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throw new OutOfChocolateException();
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Google has just quietly launched a rather nifty new feature: free international calling to 25 different countries through Hangouts/Gmail/Google+. HiGrandmaHowAreYouThat'sGreatSendMoneyOKLoveYouBye
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At one place I worked in the late 90s we had some remote equipment that we needed to communicate with and we found that we could connect it to a cellular MODEM then connect, send instructions, get status, and hangup in less than a minute. And calls less than a minute were free. Much cheaper than running networking infrastructure.
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Very lovely workaround (they should have bonussed you with the money saved )
TTFN - Kent
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For the rest of 2014, the first minute of most calls to 25 countries are free,
Idiotic marketing gimmick, but I'm sure it'll bring droves over to Google's services.
Marc
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NoMyPCIsntSpewingVirusesGoAwayBuhBye!
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Hey, Gustav, how you doing?
Fine.
Me, too. Bye!
===================
Hello, Gustav?
Yes?
I have a question for you.
What is it?
I'll call you back to ask...
===================
Yo, Pradeep! What's up?!
Well, lots of things. Call me back about 20 times and I'll let you know.
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Extending Office 365 functionality to third-party developers, Microsoft has exposed a set of application programming interfaces (APIs) so other companies can add features and capabilities to the online productivity service. VBA not required?
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Ooohhh... one Clippy coming right up!
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Clippy now, Clippy forever.
"What is dead may never die..."
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Christopher Shields wrote: "What is dead may never die..."
How do you kill that which has no life?
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OneGet isn't exactly new, it was first detailed back in April of this year but at that time, it was an optional feature for Windows 8.1 and could be installed with the Windows Management Framework 5.0 Preview. The important bit of news here is that OneGet will come with all Windows 10 installs, meaning that developers can now make use of this functionality as they know every new install will have this feature. sudo apt-get FINAL-freaking-LY!
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And in 10 years when the share of W10+ computers is finally large enough to convince the penny pinching PHBs that instead of a universal conventional installer that works on all boxes they should make a OneGet package that works on all PCs (because we can't waste money doing more than one installer); they'll bundle eleventy-seven pieces of crapware in with it and because package management is supposed to be entirely auto-magic they'll remove the step where you can opt out prior to installing them.
Did you ever see history portrayed as an old man with a wise brow and pulseless heart, waging all things in the balance of reason?
Is not rather the genius of history like an eternal, imploring maiden, full of fire, with a burning heart and flaming soul, humanly warm and humanly beautiful?
--Zachris Topelius
Training a telescope on one’s own belly button will only reveal lint. You like that? You go right on staring at it. I prefer looking at galaxies.
-- Sarah Hoyt
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Microsoft officials are revealing a few more of the Windows 10 features testers should expect in the coming months. Oh, can you feel the excitement in the air?
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Friday, Oct. 31, will mark the end of retail sales of consumer editions of Windows 7 and Windows 8. Buy up all the copies - think of what they'll be worth on eBay soon
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Google is building a nano particle platform that could one day be used to continuously measure your health via particles traveling through your bloodstream. "It was in the blood, the flesh, And now it is forever."
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It’s official: HTML5 is a standard.
The Worldwide Web Consortium today has elevated the HTML5 specification to ‘recommendation’ status, giving it the group’s highest level of endorsement, which is akin to becoming a standard. "I've seen the future. It's in my browser."
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It's no secret that Amazon leads the public cloud computing race. The question is by how much. Lock-in locks people in. News at 11.
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While he believes smart machines can take us to Mars and drive our cars for us, Musk remains worried that artificial intelligence holds a darker potential. Ia! Ia! Shub-Niggurath!
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I think someone is calling me...
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Artificial intelligence taking over the world is a horror story plot, not a real danger. Mostly this article proves that you don't need much sense to become a super-rich investor.
As long as we're afraid of artificial intelligence turning on us if advance it, let's also be afraid of sewer systems creating sludge monsters that crawl up our drains if we breed more efficient bacteria to deal with sludge. Or long hair coming alive and strangling us in our sleep because our new shampoo gives it a more "life-like shine".
There's no end to imaginary dangers that make good horror story plots.
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Kent Sharkey wrote: Musk remains worried that artificial intelligence holds a darker potential.
I'm a lot more afraid of what we humans display as "intelligence" than anything a machine will, in the foreseeable future, demonstrate.
Marc
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I'm a lot more afraid of humans getting dumber than machines getting smarter.
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