I think that Apple's expressed lack of interest in native apps in the first iteration of the iPhone OS were to discourage people from waiting for a feature and to maintain a competitive edge via secrecy.
Only FAT filesystems are truly portable between Windows and Macs & FAT is a terrible file system no big (> 4 or 2 GB) files. Totally useless for many tasks.
I understand "big changes" in Linux distributions that have a day to day impact on all users like switching to X.org or Unity are important events. But most people spend about 10 seconds tops interacting with Gdm every day. It's just not that important for most users.
WikiLeaks may think they are trying to expose corruption, but so far, I haven't seen the corruption they think exists.
How about the top story there right now?
Confidential documents related to the World Health Organization Expert Working Group on innovative financing for research and development surfaced today, revealing the group's thinking as well as pharmaceutical industry thinking about the WHO process. The documents immediately raised concern about possible undue access to the process by industry; the WHO told Intellectual Property Watch the industry group was not supposed to have the documents.
The real tragedy here is the destruction of the community. Altavista has no more value to me, but with delicious I know I can bounce over and check out what my friend Bob bookmarked about Ruby in 2006 or look at the history of annotations to a URL. That data will become inaccessible to me & I'll likely loose contact with some people I only follow through delicious.
Exactly, if they really wanted to hurt them, wouldn't an attack on something that would cost them real money (like a RIAA-blessed streaming music service) be more damaging?
This *is* the second iteration – this is a consumer (features removed) version of the QuNexus http://www.keithmcmillen.com/p...
The QuNexus also has control voltage outputs for directly triggering analog/modular gear.
That's cool, but there should be salting. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salt_(cryptography)
... because they can't figure out how to post to Facebook with a Droid, obviously!
But it still has the problem of not being able to link to the internal sections. Good job!
I think that Apple's expressed lack of interest in native apps in the first iteration of the iPhone OS were to discourage people from waiting for a feature and to maintain a competitive edge via secrecy.
Quick Google says:
64GB SSD = $86
64GB RAM = $2000
If you need to actually reboot your machine, you can always run Windows Update.
Can't you setup browsers to prompt to create local storage?
Inferior specs and capabilities never stopped any Apple product from being a runaway success, so I'd say it has a chance.
Uh Apple desktops in the 90s
ExFat doesn't work on all versions of 10.5, making it essentially useless for real cross platform use.
Only FAT filesystems are truly portable between Windows and Macs & FAT is a terrible file system no big (> 4 or 2 GB) files. Totally useless for many tasks.
I understand "big changes" in Linux distributions that have a day to day impact on all users like switching to X.org or Unity are important events. But most people spend about 10 seconds tops interacting with Gdm every day. It's just not that important for most users.
DVD? With DRM? Stallman?
How is this news for nerds? More like News for Office Drones!
All those old Beatles and Rolling Stones albums? Keep the best CD version you have, more bits aren't going to make a difference.
Many CD versions of those records were poorly mastered.
WikiLeaks may think they are trying to expose corruption, but so far, I haven't seen the corruption they think exists.
How about the top story there right now?
Confidential documents related to the World Health Organization Expert Working Group on innovative financing for research and development surfaced today, revealing the group's thinking as well as pharmaceutical industry thinking about the WHO process. The documents immediately raised concern about possible undue access to the process by industry; the WHO told Intellectual Property Watch the industry group was not supposed to have the documents.
The real tragedy here is the destruction of the community. Altavista has no more value to me, but with delicious I know I can bounce over and check out what my friend Bob bookmarked about Ruby in 2006 or look at the history of annotations to a URL. That data will become inaccessible to me & I'll likely loose contact with some people I only follow through delicious.
Anyone have any experience changing all their low priority passwords at once? Thoughts?
Exactly, if they really wanted to hurt them, wouldn't an attack on something that would cost them real money (like a RIAA-blessed streaming music service) be more damaging?
IIRC you can suffix a quantity with M or G to specify size in megabytes or gigabytes.
Yea, that was a good movie
Uh, I'd wager that the majority of web users have urchin.js in their browser cache already.
The alternate nameservers for many Universities are often at other schools. Not the same thing, but interesting to note:
mtnBook:~ $ whois rochester.edu
Name Servers:
NS1.UTD.ROCHESTER.EDU 128.151.2.1
NS2.UTD.ROCHESTER.EDU 128.151.7.6
SIMON.CS.CORNELL.EDU
DNS.CS.WISC.EDU
mtnBook:~ $ whois cornell.edu
Name Servers:
BIGRED.CIT.CORNELL.EDU 128.253.180.2
DNS.CIT.CORNELL.EDU 192.35.82.50
CAYUGA.CS.ROCHESTER.EDU
mtnBook:~ $ whois ucsb.edu
Name Servers:
NS1.UCSB.EDU 128.111.1.1
NS2.UCSB.EDU 128.111.1.2
KNOT.BROWN.EDU
There's a bunch more NYU/UCBerkeley, WUSTL/ULA, etc.
Can you explain / elaborate?
Those aren't wrappers around the same libraries as Windows Media Player as QTAmateur is around QT