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This was the game that taught me what system requirements were. My parents got it for me for my birthday or Christmas - went to install it and my Leading Edge purchased from Crutchfield just laughed at me.


Wishing you both all the best.


Mind posting the link to that comment? I purchased that bundle and would be curious to see where to start.


Believe it or not, it really is. I was given this example by an attorney who specialized in HIPAA law: Say a chain store has a breach and the only thing that was stolen was a customer's name and their flu shot records - that wouldn't be that big of a deal, right? Well, say one of those customers was a fitness guru who built an empire on natural and holistic remedies. This changes the entire context of the breach.

The same thing would work for age. Look at that ridiculous California law they proposed to get IMDb to stop showing actors' and actresses' birthdays. There can always be a claim of age discrimination - especially in finance.


How on earth would that work? You're going to have to disclose your DOB at some point in the process to landing a job or applying for a loan regardless of any 'age discrimination'.


I'm just saying that just because you're willingly giving your DOB, doesn't mean it's not considered "sensitive information". An employer can use it to determine if you're old enough to work there (Arby's for example), but if it got out, someone could possibly use it against you, so it's considered sensitive.


Why is it required for getting a job?


Because, for instance you have to be over 18 to get a job, because your minimum wage could be indexed to age, because your CV will give most of that away anyway and because various official forms your employer will need to fill in accurately contain a field for 'date of birth'.

You probably can't even open a bank account without specifying your DOB, let alone get a job or a loan.


I know people stick their DOB (and photo!) on their CVs in the Netherlands. As far as I'm aware that would be quite odd to see in the US. There are some differences here in what is comfortably or preemptively shared with employers between the US and the NL.


It's still the usual way of things in Germany. You bet I had a nice professional photo taken. You list not only your birth date, but birthplace and marital/family status.

Job-hunting as a married-but-childless 30 year old woman here is awesome. Not. When I was stupid enough to make the whole "why do we list our family status on our resumes" thing a point of smalltalk towards the end of one of my first interviews here, the guy cheerfully told me, "oh, because we need to pay a family father of 3 more than we need to pay a single guy"

... and the young, childless wife of an engineer working at that small city's most generously-paying employer? The guy did not seem to believe I needed a job at all. All's well that ends well, and I'm now in a far better job that has a relatively transparent union payscale, but it stung at the time.

My husband, a German, has told me that you used to also list the occupations of your parents!


Good grief, that's incredibly off-putting. I've refused to add a photo and DOB to my CV on principle and fortunately it hasn't seemed to hinder my job seeking.


You should see the stuff the gradeschool of my kids asks me about without so much as blushing.


It would be after the hiring decision, but the I-9 requests plenty of information.

https://www.uscis.gov/i-9


That's pretty much de facto standard in Sweden too! Seems to be very common in Europe in general.


Identity verification, background checks, etc.


After nearly 10 years working with AWS, I've learned to never trust that page.


Which AZ?


"C", but that's meaningless because AWS scrambles the zone names for each account. (Presumably to prevent everyone from putting all their servers in "A".)


Interesting - I had no idea they did that. Well, I guess checking my instances in C won't be any help to you. Sorry!



Haha - I didn't know that. Makes sense. I've got a dropdown in one of my Cloudformation scripts for AZs, and every time I get to it, I spend way more time thinking about it than I should. You've saved me some time.


Don't feel too bad about this - Android Auto is nice, but it still has a lot of drawbacks and deficiencies. I just switched to a car without it and realized I don't miss it at all.


H4!b5at+kWls-8yh4Guq it is then!


0118 999 881 999 119 7253


PolygonPlywoodBrimNibbleUndertow,UnderrateFaxCliqueBribeUnhappily4

EFF Diceware FTW. >128 bits of entropy there. Has uppercase, lowercase, a number, and a symbol to satisfy misguided password strength rules. Being a passphrase it's much more memorable than simple passwords. Clearly this passphrase is the best.


I'd rather append 0A! to passphrases to satisfy silly requirements instead of capitalizing Every Single Word (impossible to type at speed) and inserting a symbol at a random place. This looks a little troubador-sy.


It's by William Gibson, so it kind of does.


I had it done nearly 10 years ago and ever since, my eyes are much more sensitive to light and I do see halos around lights at night. That said, I'd still have it done again without a second thought - the benefits for me far outweigh those drawbacks.


Agree, I did mine around 8 years ago, and I have halos around street lights when driving at night. I'm absolutely still glad I did it, and I would do it again if/when my eyes ever get worse someday.


I've seen halos for as long as I can remember. Never had any eye surgery of any kind, and doctors tell me my eyes are fine. It's kind of annoying, but no big deal.

Wish I knew what caused it though.


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