You likely can’t do equity investing but you might be able to buy their bonds:
https://www.ndb.int/news/ndb-launches-new-usd-1-25bn-3-year-green-bond/
Seems like a bad idea to me. If you want to diversify buy index funds and ETFs.
You likely can’t do equity investing but you might be able to buy their bonds:
https://www.ndb.int/news/ndb-launches-new-usd-1-25bn-3-year-green-bond/
Seems like a bad idea to me. If you want to diversify buy index funds and ETFs.
The Cake Song
Haunting
It must be for wifi that they operate.
Sucks to suck I guess.
Except for tha time with Windows 8 where they tried to get rid of them.
I just want my privacy back.
It is a good Cyber-thriller.
It’s a discipline.
I run Emby and MythTV on a Beelink Mini PC. It is a little pricey compared to some of the options you mentioned but not by too much. It works really well and is very quiet:
https://www.amazon.com/Beelink-SER5-5560U-500GB-Computer/dp/B0B3WYVB2D
I remember when SFC was first introduced, I excitedly wrote a script to invoke it remotely so I could use it on a user’s pc when they called to fix their problem. To this day I have never run that script. This was in 1998.
I would go past underrated and day much maligned.
“> driving out rivals, diminishing competition, inflating advertising costs, reducing revenues for news publishers and content creators, snuffing out innovation, and harming the exchange of information and ideas in the public sphere.”
I feel like it is going to be hard to prove that Google’s anti-competitive actions have inflated advertising costs. Also, did news publishers lose revenue because of Google or was it Craigslist and jobs sites that killed their classified business?
Google is definitely a monopoly and has acted badly, but proving the harm in this way is going to be tricky. The government should go after them for privacy, the place where they have clearly abused their relationship with the public. Google normalizing spying on users has created the data economy that has resulted in us being spied upon us all the time and having all of our personal data being leaked over and over again.
As someone who has administered networks and written policies like this the concern here is that you will run an open network that may be used for piracy, hacking, DDOS or to send bomb threats. Tracing down this type of behavior is required by law and allowing students to run open networks makes this near impossible.
For a D&D cooking show, check out Delicious in Dungeon!
Yes, you can configure non-router DNS in your DHCP server or you can manually set DNS on individual hosts. For a VPN you want to make sure the VPN connection has DNS manually configured.
If you have your router setup to resolve DNS, which is common, then while the VPN is active if you use your router for DNS, your router will be sending queries with the sites you visit from your real ip address to your DNS provider.
It stings at first, but once you realize you can now play all of the classics on emulators it helps take the pain away.