The Inq can be educational: There is no such thing as “SATA II drives”, stupid. Once in a while.
P.S. As far as I know UK tech webjournal “The Inquirer” has no relation to the US tabloid journal of that name — other than a bad attitude.
The Inq can be educational: There is no such thing as “SATA II drives”, stupid. Once in a while.
P.S. As far as I know UK tech webjournal “The Inquirer” has no relation to the US tabloid journal of that name — other than a bad attitude.
There’s this rumor going around that I refuse to believe. Please help me debunk it.
The story — related to me at dinner in all seriousness by a serious person who convinced me that he believed it– is that Homeland Security have banned tailgate parties at the Super Bowl, which you may have heard is being held in Miami this year.
I’ve been somewhat distressed to see how meekly Americans put up with ‘security theater’ requirements that restrict their freedoms while adding at best minuscule amounts to actual security. But if the day comes when football fans will give up their tailgate parties due to some diktat from Homeland Security, well, that’s the day that I’ll have to admit beyond peradventure that the people who hate our freedoms have won.
I did a little google search and can’t find anything which suggests such a limit might be in force, which strengthens my belief that this is an urban legend. (I did find some fun debunking of other Super Bowl related urban legends.)
I did find this long list of security restrictions on what you can bring into Dolphin Stadium but I don’t read this as applying to the parking areas where the tailgate parties happen.
Full text of the somewhat Draconian security rules for entrance into the stadium reproduced below. I wonder if the rumor is based on these?
Declan McCullagh has a story about a stealth practice that apparently has been going on for some time, but blew up spectacularly the other day. GoDaddy pulls security site after MySpace complaints. (I'm quoted in the story.)
It seems a registrar has been deleting domain names in response to abuse complaints — mostly spam and child porn — for a long time. But this week their policy took down a legitimate internet security site on the theory it was a hacker haven — and did it with a minute's warning (or maybe an hour's warning, accounts differ).
If GoDaddy is your registrar, you might want to consider how you feel about that.
This is so nutty that it makes sense, even if was invented at Comedy Central: Absurd Prediction (not?).
Incidentally, I really had no idea what category to file this under. Does anyone even care about categories?
Troops Authorized to Kill Iranian Operatives in Iraq:
The wide-ranging plan has several influential skeptics in the intelligence community, at the State Department and at the Defense Department who said that they worry it could push the growing conflict between Tehran and Washington into the center of a chaotic Iraq war.
Ya think?
Pop Quiz: What do these people have in common today?
Answer below.
Hint: They're not all running for President — only the ones in bold are doing that.