(CNET) Why does my external hard drive only show 2.2TB?
CNET - Older hard-drive enclosures may be limited in the size of drive they can present to your system.
Sometimes I may put stuff here. You should look once in a while.
Turns out, a-holes exist all around the world. They work in government. Military. Law Enforcement. Fast food. Grocery stores. That's a weird word, grocery. Who says that shit? Anyway...
In all seriousness, you can be an ass. A real hateful idiot, who preaches more than practices. Good on you.
Do not DONATE to Wikipedia.org, Cancer.org, my site or any other that gives you free stuff.
They're assholes.
<pIt's against everything you stand for.
FKCU ALL THE WAY OFF.
Thank you.
blog posts by Larry A. Compton
"You can't win, Darth. If you strike me down, I shall become more powerful than you can possibly imagine." - Obi-Wan Kenobi
Welcome to my blog. See also the additional subcategories that are listed near the bottom of this page. Thank you for visiting!
CNET - Older hard-drive enclosures may be limited in the size of drive they can present to your system.
Computerworld - Microsoft's free previews of Windows 8 will expire next month, giving users about three weeks to upgrade to a paid copy or face hourly restarts.
It's the end of an era for one iconic device, but Sony plans to continue selling blank cassette tapes, tape decks, and boomboxes with cassette support -- for now.
Sounds like an oxymoron, doesn't it? Is it a standard or is it a guideline? It's both, and it's courtesy of the ISO/IEC JTC (joint technical committee). I've been told the new document was created from a SWGDE guideline, but since you have to purchase the "standard" I couldn't really even tell you what language it is in, because I'm not paying for any document created in a vacuum.
Just finished reading the CNET article "Cops to Congress: We need logs of Americans' text messages". As someone who has analyzed mobile devices and call records for law enforcement for many years, I'm not surprised at all that law enforcement wants service providers to store more data. As a citizen of the United States, I'm a bit surprised the public seems to be sleeping on this one.
Make no mistake people, the issue under consideration here is whether or not you have the right to communicate via text message privately.