Agreed. The new user interface for full screen mode in Windows is terrible. I will actually use it in 'maximum window' mode instead of full screen just so I can get the full-width slider bar. Trying to find a place in a two hour movie on a two-inch slider bar in full-screen mode is ridiculously difficult.
"GWB created a debt that will not be paid off for decades... "
Decades? America will NEVER pay off it's debt. Your country, as an individual, is no better than the person who just defaulted on their mortgage.
You are eventually going to run out of countries to invade in order to avoid your dollar and education system collapsing so much that your country as a whole might actually start to believe that Jesus walked with the dinosaurs./oh snap. It seems like you're already well on your way there. http://www.conservapedia.com/Dinosaur
I still use Mozilla as my main browser when doing site development and web programming. The options easily available under Tools such as Cookie Manager, Image Manager, Popup, Form, and most important - the Web Development options.
I use Firefox when I am doing general browsing. It does everything I need it to do when I need something quick in a pinch.
I also use Thunderbird for a secondary e-mail account but the latest version doesn't work for me. I try to add accounts and they don't show up even though they are created in the Profiles directory. If it doesn't work well out of the box, I don't have the time to track down the problem and fix it. I used to have the time to figure out these problems but not lately. Which is probably a shame.
However with work I always have my e-mail open as I often receive time-sensitive e-mails. The tighter integration of the Mozilla mail client and browser is something that still works much better than Thunderbird and Firebird. Had they not added the "Send Link" in Firefox 1.0 I probably would not use the browser at all. Now if they would just add the "send page".
As a minor quibble, I also am not thrilled with the themes available for Firefox or Thunderbird (are there any that work? I couldn't get any to). I use Orbit Retro on Mozilla and find it clean and balanced and have found nothing for Firefox that really suits the look and feel I've had with Mozilla. I understand that the themes are developed by third parties and aren't inherent to the software itself. Still, look and feel is important when I have to sit down and use a piece of software 8 to ten hours out of the day.
I find it interesting that Lockheed Martin was the one to jump out and point out the landing site was hazardous. After all, wasn't it Lockheed that was responsible for the metric screw up? Perhaps they didn't want to be the ones to look foolish this time, and if they had the chance to say "hey, look, it wasn't us" this time around, maybe we would forget their $165 million dollar mistake. Not to say that maybe their information isn't valid or accurate, but perhaps there was more to them stating it than just to point out what might have gone wrong.
Agreed. The new user interface for full screen mode in Windows is terrible. I will actually use it in 'maximum window' mode instead of full screen just so I can get the full-width slider bar. Trying to find a place in a two hour movie on a two-inch slider bar in full-screen mode is ridiculously difficult.
"GWB created a debt that will not be paid off for decades... "
Decades? America will NEVER pay off it's debt. Your country, as an individual, is no better than the person who just defaulted on their mortgage.
You are eventually going to run out of countries to invade in order to avoid your dollar and education system collapsing so much that your country as a whole might actually start to believe that Jesus walked with the dinosaurs. /oh snap. It seems like you're already well on your way there. http://www.conservapedia.com/Dinosaur
Anyone who can quote anything from a movie as terrible as AvP should be prevented from voting in the first place.
I was wondering the same thing. This hardly seems newsworthy.
I still use Mozilla as my main browser when doing site development and web programming. The options easily available under Tools such as Cookie Manager, Image Manager, Popup, Form, and most important - the Web Development options.
I use Firefox when I am doing general browsing. It does everything I need it to do when I need something quick in a pinch.
I also use Thunderbird for a secondary e-mail account but the latest version doesn't work for me. I try to add accounts and they don't show up even though they are created in the Profiles directory. If it doesn't work well out of the box, I don't have the time to track down the problem and fix it. I used to have the time to figure out these problems but not lately. Which is probably a shame.
However with work I always have my e-mail open as I often receive time-sensitive e-mails. The tighter integration of the Mozilla mail client and browser is something that still works much better than Thunderbird and Firebird. Had they not added the "Send Link" in Firefox 1.0 I probably would not use the browser at all. Now if they would just add the "send page".
As a minor quibble, I also am not thrilled with the themes available for Firefox or Thunderbird (are there any that work? I couldn't get any to). I use Orbit Retro on Mozilla and find it clean and balanced and have found nothing for Firefox that really suits the look and feel I've had with Mozilla. I understand that the themes are developed by third parties and aren't inherent to the software itself. Still, look and feel is important when I have to sit down and use a piece of software 8 to ten hours out of the day.
I find it interesting that Lockheed Martin was the one to jump out and point out the landing site was hazardous. After all, wasn't it Lockheed that was responsible for the metric screw up? Perhaps they didn't want to be the ones to look foolish this time, and if they had the chance to say "hey, look, it wasn't us" this time around, maybe we would forget their $165 million dollar mistake. Not to say that maybe their information isn't valid or accurate, but perhaps there was more to them stating it than just to point out what might have gone wrong.