If you really have a low risk commute and you feel that you might be being overcharged, this may well be the way to go, but I wouldn't put this thing in a sports car or any vehicle you like to have a little fun in on a nice empty road.
And herein lies the problem. Insurance rates will be adjusted (raised) such that those with the devices are soon paying what everyone is now paying (inflation-adjusted). Those without the devices, for whatever reason be it habits or privacy concerns, will be paying more.
make sure to have a good long look at the keyboard before you do. the half-height up/down arrows are annoying.
So long as |\ is above enter I can live with the arrow keys. Long live VIM! If you have any other tips I would love to hear them. (of course, as AC I doubt that you'll know that I responded)
Nice how they include the link for the "dead tree" version but the online version is much harder to find. Here it is http://en.flossmanuals.net/kde-guide/
Although I appreciate snide as much as anyone, you might notice that the hyper secret search tool called google has no idea what you are talking about: https://www.google.com/search?q=tex2epub
The fossil record shows that time and time again biosphere changes are not only recovered from, but that the net effect is dramatically positive in terms of long term diversity.
That is cute, but I cared about long term diversity of Earth's biosphere up until my kids were born. Now, I am interested in preserving the current state of biology, diverse or not.
I'm pretty sure those tin foil hats don't actually work.
I think in four different languages. I wonder how much overlap there is between them. Do phonetically-similar words in different languages stimulate the same brain centers, or do words with the same meaning? How about synonyms? Proper nouns? Proper nouns with different names in different languages?
As long as the guy with the laser can keep the laser on you, that's not going to help a lot.
How about an LED decoy thrown to the side?
You do bring up an interesting point, though. Who is responsible for the kill, the guy pulling the trigger or the guy pressing the button on the laser?
So don't be all day about it - aim and fire and let the bullet do the rest of the work, that's what it's for.
The 'other side' already has someone with night-vision goggles scanning for muzzle flashes of sniper weapons. He will easily see the IR laser too. In fact, that laser will give him a short warning that a sniper is about to fire. At 1.5 kilometers range, a second's warning is enough to yell "down" so nobody's torso is in the same place that it was when the trigger was pulled.
Of course, the laser (even IR) will give away the spotter's position. This is no sniper weapon. I wonder, then, what applications the technology does have.
Just because someone doesn't like KDE 4.x doesn't mean they haven't tried it.
Mind you, I've tried, IIRC, 4.1, 4.2 or 4.3 and 4.4 or 4.5 and haven't liked it in any of those, over 3.5
Different people have different tastes.
If it is a matter of taste, then I agree that KDE 4, nor any other desktop, will satisfy everyone. If things are broken or unintuitive for you, though, I would really like to know so that the issue could be addressed. You can reply here or email me, my Gmail username is the same as my/. username. Thanks.
No, the hidden volumes can still be easily found on most disk partitions. Only in Truecrypt 6 has this been addressed, and then only on certain file system versions.
Rubberhose has long since been abandoned. Truecrypt has some plausible-deniability features, but is nowhere as secure in this regard as Rubberhose was.
Celery contains natural MSG. It's a single blind test for the self described 'super sensitive to MSG people'.
If you eat celery you can stand a some level of MSG. Look it up for yourself.
Thanks. I won't look it up, I will eat celery next weekend when I can afford to have an unproductive 24 hours. I am genuinely interested, and I know how much "both sides" will confuse the issue online. I have no problem being a guinea pig if it means that I will know more about my situation for the future.
The apps were all massively crippled. Pocket Office was inferior to Wordpad. Browsers were all crap, crippled compared to desktop versions, and nobody had figured out how to render full sized web pages on a 240x320 screen.
I must note that every complaint that I had about that Windows Mobile device is about three times more valid for todays tablets. One step forward, four steps back.
Ok then, do you demand the recipes of dishes that you order out in restaurants? And if they do provide them, do you then audit the cooks to make sure the recipe was followed exactly?
I do ask if they use MSG. And if the waitress doesn't know what MSG is, I go to the back and ask the chef myself rather than explain it to her and let her ask. Because I _will_ find out later if I don't.
If you really have a low risk commute and you feel that you might be being overcharged, this may well be the way to go, but I wouldn't put this thing in a sports car or any vehicle you like to have a little fun in on a nice empty road.
And herein lies the problem. Insurance rates will be adjusted (raised) such that those with the devices are soon paying what everyone is now paying (inflation-adjusted). Those without the devices, for whatever reason be it habits or privacy concerns, will be paying more.
Give it five years.
Thank you Jose!
make sure to have a good long look at the keyboard before you do. the half-height up/down arrows are annoying.
So long as |\ is above enter I can live with the arrow keys. Long live VIM! If you have any other tips I would love to hear them.
(of course, as AC I doubt that you'll know that I responded)
Nice how they include the link for the "dead tree" version but the online version is much harder to find. Here it is http://en.flossmanuals.net/kde-guide/
Nice, thanks. Here is a direct link to the PDF:
en.flossmanuals.net/_booki/kde-guide/kde-guide.pdf
And EPUB:
en.flossmanuals.net/_booki/kde-guide/kde-guide.epub
Well, how about we ask the retailers?
FreeDOS [subtract $100.00]
Thank you, I am in the market for a laptop and now I know to buy an HP.
Here is a super secret link to it from the hyper secret search tool called google, it took 3 seconds to get it.
https://github.com/kmuto/latex2epub
there is a world outside of apt-get
Although I appreciate snide as much as anyone, you might notice that the hyper secret search tool called google has no idea what you are talking about:
https://www.google.com/search?q=tex2epub
It is. called latex. run tex2epub and have it in your favorite format.
It would be nice if that tool even existed:
This is on a popular Debian-derived distro:
saturn:~$ aptitude search tex3epub
saturn:~$
And this on CentOS:
[root@neptune]# yum search tex2epub
Loaded plugins: fastestmirror
Loading mirror speeds from cached hostfile
* base: centos.mirrorcatalogs.com
* extras: centos.mirror.netriplex.com
* updates: mirror.raystedman.net
addons | 951 B 00:00
base | 1.1 kB 00:00
c5-testing | 951 B 00:00
c5-testing/primary | 374 kB 00:00
c5-testing 916/916
extras | 2.1 kB 00:00
extras/primary_db | 179 kB 00:00
r1soft | 951 B 00:00
updates | 1.9 kB 00:00
updates/primary_db | 614 kB 00:00
Reducing CentOS-5 Testing to included packages only
Finished
Warning: No matches found for: tex2epub
No Matches found
[root@neptune]#
I think it would be a good idea that the book will be avaliable in epub format, to read it in most e-readers.
As noted above, the sources are available so you can compile it to epub:
http://github.com/lydiapintscher/Open-Advice
That is the spirit of Open Source, I suppose! Upstream provides the source, you compile it as you see fit.
I appreciate your optimism.
The fossil record shows that time and time again biosphere changes are not only recovered from, but that the net effect is dramatically positive in terms of long term diversity.
That is cute, but I cared about long term diversity of Earth's biosphere up until my kids were born. Now, I am interested in preserving the current state of biology, diverse or not.
I'm pretty sure those tin foil hats don't actually work.
I think in four different languages. I wonder how much overlap there is between them. Do phonetically-similar words in different languages stimulate the same brain centers, or do words with the same meaning? How about synonyms? Proper nouns? Proper nouns with different names in different languages?
I saw that after I posted! In my defense, he posted after I loaded the page so I couldn't see it!
As long as the guy with the laser can keep the laser on you, that's not going to help a lot.
How about an LED decoy thrown to the side?
You do bring up an interesting point, though. Who is responsible for the kill, the guy pulling the trigger or the guy pressing the button on the laser?
It it's smooth-bore, it's a musket, not a rifle...
Don't worry, the next version will have a flash pan.
So don't be all day about it - aim and fire and let the bullet do the rest of the work, that's what it's for.
The 'other side' already has someone with night-vision goggles scanning for muzzle flashes of sniper weapons. He will easily see the IR laser too. In fact, that laser will give him a short warning that a sniper is about to fire. At 1.5 kilometers range, a second's warning is enough to yell "down" so nobody's torso is in the same place that it was when the trigger was pulled.
The bullet is 10cm not 10in.
That's what she said.
If everything went metric we wouldn't have these problems.
The bullet is 10cm not 10in.
Maybe a NASA engineer submitted the fine article?
Of course, the laser (even IR) will give away the spotter's position. This is no sniper weapon. I wonder, then, what applications the technology does have.
Just because someone doesn't like KDE 4.x doesn't mean they haven't tried it.
Mind you, I've tried, IIRC, 4.1, 4.2 or 4.3 and 4.4 or 4.5 and haven't liked it in any of those, over 3.5
Different people have different tastes.
If it is a matter of taste, then I agree that KDE 4, nor any other desktop, will satisfy everyone. If things are broken or unintuitive for you, though, I would really like to know so that the issue could be addressed. You can reply here or email me, my Gmail username is the same as my /. username. Thanks.
like a truecrypt hidden volume?
No, the hidden volumes can still be easily found on most disk partitions. Only in Truecrypt 6 has this been addressed, and then only on certain file system versions.
Is this what you're talking about?
Rubberhose has long since been abandoned. Truecrypt has some plausible-deniability features, but is nowhere as secure in this regard as Rubberhose was.
Celery contains natural MSG. It's a single blind test for the self described 'super sensitive to MSG people'.
If you eat celery you can stand a some level of MSG. Look it up for yourself.
Thanks. I won't look it up, I will eat celery next weekend when I can afford to have an unproductive 24 hours. I am genuinely interested, and I know how much "both sides" will confuse the issue online. I have no problem being a guinea pig if it means that I will know more about my situation for the future.
Thanks.
The apps were all massively crippled. Pocket Office was inferior to Wordpad. Browsers were all crap, crippled compared to desktop versions, and nobody had figured out how to render full sized web pages on a 240x320 screen.
I go into detail about that here:
http://dotancohen.com/eng/dell_axim.php
I must note that every complaint that I had about that Windows Mobile device is about three times more valid for todays tablets. One step forward, four steps back.
Do you eat celery?
I do not avoid celery. Until I saw your post I was not aware that there are celery-sensitive people. That is rather interesting, thanks.
Ok then, do you demand the recipes of dishes that you order out in restaurants? And if they do provide them, do you then audit the cooks to make sure the recipe was followed exactly?
I do ask if they use MSG. And if the waitress doesn't know what MSG is, I go to the back and ask the chef myself rather than explain it to her and let her ask. Because I _will_ find out later if I don't.