neither is anybody else in the United States." That includes the FBI. Or doesn't he know that?
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Big man. Let's see him try. Tim Cook will gleefully go to jail over this. What a pathetic little idiot.
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vaughnv said: ... Is it not possible for the FBI to turn the phone over to Apple and let them privately and secretly break the encryption on the phone (holding the pass code with Apple, not the FBI)? The federal government has been a pa…
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... and every single one of the Republican candidates for President of this once great nation advocated compelling Apple to yield to the overwhelming power of government to compel them to create a product that does not exist and for which there is n…
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"Positioning their refusal to cooperate as having anything to do with privacy interests is a corporate PR stunt and ignores the 4th Amendment protections afforded by our Constitution." A comment that illustrates that genius has limits but ignoran…
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I don't think he quite understands Apple's reasons for appealing the order. The DOJ is compelling Apple to create software that doesn't exist. Slavery was abolished in the US some time ago. Apple was pushed into an untenable situation to which they …
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linkman said: Would some rational person please explain why we need a law for this when failure to follow a court order is already a criminal offense? You don't need that explanation. The idiot "Intelligence Committee Chairman" does.
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IanMC2 said: If this ever becomes a law I would like to see Apple leave the United States. I wonder how many billions the US govt would lose in revenue. $19B in direct corporate income tax alone, but that obviously excludes non-direct tax …
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McAfee originally declared himself the cyber party candidate: http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2015/09/antivirus-mogul-john-mcafee-makes-his-bid-to-run-for-president-official/ http://docquery.fec.gov/pdf/254/201509089001618254/20150908900161…
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More from its inventor: http://www.ted.com/talks/harald_haas_wireless_data_from_every_light_bulb/transcript?language=en There are 10,000 times more light bulbs – each one of them a potential Li-Fi "access point" – than there are cellular radi…
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SpamSandwich said: Li-fi is a bust even before it becomes anything. The line of sight requirement is instant death. Not really. You probably already have at least one light bulb in every room, right? That "light bulb" would need to be …
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justbobf said: I'd like to know the difference between an industrial age tax code and a digital age tax code. To me, it just sounds like Tim and Company don't like paying taxes. But, maybe others can explain his thoughts. Here's a shor…
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Shamsung's case won't make it past the lowest Supreme Court clerk.
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Apple Pay alone is worth the price. Click click done.