It's obvious Tektronix is just lazy. They don't want to go through the hassle of ordering different sized ROM chips for the different model features (so someone can't flash better firmware on to a cheaper one). Ideally with different electrical characteristics, so you can't just swap it out.
So what about other concurrent bandwidth usage (ie. Netflix/Downloads)? I will watch Youtube while someone else is either watching Netflix, or downloading. I have on occasion seen that blue bar.
Will that negatively affect my ISP's ratings?
I actually have a decent local ISP. I don't want them to get unwarranted negative ratings due to my pipe being filled of my own accord.
I have an old Radio Shack DMM (probably 10 years old or more now). It's mostly yellow, with a grey front. Except for that, I rarely see any yellow multimeters anymore that aren't Fluke. Got to Harbor Freight, Fry's or RS now, and all you see are grey, black, and red ones. No yellow. Like the original guy from Sparkfun, I also associate yellow with multimeters in general (and red now), but not Fluke specifically.
I've used Fluke before, and they're nice, but I won't buy one for hobbyist work.
Some people are allergic to certain vaccines. Just like how some people are allergic to bees. That alone is one reason everyone who can, should vaccinate. It protects those who cannot via herd immunity. Unlike the idiots who choose not to vaccinate, these people, like sadly your niece, medically cannot receive the vaccines.
I have to agree. I'm in software development, and both I and at least one other peer don't have advanced college degrees. I only have an AS (in network admin), and he has none at all. We do just fine. Although I did get started by working at said company as an intern. College education may not be worthwhile, but internships most definitely are. Higher education should be focused more on that, IMO.
I emailed her, this is her reply (received about a week ago):
Thank you for your letter expressing your support for reforming National Security Agency (NSA) programs. I appreciate hearing from you on this important issue, and welcome the opportunity to respond.
First, please be assured that the NSA does not conduct mass surveillance on U.S. citizens. Its mission is to collect foreign signals intelligence to detect foreign national security threats. For your convenience, a summary of the NSA's authorities under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) is available on the agency's website or at http://tinyurl.com/NSA-FISA.
Please know that I support measures to improve oversight of U.S. intelligence programs and to make them more transparent to the public. On October 31, 2013, I introduced the "FISA Improvements Act" (S. 1631), which would require court review when the NSA call records database is queried, and mandate a series of limitations on how the records can be obtained, stored, and used. It would also authorize the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court to designate outside "amici curiae," or "friends of the court," to provide independent perspectives and assist the Court in reviewing matters that present a novel or significant interpretation of law.
Additionally, on November 5, 2013, the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, which I chair, approved the "Intelligence Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2014" (S. 1681), which would strengthen existing protections that allow whistleblowers in the Intelligence Community to bring their concerns directly to the attention of Congress, inspectors general, and Intelligence Community leaders. The bill would also require the Department of Justice to inform the Congressional intelligence committees of all Office of Legal Counsel opinions regarding intelligence activities, and extend the charter of the Public Interest Declassification Board, which promotes public access to a thorough record of U.S. national security decisions and activities.
Finally, as Chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, I have called for a full review of all U.S. intelligence programs. For your convenience, I have included an opinion piece I authored in the San Francisco Chronicle on November 2, 2013 that further outlines proposals that I support.
Again, thank you for writing. Please know that as Chairman of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, I take seriously my responsibility to ensure that national security programs honor the privacy and Fourth Amendment rights of U.S. citizens. I will certainly keep your concerns in mind as Congress considers legislation to reform NSA programs. Should you have any additional questions or concerns, please do not hesitate to contact my Washington, D.C. office at (202) 224-3841.
Nubribullet, LLC is the owner of the well-known trademark and trade name Nutribullet. As you are no doubt aware, Nutribullet is a trademark used to identify products, services, activities and events related to Nutribullet, LLC.
1) Well-known, I doubt it. I didn't know about it. Granted that is a small selection size. 2) They couldn't even spell the company name correct.
I think the people in her (my) state just don't care.
They see a name they recognize and pick it.
I'm starting to think letting ignorant people vote is worse than not letting them.
Forget this 'right to vote' garbage. You need to show at least some semblance of intelligent political thought before being allowed to vote. Not just, "Should I check the top box, or the bottom?"
Otherwise you end up with this situation.
Anyway to answer the article's question: She's blind, deaf, and dumb. That's how.
I just hope this situation finally gets her thrown out of office. Wishful thinking, I know...
When Star Trek: Armada came out, I got a demo disk from a gaming magazine then.
I played the demo (two missions) far more than 20 times. Then again I was like 10 or 12, so I wouldn't have been able to buy the game anyway. I didn't care, the demo was fun enough for me back then.
I bought the sequel when it came out, then the original when it was re-released by another company.
I think it's about time I write another letter to my disgrace of a senator, Feinstein, and let her know my feelings on this.
Part of me wants to know what canned response letter I'll receive back. However speaking my opinion will make me feel a little better. Even if it serves no purpose, at least it's better than most of the people in this country that won't do anything.
On the post: Tektronix Uses DMCA Notice To Try To Stop Oscilloscope Hacking
They should stop being lazy
They don't want to go through the hassle of ordering different sized ROM chips for the different model features (so someone can't flash better firmware on to a cheaper one). Ideally with different electrical characteristics, so you can't just swap it out.
Stop being lazy!
On the post: Comic Artist Randy Queen Now Claims Post About His Abuse Of Copyright To Stifle Criticism Is Defamatory
So you didn't copy-paste or do OCR, but manually retyped it?
On the post: The Inevitable: Drunk Man Arrested For Impersonating Groping TSA Agent At Airport
Which is sad.
On the post: YouTube Quietly, But Publicly, Shaming ISPs That Make Your Video Streams Stutter
Re: Re:
Once it was downloaded, it was done. This was also true of prebuffering in general.
Lately I've noticed most videos won't prebuffer the entire amount anymore. Only about 30-60 seconds or so, no matter how long you leave it to buffer.
On the post: YouTube Quietly, But Publicly, Shaming ISPs That Make Your Video Streams Stutter
What about other bandwidth?
I will watch Youtube while someone else is either watching Netflix, or downloading.
I have on occasion seen that blue bar.
Will that negatively affect my ISP's ratings?
I actually have a decent local ISP. I don't want them to get unwarranted negative ratings due to my pipe being filled of my own accord.
On the post: IP Sanity: Boston Strong Trademark Applications Denied
Re: Re: Not quite
FTFY.
On the post: Sheriff's Dept. Charges Man With No Drugs With 'Intent To Distribute Counterfeit Controlled Substances'
Re: Re:
On the post: PSA: Don't Kill Yourself, Literally, Over BS Ransomware
He should have hung himself first. Disgusting.
On the post: Fluke Gives Sparkfun A Bunch Of Multimeters In Response To Trademark Mess
I've used Fluke before, and they're nice, but I won't buy one for hobbyist work.
On the post: Thanks Anti-Vax Loons: The Return Of The Measles And The Backlash Against Jenny McCarthy
Re:
Unlike the idiots who choose not to vaccinate, these people, like sadly your niece, medically cannot receive the vaccines.
On the post: DailyDirt: Are College Degrees Useless Now?
Re: Not for every career path
We do just fine.
Although I did get started by working at said company as an intern. College education may not be worthwhile, but internships most definitely are. Higher education should be focused more on that, IMO.
On the post: Senator Feinstein Finally Finds Surveillance To Get Angry About: When It Happened To Her Staffers
Thank you for your letter expressing your support for reforming National Security Agency (NSA) programs. I appreciate hearing from you on this important issue, and welcome the opportunity to respond.
First, please be assured that the NSA does not conduct mass surveillance on U.S. citizens. Its mission is to collect foreign signals intelligence to detect foreign national security threats. For your convenience, a summary of the NSA's authorities under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) is available on the agency's website or at http://tinyurl.com/NSA-FISA.
Please know that I support measures to improve oversight of U.S. intelligence programs and to make them more transparent to the public. On October 31, 2013, I introduced the "FISA Improvements Act" (S. 1631), which would require court review when the NSA call records database is queried, and mandate a series of limitations on how the records can be obtained, stored, and used. It would also authorize the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court to designate outside "amici curiae," or "friends of the court," to provide independent perspectives and assist the Court in reviewing matters that present a novel or significant interpretation of law.
Additionally, on November 5, 2013, the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, which I chair, approved the "Intelligence Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2014" (S. 1681), which would strengthen existing protections that allow whistleblowers in the Intelligence Community to bring their concerns directly to the attention of Congress, inspectors general, and Intelligence Community leaders. The bill would also require the Department of Justice to inform the Congressional intelligence committees of all Office of Legal Counsel opinions regarding intelligence activities, and extend the charter of the Public Interest Declassification Board, which promotes public access to a thorough record of U.S. national security decisions and activities.
Finally, as Chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, I have called for a full review of all U.S. intelligence programs. For your convenience, I have included an opinion piece I authored in the San Francisco Chronicle on November 2, 2013 that further outlines proposals that I support.
Again, thank you for writing. Please know that as Chairman of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, I take seriously my responsibility to ensure that national security programs honor the privacy and Fourth Amendment rights of U.S. citizens. I will certainly keep your concerns in mind as Congress considers legislation to reform NSA programs. Should you have any additional questions or concerns, please do not hesitate to contact my Washington, D.C. office at (202) 224-3841.
Sincerely yours,
Dianne Feinstein
United States Senator
On the post: Company 'Thanks' Blogger For Positive Review By Sending C&D Claiming 'Unauthorized Trademark Use'
1) Well-known, I doubt it. I didn't know about it. Granted that is a small selection size.
2) They couldn't even spell the company name correct.
On the post: TSA Security Theater Makes Unwilling Co-Star Out Of 3-Year-Old With Rare Medical Condition
404 is not useless
Ergo, the TSA is less useful than a 404 page.
On the post: How Could Dianne Feinstein Not Have Seen The Report Laying Out NSA Abuses?
Re: Again...
They see a name they recognize and pick it.
I'm starting to think letting ignorant people vote is worse than not letting them.
Forget this 'right to vote' garbage. You need to show at least some semblance of intelligent political thought before being allowed to vote. Not just, "Should I check the top box, or the bottom?"
Otherwise you end up with this situation.
Anyway to answer the article's question: She's blind, deaf, and dumb. That's how.
I just hope this situation finally gets her thrown out of office. Wishful thinking, I know...
On the post: Nintendo Restricts The Number Of Times You Can Play A Game Demo For Some Reason
I've done it
I played the demo (two missions) far more than 20 times. Then again I was like 10 or 12, so I wouldn't have been able to buy the game anyway. I didn't care, the demo was fun enough for me back then.
I bought the sequel when it came out, then the original when it was re-released by another company.
On the post: Congressional Oversight? Dianne Feinstein Says She's 'Not A High-Tech Techie' But Knows NSA Can't Abuse Surveillance
Silicon Valley
Yet another reason she needs to go, she does not represent our state.
On the post: Growing Number Of Senators Demand Answers About NSA Surveillance
Part of me wants to know what canned response letter I'll receive back. However speaking my opinion will make me feel a little better. Even if it serves no purpose, at least it's better than most of the people in this country that won't do anything.
On the post: Eric Holder Wants To Stop And Frisk The NYPD
Re: Re: Pet Peeve
On the post: Eric Holder Wants To Stop And Frisk The NYPD
Re: Pet Peeve
http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/flak
http://oxforddictionaries.com/us/definition/am erican_english/flak?q=flak
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