That saved my ass. Had been on AOL for a month or so, by stealing my dads CC number out of his wallet. Just happened to look at what the bill was going to be and it was something stupid like $400 (mid 90's dollars, so like a grand today).
I quickly found a fake CC generator and updated the CC. I was panicked for about a week..but he never found out. It never hit his CC, and then I was changing the CC every couple of weeks whenever I got a warning.
Anecdotally, we've walking a few OC beach towns the last couple weeks.. its _all_ vinyl sided tents everywhere outside. They're keeping in the heat for evening dining.
Afternoon dining is pretty easy to do, but dinner seems to be problematic even in OC where I'm at.
So, so wrong. How did (s)he think experts get so good? Isn't the phrase `the master has failed more times than the apprentice has even tried` well known for a reason?
Along these lines, I once heard somewhere that people do not process the word 'dont'. As a coach, I've had to shift my vocabulary to focus on the 'do's rather than the 'dont's
Eg: If you're doing a sport where leaning forward is bad, avoid telling yourself 'dont lean forward' as your mind only hears 'lean forward', therefore reinforcing the thing you're trying to avoid. Alternatively, tell yourself 'lean back' or 'stay straight' or whatever you're focusing on for that maneuver or drill.
I went looking, but found nothing regarding any operations management.
* How does this scale?
* How is it monitored? Where do I get the metrics for it? (indexing performance, search performance, etc.. Stuff not found in the OS)
* Are there any kind of throttling or queueing capabilities?
* What's the redundancy/HA approach?
* I'll ask about backups, though its the least of my worries as indexing databases like this and ES should be able to be rehydrated from source. However, snapshots may be faster to restore than reindexing.
This might be a nice local dev tool for something, but I'm not sure how you run a business critical application with it? I'm wondering if I'm missing something.