Nope. They have one uni-sex model. But never fear I'm just looking for house shoes/slippers. I developed plantar fasciitis about a year ago so I always wear something on my feet in the house now. I bought a pair of Under Armour slides and they were a life saver. Problem is they don't last very long. Birkenstocks are supposed to last many years so I thought I'd look at them. I tried a pair today and it's a weird shoe. They were uncomfortable and I have no idea if it they would break in. I didn't get them.
Birkenstocks = hippies. Case in point, the lead photo for this survey... http://blog.estately.com/2013/07/17-best-u-s-cities-for-hippies/ Boulder is #4!
What you got against hippies eh? I worked and went to school in Boulder for a year and I actually liked it a lot but it's changed. The hippies have been replaced by gangs, homeless, and millionaires. There is still an abundance of pot but since it went legal it's not even that special anymore. CU is still a great place to go to school.
No idea regarding the security aspect, although it's a bonus to think that it might help. I changed to it on a whim based on a period of sluggish web performance after upgrading to Yosemite, and it was effective in clearing that up.
Putting in some new systems and moving to ESX6, added 2 racks to the vCenter so far, I like the way it lumps all the resources together and just manages the whole thing as if it is one big system. Gone from 4.1 to 6 so missed 5 completely. Thats a whole load of free processing power already, gonna add in 16TB of storage tomorrow.
I just lost my VMware guy today. I think he quit or something and I really have no idea how he built my stuff. Thank goodness I hadn't moved anything critical to the servers he managed.
I wish I could rotate between 2 seasonal jobs so I only work off-seasons. My job just went 0-100% busy in the last 2 weeks.
That is exactly what has happened to me in the last week. Got next week off so set myself a plan to get so far into the implementation of the new hardware/ESX environment and then a Nortel BCM fails at one office and a Cisco Router at another, hopefully today I can get on!
PC got hosed up today. Black screens after the Windows logo. I couldn't fix it so I reinstalled Windows. I'm like 50% sure it's my SSDs fault but I don't know whats going on with it. I've been getting odd file and disk errors for the last month but nothing super solid. It's still under warranty. What do I do next? It's a Seagate 600 Series 480GB.
The Waltons have a net worth of $175B. Six family members have as much money as the bottom 42% of Americans combined. They could afford to give every employee a livable wage with benefits and still have more money than anyone could spend in thousands of lifetimes. They just choose not to because they're greedy, evil fucks. I guess it's easy to be that rich when you don't pay your employees and leave it up to taxpayer funded social programs to pick up the difference.
They are also notorious for not only trolling the IRS, but single-handedly developing most of the tax avoidance schemes used by the wealthy. They have successfully dodged inheritance and estate taxes for a few generations now. Every time the IRS plugs a hole, they spend millions concocting a new scheme to transfer wealth around.
I've always found it hilarious that Bill Gates has been successful in getting people to believe that he's giving his fortune away without actually dropping down the net worth list. He's #1 or #2 every year, but he's "giving it away".
He's transferred ~$30b to the Gates Foundation lifetime to date (at one time ~50% net worth). He made it back and then some due to the recession. The wealthy were able to invest heavily on the dips in 2007-2010. Don't be jealous just cause steve jobs was a notorious greedy miser.
Right, but it really doesn't translate to 50% of net worth because his net worth isn't actually down by 50%. He's not giving anything away. Plus, the majority of the money in the Gates Foundation is used for investing in the stock market, not charity.
Are you trying to argue semantics of what literally constitutes giving away your own money? I'm not sure why you would do that but I suppose you're right on that petty point. The foundation as "only" given out $33 billion. But their spending money is indeed generated with profits from the investment of endowment (Gates $30b). I never understood this criticism. They are donating a staggering amount of money to causes and generating money to continue operations. If they straight just gave his money away it would've already closed... Also, net worth at this level is widely variable with assets. You can't turn it into a basic arithmetic problem without accounting for ~20 years in market fluctuations.