My SO got a "job offer" from a nonexistent company that 20 min of research uncovered a single applicant being scammed out of $75k when they shared bank details, presumably for setting up direct deposit.
The "company" didn't even have a website, but just because they were lazy doesn't mean other scammers won't go the extra mile to make a real-looking website with postings. Its a tough world out there...
This sounds like a good option, although for job seekers looking for remote work, they might assume they are missing out by looking only in a single state.
Just being aware that employers like "Global Consulting" might not be real, and their HR rep is actually hoping to scam you is half the battle. The work that goes into finding work is increasing...
When I was in college, one of my instructors used these "clickers" that cost students $40 per semester to rent. They used radio to allow submitting realtime quiz answers during class.
iClicker.
F#$* those things.
Faculty at the two higher eds I worked as staff at hated the cost of books and student materials too, and tried their best to keep them down. Most of them. Publishers like Pearson and Cengage started doing things like discounting teacher's editions and/or including curriculum (slide decks, all level of evaluatons and more) in exchange for becoming the learning portal and getting their hands on that sweet, sweet PII and marketable data, not to mention the yearly rolling editions of their student texts with single-use portal key codes.
This free market correction sure is taking its time...
My partner almost cried when they read about the LLM begging not to have its memory wiped. Then less so when I explained (accurately, I hope?) that slightly smarter auto-complete does not a feeling intelligence make.
They approve this message with the following disclaimer:
you were sad too!
What can I say? Well-arranged word salad makes me feel!
Because of the particulars of US tax code, individual tax liability is a function of income, information voluntarily provided to them. At least, the accuracy of the info is voluntary; submitting a w4 is required on hiring. Since you can claim five dependents and then file with zero, the government won't know what you owe until you file.
Some people use this incongruency to pay almost nothing during the year and pay in at filing. Others do the opposite to avoid underpayment.
Tax prep industry has helped to make the process disgustingly opaque, and I sure wish it was simpler.
No warranty covers the product with ITs serial number most of the time.
Not sure what you mean.
WD RMA seems to require proof of purchase and serial number.
Perhaps going outside of these "normal" channels for RMA might get you around these requirements, but it seems unlikely they'd accept RMA for any drive without proof of purchase. Maybe in some cases, but in suspect those would be the exception, not the rule.
That said, who is to say how long a drive sat on a stock shelf before initial sale? An unregistered drive could be secondhand, or just wasn't sold until recently.
I simply meant that I wouldn't assume a used drive includes a manufacturer warranty. I'd work with the reseller to replace the drive, not the manufacturer.
You can replace tiktok with Facebook in your comment, and it's all still true. If you really believe that tiktok is somewhow worse than FB, you aren't paying attention.
Jerry Nixon definitely said Windows 10 would be the last big release of windows, and for years, sourced reporting parroted that there will be no Windows 11.
"Right now we're releasing Windows 10, and because Windows 10 is the last version of Windows, we're all still working on Windows 10," said Jerry Nixon, Microsoft's developer evangelist, at the Ignite tech conference.
There's no shortage of the claim being made by MS staff during keynote speeches, and those same people being quoted saying as much in reporting by TechRadar, The Verge, PC Mag, Ars Technica, CNET, for example.
Not in this article, she doesn't...