If fiberglass, turn it over, patch the holes...instant Margaritaville umbrella! Or, you could patch the holes and attach it to your ski boat and let 5 of your friends try it out.
40% of americans vote democratic
40% of americans vote republican
the 20% left are running the country
perhaps the republicans' tech saavy will change that. you'd think that all parties would have someone in charge of technology and use the web to their advantage. apparently the technology is limited to emails begging for money and websites that flash, dance, and tell you what you want to read.
PDF would be a great way to submit work, but then you run into the same problem: OpenSource or Commercial? I don't know many districts that could afford to purchase licenses for Adobe's Acrobat. I think OpenOffice.org should be the standard. It's cheap (free!), and resembles MSOffice enough that compatibility isn't much of an issue.
I'm a teacher, and I use OpenOffice.org at home and transfer files to school. Our district uses MS Office XP, and I haven't had any transfer problems. OpenOffice.org is the way to go for districts on the cheap.
One thing a lot of people don't realize is that to shut down the ink head, you have to power off the printer. The reason so many people have their cartridges "dry out" is because they leave the printer on non-stop. When you shut down the computer, make sure you power off the printer _before_ you do so. I've not had a problem with ink evaporating with my HP AIO because I do this.
That's possible, but I thought someone would have told me.
Oh. Yeah. How could I have forgotten?
I thought the Enterprise went down in the Mutara Sector and was replaced by the Enterprise-A.
If fiberglass, turn it over, patch the holes...instant Margaritaville umbrella! Or, you could patch the holes and attach it to your ski boat and let 5 of your friends try it out.
i thought morons were simplistic by definition
40% of americans vote democratic 40% of americans vote republican the 20% left are running the country perhaps the republicans' tech saavy will change that. you'd think that all parties would have someone in charge of technology and use the web to their advantage. apparently the technology is limited to emails begging for money and websites that flash, dance, and tell you what you want to read.
PDF would be a great way to submit work, but then you run into the same problem: OpenSource or Commercial? I don't know many districts that could afford to purchase licenses for Adobe's Acrobat. I think OpenOffice.org should be the standard. It's cheap (free!), and resembles MSOffice enough that compatibility isn't much of an issue. I'm a teacher, and I use OpenOffice.org at home and transfer files to school. Our district uses MS Office XP, and I haven't had any transfer problems. OpenOffice.org is the way to go for districts on the cheap.
One thing a lot of people don't realize is that to shut down the ink head, you have to power off the printer. The reason so many people have their cartridges "dry out" is because they leave the printer on non-stop. When you shut down the computer, make sure you power off the printer _before_ you do so. I've not had a problem with ink evaporating with my HP AIO because I do this.
I see that recognizing facetiousness is not one of your strengths.
What the Windows logo means is that there is a Windows logo on the hardware, nothing more. Really can't see that it means anything more than that.