The easiest way is to use tags if you want to group emails with different subject fields. If you enable imap in the gmail options you can read and sort your email anyway you want. Theoretically this should work with any command line imap capable mail client although I can only verify that it works with Thunderbird. When you view your inbox through Thunderbird the tags show up as folders.
I wholeheartedly agree! I mean obviously there has always been conflict between religion and science. Who would want that? This is a weird and scary discussion. And by the way whose concept of god is not in conflict with science? The Southern Baptists, Arian Nazi church of white Ubermensch. Freedom of religion means you belive what you like and practice how you want at home or at your church. Does'nt mean you have a right to adjust reality.
What I get from the article is that this technology doesn't have any application today but can be used to fuel implants in the future. If the body can produce it's own energy, at least partially, that's probably better for you than having to install batteries which would otherwise be the case (and is the case now although I don't know if this an issue today).
I think that today it could be argued that developement of computer software and hardware is as much dependent on the developers imagination and understanding of how people interact with computers and each other. This would put computer developement in the field of art rather than science. Computers are definetly out of the lab and they are not going back. Mathematicians are surely needed but I would think there should be room for people with knowledge of linguistics and why not psychologists (possibly to help us away from our computers). A few designers would help
A quick read gave the impression of more of the same, nothing really new. What I'm still waiting for: SSD hard drives (under way, latest modell 64 Gig). clockless processors, holographic memory. All in the same box would be a revolution.
Douglas Coupland wrote "Microserfs" which portrayed the Microsoft work culture in the golden age when employees could become stock millionaires. It's a very nice book and actually more about relationships than geek culture
The easiest way is to use tags if you want to group emails with different subject fields. If you enable imap in the gmail options you can read and sort your email anyway you want. Theoretically this should work with any command line imap capable mail client although I can only verify that it works with Thunderbird. When you view your inbox through Thunderbird the tags show up as folders.
I wholeheartedly agree! I mean obviously there has always been conflict between religion and science. Who would want that? This is a weird and scary discussion. And by the way whose concept of god is not in conflict with science? The Southern Baptists, Arian Nazi church of white Ubermensch. Freedom of religion means you belive what you like and practice how you want at home or at your church. Does'nt mean you have a right to adjust reality.
What I get from the article is that this technology doesn't have any application today but can be used to fuel implants in the future. If the body can produce it's own energy, at least partially, that's probably better for you than having to install batteries which would otherwise be the case (and is the case now although I don't know if this an issue today).
I think that today it could be argued that developement of computer software and hardware is as much dependent on the developers imagination and understanding of how people interact with computers and each other. This would put computer developement in the field of art rather than science. Computers are definetly out of the lab and they are not going back. Mathematicians are surely needed but I would think there should be room for people with knowledge of linguistics and why not psychologists (possibly to help us away from our computers). A few designers would help
A quick read gave the impression of more of the same, nothing really new. What I'm still waiting for: SSD hard drives (under way, latest modell 64 Gig). clockless processors, holographic memory. All in the same box would be a revolution.
Douglas Coupland wrote "Microserfs" which portrayed the Microsoft work culture in the golden age when employees could become stock millionaires. It's a very nice book and actually more about relationships than geek culture
Thats definetly one for the scrolls...
If Im going to travel into Deep Space on neuclear reactor I would want to know what operatin system it would be running