I support any Copyright law extentions to 100 years or more in the United States. Why: International Court recognizes 100 years or more as a synonym for indefinite or forever. US constitution grants a limited monopoly for copyrights. Any changes to the laws to support 100 years or more are unconstitutional and would be struck down.
I'm not sure if Britain has the same limitation, but they only leased Hong Kong for 99 years for this reason. US leases are also limited this way.
Lame can be derogatory, but its definition is quite useable in "Politics is really lame." You could just as easily say "Politics is really [marked by stiffness and soreness]" or "Politics is really [lacking needful or desirable substance]" or even "Politics is really [not being in the know]".
If "to gyp" is a slur on gypsies, the connection is lost to time.
The first (free) online mapping system where I can tell it to pretend a segment of a road doesn't exist and create a map with that and/or allows me to create a multi-point directions list will be my new favorite.
With the way traffic is in the DC area, pretending specific segments of road don't exist is about the same as if it didn't for driving purposes. (Except for those who are parked, i mean driving, those areas.)
Could you be a little more specific, I'm trying to figure out how to activate these built in features you hint at. Googling it is only finding me 3rd party apps that do it.
It is probably going to take me years to realize UMD does not always mean Use Magic Device... Until then, these subject lines are going to be odd and funny to me.
My mind has issues realizing that Launch does not mean "I can buy now".
I guess I'm just not good with the marketing speak. I would call this a "Preview" or a "Product Announcement." Launch means to me that there is product going to stores.
Whoever metamods this, please keep in mind that today is April Fools day and the topic of the thread was this guy managing to actually get the first post. Whoever moded this as Offtopic is not a pleasant person.
Although it seems backwards to me from what they should do. What Google needs to do is not index 302s and instead index the final page. Alternatively/additionally, make sure the domain remains the same when accepting a 302 and indexing it.
As it is, it sounds like they're indexing my change of address card and ignoring my current residence.
The old imprint machines still exist and are valid. Finding one may be a pain, and you won't instantly know if they are overdrawn. I'm no expert though. I just know I've seen the machines in recent memory.
If you're using digital sound, the volume control is on the expensive box you bought to process that signal, not the cable box!
The DVI and a few of the other really good outputs aren't ready yet in the software. (Bad SA!, At least the copy to VCR feature works the older ones after about a year.)
The old channels probably look only as good as they used to. And YAY for gray letterbox! I have some dark burn-in on the sides of my screen because of the black letterboxing the old HD box uses.
Now, time to see if Comcast Alexandria has this box. (I hate having two cable boxes in my living room. (SA DVR and HD each). They use the same remote signals...
I've found that for my printing needs, usually black and white text with tables, that Kinko's works just fine. My Cannon S110 costs about 12 cents per page and runs out of ink after 100 sheets. Kinko's charges about 9 cents per sheet or so depending on the volume. (More is cheaper still.) Just upload your files to their online form and pick a store. It'll usually be done in a few hours. You can go pick it up, or even ship it.
* How does encrypted email deal with, say, worms? - The worm doesn't have the PIN number to the CAC/use High security on your software cert. Thus it can't sign the e-mail with your signature. It might use its own, but that won't match yours or the sender-apparent's e-mail address.
*DDOS -That's a network problem. That's sort of like asking "how do wheels put out fires?"
*How does it deal with email phishing? The fisherman has to get your public key first, this can take time. Then they have to use their certificate to sign it. (I think you can skip the signing step though.) If you validate their signature, you'll learn they aren't really Citibank.
If the spammers really wanted to get evil, they would encourage people to adopt PKI/PGP/GPG. After that, they could start encrypting all their e-mail and defeat almost all SPAM content filtering mechanisms. Mind you, the CPU resources required to encrypt a million e-mails would be slightly prohibitive. But if you have a million zombies...
Go to www.thawte.com and pick up one of their free X.509 e-mail certs and send me an e-mail. I'll reply with a digitally encrypted e-mail with a DoD root. (The reply will be with my work address, not my personal one.)
I dare you to sniff and decrypt that over any ISP lines. (You'll probably manage to sniff it, but making heads or tails of it will take a while.)
I think the "Special" FAX machines are ones that also employ encryption.
I support any Copyright law extentions to 100 years or more in the United States.
Why:
International Court recognizes 100 years or more as a synonym for indefinite or forever. US constitution grants a limited monopoly for copyrights. Any changes to the laws to support 100 years or more are unconstitutional and would be struck down.
I'm not sure if Britain has the same limitation, but they only leased Hong Kong for 99 years for this reason. US leases are also limited this way.
IMarv
I don't know. I always liked listening to my shows while watching them.
It's more like a Video player that happens to play music too.
IMarv
Lame can be derogatory, but its definition is quite useable in "Politics is really lame." You could just as easily say "Politics is really [marked by stiffness and soreness]" or "Politics is really [lacking needful or desirable substance]" or even "Politics is really [not being in the know]".
If "to gyp" is a slur on gypsies, the connection is lost to time.
IMarv
The first (free) online mapping system where I can tell it to pretend a segment of a road doesn't exist and create a map with that and/or allows me to create a multi-point directions list will be my new favorite.
With the way traffic is in the DC area, pretending specific segments of road don't exist is about the same as if it didn't for driving purposes. (Except for those who are parked, i mean driving, those areas.)
IMarv
Could you be a little more specific, I'm trying to figure out how to activate these built in features you hint at. Googling it is only finding me 3rd party apps that do it.
IMarv
It is probably going to take me years to realize UMD does not always mean Use Magic Device... Until then, these subject lines are going to be odd and funny to me.
IMarv
My mind has issues realizing that Launch does not mean "I can buy now".
I guess I'm just not good with the marketing speak. I would call this a "Preview" or a "Product Announcement." Launch means to me that there is product going to stores.
Grr.
IMarv
Whoever metamods this, please keep in mind that today is April Fools day and the topic of the thread was this guy managing to actually get the first post. Whoever moded this as Offtopic is not a pleasant person.
Congrats.
Today will be a long day.
IMarv
This explains to me what's going on.
Although it seems backwards to me from what they should do.
What Google needs to do is not index 302s and instead index the final page. Alternatively/additionally, make sure the domain remains the same when accepting a 302 and indexing it.
As it is, it sounds like they're indexing my change of address card and ignoring my current residence.
IMarv
My vote is SCO vs IBM for "Worst lawsuit - evar!"
This is just a few steps below it.
IMarv
I'm not certain, but I'm sure CPIP may help.
IMarv
This is morbidly funny. Very well done.
IMarv
Who is this Gill Sellers guy and why does he have to be struck?
IMarv
Right Here
The old imprint machines still exist and are valid. Finding one may be a pain, and you won't instantly know if they are overdrawn.
I'm no expert though. I just know I've seen the machines in recent memory.
Heavy Rail is pretty good, and so is the light rail and busses.
IMarv
Northern Virginia is probably a pretty good place, since we're right next to DC and a lot of the juicy government contracting jobs.
IMarv
So, how much is a headband of intellect +1?
Hmm
IMarv
Here's a simple analogy that I think everybody can get:
Crossfire is to The Daily Show as Hard Core Porn is to Seseme Street.
The problem is, we're only getting teaser shots from Crossfire.
IMarv
If you're using digital sound, the volume control is on the expensive box you bought to process that signal, not the cable box!
The DVI and a few of the other really good outputs aren't ready yet in the software. (Bad SA!, At least the copy to VCR feature works the older ones after about a year.)
The old channels probably look only as good as they used to. And YAY for gray letterbox! I have some dark burn-in on the sides of my screen because of the black letterboxing the old HD box uses.
Now, time to see if Comcast Alexandria has this box. (I hate having two cable boxes in my living room. (SA DVR and HD each). They use the same remote signals...
IMarv
I've found that for my printing needs, usually black and white text with tables, that Kinko's works just fine. My Cannon S110 costs about 12 cents per page and runs out of ink after 100 sheets. Kinko's charges about 9 cents per sheet or so depending on the volume. (More is cheaper still.)
Just upload your files to their online form and pick a store. It'll usually be done in a few hours. You can go pick it up, or even ship it.
Marv.
Retina, smetina. Wire the video straight into my brain! Now that's the way for me!
IMarv
* How does encrypted email deal with, say, worms?
- The worm doesn't have the PIN number to the CAC/use High security on your software cert. Thus it can't sign the e-mail with your signature. It might use its own, but that won't match yours or the sender-apparent's e-mail address.
*DDOS
-That's a network problem. That's sort of like asking "how do wheels put out fires?"
*How does it deal with email phishing?
The fisherman has to get your public key first, this can take time. Then they have to use their certificate to sign it. (I think you can skip the signing step though.) If you validate their signature, you'll learn they aren't really Citibank.
If the spammers really wanted to get evil, they would encourage people to adopt PKI/PGP/GPG. After that, they could start encrypting all their e-mail and defeat almost all SPAM content filtering mechanisms. Mind you, the CPU resources required to encrypt a million e-mails would be slightly prohibitive. But if you have a million zombies...
IMarv
Go to www.thawte.com and pick up one of their free X.509 e-mail certs and send me an e-mail. I'll reply with a digitally encrypted e-mail with a DoD root. (The reply will be with my work address, not my personal one.)
I dare you to sniff and decrypt that over any ISP lines. (You'll probably manage to sniff it, but making heads or tails of it will take a while.)
I think the "Special" FAX machines are ones that also employ encryption.
IMarv.