Well had they deleted the password and someone still accessed the network without authorization and the FBI investigated the situation (much like they are now) then the Cardinals could have been charged with obstruction of justice under the SOX act Section 802.
As a Windows user with an iPhone I am very happy that they are bringing Cortana to iOS. I like unifying my environment, but I don't want to buy a new device to do that.
Do you actually use OneCloud on OSX and the mini office on Android?
I find OneCloud to be very smooth: I only have a 128GB SSD drive on my old MacBook Air and the selective sync lets me keep most of my videos, pictures, backups, etc. offline.
I don't use Office on the Android too much, but it seems OK enough.
BTW, I went with Office 365 as a price/cost decision. For $99/year my wife and I both get 1 TB of cloud storage, and if we want them the latest office suite. We both just use the web versions of the Office 365 apps on out MacBook Airs though.
EDIT: a bonus: the web based Office 365 apps are very useful on my Linux laptop - I stopped using Libre Office.
Yes, I went through a one mongth trial of Office 365 because the price seemed good and I really wanted to like it.
On OS X the OneDrive client had problems synchronizing my 80 GB archive - refused to synchronize files containing characters not accepted on Windows (like ":"), crashed several times and it was also saturating my network bandwidth. To make matters worse, OneDrive doesn't have basic functionality, like a log of what happened (files added, removed), let alone a 30 days version history. So I have to trust that their shitty client is doing the right thing.
The way I see it - yes, the Family pack is cost effective, but I'll never store 1 TB of my data on OneDrive without having logs, versioning and a client that does not suck for both OS X and Linux. I also think people get to be irrational about pricing - the price of 1 TB on Dropbox or Google Drive is as much as 2 Starbucks coffees.
On Android, Office wasn't available for my Nexus 6 (Android L) until 2 or 3 weeks ago when it was finally released. Gave it a try and it's too bare-bones, plus it had problems displaying documents from work. I expected it to work well as a viewer, but it doesn't.
I agree that it is annoying to occasionally have to remove special characters from file names. BTW, I also back up locally so a OneDrive error would be a real nuisance, but no real damage. I mainly like cloud storage for devices with small SSD drives, like my old MacBook Air.
I used to be a very happy Dropbox paying customer but I did not like their hiring of C. Rice to their board of directors.
I guess I've always misunderstood blackholes. I was under the impression that they were simply a vacuum created as a by product of the every expanding "space". Sure they are sucking things up and growing, but space is always expanding.
I went over this and I feel like I need a little context to understand exactly what this is besides some guys ramblings about Verizon. Or is this an official document "leaked" from Verizon?
Context: the conference at which the talk is presented:
"The Eindhoven Institute for the Protection of Systems and Information (Ei/PSI) organizes a 1-day event on Security in Times of Surveillance on Friday, 08 May 2015. The event will take place at the Technische Universiteit Eindhoven in the Blauwe Zaal. It features eight invited talks covering technical as well as legal and political aspects of security and surveillance. The program closes with a viewing of the CITIZENFOUR film."
Then read the disclaimer of the presentation which you certainly skipped.
Voat does indeed seem to be a viable replacement. Of course, it's just starting out, and they are in a self-described alpha state, so they may not be ready for a huge influx of users.
Voat's become a magnet for the GG and other seedy reddit communities that have propped up over the past few months. More power to them, but Voat can keep them.
I'll go elsewhere once Reddit crashes and burns. Away from the MRAs and SRS. Somewhere where the noise is squelched far from the signal.
The whole bubble site is actually pretty flaky. Just for the sake of curiosity (and I saw it was free to create websites with) I tried to create an account. Even after creating the account it keeps redirecting me back to the pricing page where it wants me to select my payment plan. Bubble.is, no thanks.
Also not a fan of the alery box that shows up on every page as you try to navigate their website letting me know:
> We're still saving your latest changes... please wait a moment!
I think site is trying to get push the idea of "look what click and drag website makers are capable of doing". The nottwitter site was built with bubble.is by a person without any programming experience, it was all click and drag.
As a web developer I see the promise in these website builder sites for the layman. By simplifying the task of making a website it reduces the need to hire costly developers. In my experience though, sites built using these cookie cutters quickly outgrow the platform or tend to break catastrophically because the people using them have no clue what is going on.
I've read so many great things about this game; however, the little bit I played on a friends computer just leaves me wanting more (especially at +20$). I understand that this is relatively cheap in gaming standards I just can't get there.
This is a shame. When I first started college I felt that citations were always a burden. Five years later and two degrees I wouldn't even dream about writing without citing my work. If these kids want to cheat, they shouldn't be rewarded. But hey, the more the kids fluff off the less I have to worry about my field of study being over populated by people that can ACTUALLY do the job..
http://www.soxlaw.com/s802.htm