Gimp is not just not "exactly like photoshop", it's not layed out like any other Windows application. If you're on Mac or Linux is fine, but someone accustomed to Gimp will struggle needlessly with the (incidentally monstrously ugly [to the point of making it difficult to use]) interface. Gimpshop and gimphoto are fine but are several major revisions behind gimp proper.
Google wants to close android in order to keep the manufacturers from closing android further. Openness advocates are fighting to protect the rights of the manufacturers (that of closing Android)
I'm not sure who to root for here, so I'll just say GO LOCAL SPORTS TEAM
Really, in terms of the universe, EVERYTHING is rare. Galaxies are rare. Stars are rare. Matter is rare. About the only thing that isn't rare is space itself. Draw a line segment across the universe, make it trillions of miles long. How many atoms did you actually touch with that line?
There's a Cell company in Canada called Koodo Mobile which advertises the following system:
- You don't have a locked-in contract - You instead get the cost of the free phone added to your account. - This amount is lowered as you use your phone and pay your regular phone bills.
I'm not sure if the system 'works' or anything, I'm currently locked in on another provider, but it might be what people are really looking for: AN actual, explicitly subsidized phone, instead of having it 'magically' tied just in to how many months you have left and not have anything to do with the actual cost of the phone or the cost of the plan.
They try to downplay actual lap-top use (in case of another burn lawsuit) to the point that they almost say "do not use this on your legs"
Notice how companies never actually call them "laptops"? They'll call them either "notebook computer" or "labtop" (as in: put on the counter of a research lab).
Releasing one with leg grooves would be rather strange, given that.
No, then you just have the result where cars jump the light knowing that there is a pause.
Doesn't this already happen in Boston? This is true- actually. The "Everybody's Red" phase actually causes more accidents then it solves, since it makes people far more likely to speed up on a yellow. I heard about it on CBC Radio one night.
Nothing that happened in New Orleans really had anything to do with where everyone's ancestors are from. If you were in New Orleans you got fucked by a hurricane. Black or white. And it doesn't matter whether so and so up the chain of aid was black or white. A corrupt official is a corrupt official. The only color that really mattered to them was green.
There are some consumer routers that take you through a when you first plug them in you have to go through the wizard. Tt won't let you even access the internet because it'll route ANY request directly to the setup screen.
The only way this law could ever be considered realistic is if every router were regulated to have to have a feature such as that one- namely that you have to explicitly say "yes" to enable an open router.
One has to wonder though.. counting is like, the most basic thing a computer can do with complete and total reliability. Human eyes can be used to verify, but wouldn't you trust a computer count more than a human one for anything other than voting? So what makes voting so different?
A properly developed voting system is not farfetched, it's the security that's the issue, and the companies currently making voting machines seem to be extremely bad at making verifyiably secure machines.
Something is weird... whenever I look at a fmt=18 video it's noticeably blurrier with heavier artifacting then the regular video. And usually fmt=6 doesn't work for those same videos. Some individual frames seem a little sharper, but generally the video is worse on fmt=18 then no fmt at all.
360s support divx natively as of the latest Dashboard update, so if you want a Divx player one of the easiest thing to right now is to just buy a cheap 360 (about the same price as a wii) and stick em on a USB flash drive or external HD or something.
It seems a lot of people who are known for risking their lives are dying doing pretty normal things... a man who rides high-tech experimental aircraft to world records died crashing a normal single-engine plane. An adventurer who spent his time mostly around horribly dangerous animals was killed by what was supposed to be a completely harmless stingray. There was another recent example I remember but I don't remember the specifics. It's kind of wierd, although I know there's no connections or anything
I'm confused here.. DMCA is for copyright, that's what the C stands for.. but no part of what was taken was? It's possible it was patented (I believe game mechanics are patented) but there is no DMPA is there? TFA says that they have a "solid case" but I'm not seeing that this "solid case" is what is trying to be used here.. There is no copyright on scrabble. There's a copyright on the scrabble box design, and the scrabble instructions, and perhaps even on the actual design of the board, but not the overall layout of it. There's a trademark on "Scrabble" probably as well, on which "Scrabulous" might infringe.
I can see a pretty solid case on Trademark or Patent grounds, but copyright is the one thing that WASN'T infringed.
Here, (southern Ont) it seems to be tied to the siren, and seems to basically just to be to disable the red light camera. A lot of the time I'll see a police car come up to a red light, put on their siren for just long enough to get through, and then turn it off again.
People compare the adoption of HD video format discs to the adoption of other formats, but there's something that never gets brought up enough, and in my experience is what really drove DVD in it's early days:
DVD was a far more usable format than tapes. You didn't have to rewind it, it was smaller, harder to ruin, didn't get tangled up all the time, allowed extra content to be easily accessible, allowed other multimedia content (such as pictures), alternate video and audio tracks, and even interactive features. A lot of people that I met, from vastly different walks of life, were most interested in the features that DVDs had over tapes, and not so much the increased video and audio fidelity.
In contrast, the HD formats, basically ONLY have higher quality. As a result, people don't want to buy HD discs because they don't care enough, but they realize they will in the future be buying HD versions of every DVD they own, so they're also holding off buying original DVDs. There's more to the issues in the current market than the format war.
Wordpad is basically Write- they more or less just renamed the application for 95.
So basically something we haven't invented the technology for is impossible until the technology is invented.
I'm so shocked.
Gimp is not just not "exactly like photoshop", it's not layed out like any other Windows application. If you're on Mac or Linux is fine, but someone accustomed to Gimp will struggle needlessly with the (incidentally monstrously ugly [to the point of making it difficult to use]) interface. Gimpshop and gimphoto are fine but are several major revisions behind gimp proper.
Google wants to close android in order to keep the manufacturers from closing android further.
Openness advocates are fighting to protect the rights of the manufacturers (that of closing Android)
I'm not sure who to root for here, so I'll just say GO LOCAL SPORTS TEAM
Really, in terms of the universe, EVERYTHING is rare. Galaxies are rare. Stars are rare. Matter is rare. About the only thing that isn't rare is space itself. Draw a line segment across the universe, make it trillions of miles long. How many atoms did you actually touch with that line?
There's a Cell company in Canada called Koodo Mobile which advertises the following system:
- You don't have a locked-in contract
- You instead get the cost of the free phone added to your account.
- This amount is lowered as you use your phone and pay your regular phone bills.
I'm not sure if the system 'works' or anything, I'm currently locked in on another provider, but it might be what people are really looking for: AN actual, explicitly subsidized phone, instead of having it 'magically' tied just in to how many months you have left and not have anything to do with the actual cost of the phone or the cost of the plan.
Isn't the fact that he got his identity stolen due to use of the system more or less hard proof that he didn't know it wouldn't work?
They try to downplay actual lap-top use (in case of another burn lawsuit) to the point that they almost say "do not use this on your legs"
Notice how companies never actually call them "laptops"? They'll call them either "notebook computer" or "labtop" (as in: put on the counter of a research lab).
Releasing one with leg grooves would be rather strange, given that.
return rollD20() >= target def skillCheck(target, modifier):
roll = rollD20();
return (((roll==20) || (roll+modifier) >= target) && (roll != 1))
How ironic is it, that a company known for it's cables really only does good work in wireless?
Doesn't this already happen in Boston? This is true- actually. The "Everybody's Red" phase actually causes more accidents then it solves, since it makes people far more likely to speed up on a yellow. I heard about it on CBC Radio one night.
The video seems to be of last year's Perdue entry (which was an Orange Juice machine)
Nothing that happened in New Orleans really had anything to do with where everyone's ancestors are from. If you were in New Orleans you got fucked by a hurricane. Black or white. And it doesn't matter whether so and so up the chain of aid was black or white. A corrupt official is a corrupt official. The only color that really mattered to them was green.
There are some consumer routers that take you through a when you first plug them in you have to go through the wizard. Tt won't let you even access the internet because it'll route ANY request directly to the setup screen.
The only way this law could ever be considered realistic is if every router were regulated to have to have a feature such as that one- namely that you have to explicitly say "yes" to enable an open router.
One has to wonder though.. counting is like, the most basic thing a computer can do with complete and total reliability. Human eyes can be used to verify, but wouldn't you trust a computer count more than a human one for anything other than voting? So what makes voting so different?
A properly developed voting system is not farfetched, it's the security that's the issue, and the companies currently making voting machines seem to be extremely bad at making verifyiably secure machines.
So.. it's less toxic than one of the world's most famous deadly poisons
That's really reassuring.
Something is weird... whenever I look at a fmt=18 video it's noticeably blurrier with heavier artifacting then the regular video. And usually fmt=6 doesn't work for those same videos. Some individual frames seem a little sharper, but generally the video is worse on fmt=18 then no fmt at all.
360s support divx natively as of the latest Dashboard update, so if you want a Divx player one of the easiest thing to right now is to just buy a cheap 360 (about the same price as a wii) and stick em on a USB flash drive or external HD or something.
Is there a single other site that can compare to stage 6 in terms of quality and video length?
It seems a lot of people who are known for risking their lives are dying doing pretty normal things... a man who rides high-tech experimental aircraft to world records died crashing a normal single-engine plane. An adventurer who spent his time mostly around horribly dangerous animals was killed by what was supposed to be a completely harmless stingray. There was another recent example I remember but I don't remember the specifics. It's kind of wierd, although I know there's no connections or anything
What happens when they put it on the Internet, and then has to also serve itself?
I'm confused here.. DMCA is for copyright, that's what the C stands for.. but no part of what was taken was? It's possible it was patented (I believe game mechanics are patented) but there is no DMPA is there? TFA says that they have a "solid case" but I'm not seeing that this "solid case" is what is trying to be used here.. There is no copyright on scrabble. There's a copyright on the scrabble box design, and the scrabble instructions, and perhaps even on the actual design of the board, but not the overall layout of it. There's a trademark on "Scrabble" probably as well, on which "Scrabulous" might infringe.
I can see a pretty solid case on Trademark or Patent grounds, but copyright is the one thing that WASN'T infringed.
Here, (southern Ont) it seems to be tied to the siren, and seems to basically just to be to disable the red light camera. A lot of the time I'll see a police car come up to a red light, put on their siren for just long enough to get through, and then turn it off again.
People compare the adoption of HD video format discs to the adoption of other formats, but there's something that never gets brought up enough, and in my experience is what really drove DVD in it's early days:
DVD was a far more usable format than tapes. You didn't have to rewind it, it was smaller, harder to ruin, didn't get tangled up all the time, allowed extra content to be easily accessible, allowed other multimedia content (such as pictures), alternate video and audio tracks, and even interactive features. A lot of people that I met, from vastly different walks of life, were most interested in the features that DVDs had over tapes, and not so much the increased video and audio fidelity.
In contrast, the HD formats, basically ONLY have higher quality. As a result, people don't want to buy HD discs because they don't care enough, but they realize they will in the future be buying HD versions of every DVD they own, so they're also holding off buying original DVDs. There's more to the issues in the current market than the format war.