It was fun, indeed. People knew so little about the implications and possibilities of connecting two systems, that even if you didn’t hack anything worthwhile, it was easy to feel like a genius simply by war-dialing into another local nerd’s own Commodore 64.
To be honest… that doesn’t sound like a heavy lift at all.
True, and this is why the system needs to provide mental health services for these caretakers too. Right now, you’ve got the overwhelmed and frustrated overseeing the overwhelmed and frustrated, which is a recipe for disasters like this. Add a profit motive, and now you’ve got yourself a stew going.
That first picture looks like the cover of a 1980s computer magazine, but I just can’t figure out which one.
I don’t want to know how the thumbs are at the top.
Ha ha. Yeah… funny. … gulp.
Also the first president to face 91 criminal charges. What in the ever-loving hell is your point?
They had a good shot until the Russian government took over US Congress.
Kindness isn’t patronizing. Just offer to help because you care for Stevie and your neighbor. No need to make it a debt (or worse, make her “work it off”), which would redefine your relationship as employer/employee. Just friends doing what friends do.
Most liquors, but gin and tequila in particular.
Unless they’re apologizing for their failures or resigning in shame, why even include comments from politicians like Grassley and Nunn? They’ve already told us they’re not interested or involved in such matters.
Op-Ed’s are just that: Opinions and Editorials. In traditional print journalism, they usually included informed opinion pieces from the editor of the publication itself, or perhaps expert guest or syndicated columnists. Fringe opinions were only relegated to the “letters to the editor” public-forum subsections and not given much weight. Today it seems whoever types fastest gets the audience.
And now I’m reading a computer’s version of a story describing how a computer wrote a story that should have been discarded.