conceal them. so, they embark upon, if you, know the cover-up is always worse than the crime. and that is exactly what seems to happen here. i should point out, also, employee for an employee five, i, mean these are people who are clearly providing substantial testimony to the government already. employee for, his conversation with carlos de oliveira, is laid out in the indictment. he has testified to that, that testimony is in the book, it will likely come up at trial. the very expensive efforts that the fbi has conducted here to interview everyone, associate with mar-a-lago, that work has paid off for them. they have uncovered some dip very damaging witnesses. what we really see here, anderson, obstruction, on top of obstruction. the first layer is moving these documents out, getting them away from a lawyer. keeping them from the grand jury. and they realize, oh boy, we were captured by the surveillance videos. and then they tried to tamper with delete this surveillance video. two
woman. it is a tragic situation, we have to get all the facts. but i do think that ultimately the shooting will be ruled a justified shooting by the police. what is that process for determining if the officers acted reasonably under the circumstances? yes, so, under the law you have to look at what the officer reasonably knew at that moment. the law says you can t go back and use sort of perfect hindsight and say, well, for example, there was this person this young woman behind the wall there, there is no way based on the evidence we have seen that the officers could have known that. police and prosecutors have to get every bit of evidence here, they have to run the ballistics, they have to review every second of surveillance video, body cam video, interview everyone who was there, police officers, bystanders, get the complete picture and make the legal conclusion. sergeant dorsey, put us in the police officer s shoes. this is a clothing store, open during shopping hours, middl
The Reg speaks to former Microsoft engineer Dave Plummer
SmartDrive, DiskCopy. it s life at Redmond in the DOS era
Richard Speed Wed 6 Jan 2021 // 09:10 UTC Share
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Interview Everyone remembers their first time. It might be Commodore-flavoured, or carry a whiff of Sinclair about it. For former Microsoft engineer Dave Plummer, it was a TRS-80 in a 1979 Radio Shack.
Plummer now runs a YouTube channel stuffed full of nerdery, though decades ago he played a role in the rise of Microsoft, contributed to MS-DOS, wrote Windows components familiar to all, and stuffed Microsoft Bob into XP s box.
The Register had a chat with him about how it all began.
The Reg chats to Azure Data man Rohan Kumar
WinFS, stability, and waking engineers
Richard Speed Mon 28 Dec 2020 // 13:15 UTC Share
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Interview Everyone has their favourite when diving into the tub of SQL Server - for some it s a chewy hard toffee that delights, for others it s a thin choc shell crammed with overperfumed fondant. Microsoft s Rohan Kumar says his preferred version is SQL Server 2008.
El Reg spoke to Kumar, corporate vice president for Azure Data, about its history, future, and just why that particular flavour of DB is dear to him. A brief history of SQL Server
Microsoft s twist on enterprise data goes back to the 1980s and the development of OS/2 undertaken by the soon-to-be Windows giant and IBM. Even as the relationship famously soured, Microsoft was working on an enterprise database product to compete with the likes of Oracle.
it could work politically and that is the only point. more than two weeks since the brett kavanaugh saga, only senate republicans still believe the story had anything to do with sexual abuse. last friday, democrats said they needed a few days for interviews to follow-up on christine ford s claims. let s give this one week, says senator amy klobuchar. her fellow democrats nodded solemnly. poor jeff flake believed them. today, you will be surprised to know this, democrats are saying that a week is not enough. the fbi will need a lot more time. who knows how much time? to interview everyone who was ever made a claim against brett kavanaugh, including julie swetnick, maybe the editors of the georgetown prep yearbook also. just a week? that is a cover-up. jeff flake may call for this again, everybody else knows exactly what is going on.ls it is not about brett kavanaugh at this point. it is about punishing everyone who looks like brett kavanaugh. watch this. as a man, i was embarrassed f