I doubt anyone will ever read this comment, but I have reported this bug, and the reply was as follows:
Thank you for reporting this issue to us. This code seems to cause an error in Internet Explorer module ShlwApi.DLL. The problem here is that "crash" is an invalid text for the html syntax:
I've reported this issue to our Internet Explorer team. While I could not provide an exact date for a fix release, the issue is now being pursued by our Development group. Fortunately, the , as an invalid HTML sentence, will not appear in a normal web page.
Physical access to a port does not guarantee access. For a start the port must be on the correct vlan of the network you want to access. Also, the port may be disabled, or set to secure mode, in which only learned hardware may make use of it.
Last time I checked, speed is equal to distance divided to time. The corresponding computer term is called latency. Having tried a few adsl and cable providers, I have found latency on cable to be at most half that of adsl, thus making cable definitively faster than adsl.
I used a 3ffe prefix a few years ago to get acquainted with IPv6. These days, my JANET provided tunnel serves me well. Performance to a lot of 6bone networks has been deteriorating with all the free subnets they have been allocating.
I'm sure cracking their key violates their acceptable use policy as well as any other license you implicitly agree to when you use the product.
But what if you do not own an X-Box? Surely they cannot bind you to their contract if you have nothing to do with them; at least not morally. I'm not entirely sure what the laws state in America.
I realize this is probably a little late and nobody is going to read it, but if it helps at least one person then it has been worth it.
I left school at 16 with 10 GCSEs, As and Bs, to spend some time in Australia. I stayed for a total of 14 months. Had it not been for my parents' choice, I would have stayed as I had already found work and I had planned to enroll in a TAFE course.
Well I returned to England and they forced me into education. I am now at the end of a two year HND and am working as a sysadmin for the very same college. I had applied for the post in the first year, but they never even offered me an interview. A year later they fired the guy because he made a load of personal phone calls and didn't do a great deal. By this time they had taken me on as a contractor to develop an in-house system. Bear in mind that for a HND, I started at 17 which is a year younger than required, and I didn't even have any A-levels. So technically they took me on as a mature student because I have demonstrated my skills were easily sufficient. Without being too modest, I was still more capable then then all the final-year students are now. As I was already doing work for them, they could see that I had the skills they required so they hired me on the spot. I now manage servers on both campuses, as well as the network infrastructure.
Ok if you managed to read all that, you're probably wondering what's the point to this? Well there are two. Firstly, qualifications _can_ get you jobs. A college degree is good, but if I'm hiring someone it is based on their other qualifications, for example Cisco or Microsoft certs. The second point is that its an unfair world, and even if you are way more qualified for the position, they would rather hire somebody they know. SO to sum up, if there is a particular job you are after, you are better to do some freelance work for the comapny first in order to get them acquainted. Then chances are when a position is available they will hire you on the spot.
I know i have not been entirely clear, so please forgive any inaccuracies.. my head works in a strange way...
Every job I have ever worked there has been a contract. If you won't do the work required of you by your employer, they have every right to dismiss you. Not that I don't agree with that, but law is law, as unfortunate as it may be.
Don't forget the larger you make the filament the more current is required to heat up the filament to produce the light. That's why they are as small as they are.
My home network is 100mbs, too bad i only have 512kbs cable, whos upstream is limited to 128kbs. I'll be moving soon though and getting 2meg down, 256k up (both are blueyonder cable). At least Britain has the idea that charging for transfer is bad:)
Wow you saved me having to write a post about this:) There is another great one i use called lbt (linuxcare bootable toolkit - which was the precursor of LNX-BBC) and you can find it here: http://lbt.linuxcare.com/. The other distribution is demolinux which needs a 700meg cd, but contains a whole operating system including KDE and Gnome that runs off the cd.
Probably the reason they have opted to choose it is it is good value for money in that it has all the elements of a software recording studio in one package. If you are interested in music production as a career though, Reason is just a toy. I have never been to a studio that used Reason.
If you think Reason is powerful, you need to be shot. It is a simple sequencer with a few built in samplers, synths and effects. Perhaps you were thinking of Reaktor, made by Native Instruments. There are countless sequencers, effects and instruments out there that can be combined in any way you can imagine. Here are a few links to get you started:
Data is actually stored on the reverse of the label and not the plastic underneath. Get a blank or useless cd and scratch off the label, and you'll see the shiny surface on the reverse:o) Watch out thoough, it tends to end up like confetti
No, i just happen to admin a couple of 2k server boxes (unfortunately, the rest being a combination of Linux and BSD). I'm studying for CCNA, and after that I hope to achieve a CCNP. I have not and would not consider getting a certification from Microsoft. They are more hinderance than use to someone interested in Unix and networking:)
It can be done with 2k server and advanced server in the routing and remote access section of administrative tools. go to [Computer Name]->Ip Routing->Network Address Translation (NAT) and right click, and choose 'New Interface...', and add the NIC that is connected to your internet access device (usually a cable or DSL modem). In the properties choose 'Public interface connected to the internet'. Also tick the box 'Translate TCP/UDP headers, then hit OK.
I doubt anyone will ever read this comment, but I have reported this bug, and the reply was as follows:
Thank you for reporting this issue to us. This code seems to cause an error
in Internet Explorer module ShlwApi.DLL. The problem here is that "crash"
is an invalid text for the html syntax:
I've reported this issue to our Internet Explorer team. While I could not
provide an exact date for a fix release, the issue is now being pursued by
our Development group. Fortunately, the , as an invalid
HTML sentence, will not appear in a normal web page.
SmartHome is my preferred supplier of X-10 equipment.
Physical access to a port does not guarantee access. For a start the port must be on the correct vlan of the network you want to access. Also, the port may be disabled, or set to secure mode, in which only learned hardware may make use of it.
Last time I checked, speed is equal to distance divided to time. The corresponding computer term is called latency. Having tried a few adsl and cable providers, I have found latency on cable to be at most half that of adsl, thus making cable definitively faster than adsl.
the site is slashdotted, I have put up a mirror at
chaz6.com/enterprise/
I used a 3ffe prefix a few years ago to get acquainted with IPv6. These days, my JANET provided tunnel serves me well. Performance to a lot of 6bone networks has been deteriorating with all the free subnets they have been allocating.
Why should Europe not make any money? America is not the only force in Iraq.
I'm sure cracking their key violates their acceptable use policy as well as any other license you implicitly agree to when you use the product.
But what if you do not own an X-Box? Surely they cannot bind you to their contract if you have nothing to do with them; at least not morally. I'm not entirely sure what the laws state in America.
I hear that. My box is also at work on a Dell PowerEdge 350, sharing an E1.
The free service does not give you ownership of the domain. This costs $9.95 per year. You must pay if you want to use your own nameservers.
Oh. Proxomitron (yes, I know, I'm being a tiresome shill for Proxomitron) can do both of these things.
So can Mozilla.
I realize this is probably a little late and nobody is going to read it, but if it helps at least one person then it has been worth it.
I left school at 16 with 10 GCSEs, As and Bs, to spend some time in Australia. I stayed for a total of 14 months. Had it not been for my parents' choice, I would have stayed as I had already found work and I had planned to enroll in a TAFE course.
Well I returned to England and they forced me into education. I am now at the end of a two year HND and am working as a sysadmin for the very same college. I had applied for the post in the first year, but they never even offered me an interview. A year later they fired the guy because he made a load of personal phone calls and didn't do a great deal. By this time they had taken me on as a contractor to develop an in-house system. Bear in mind that for a HND, I started at 17 which is a year younger than required, and I didn't even have any A-levels. So technically they took me on as a mature student because I have demonstrated my skills were easily sufficient. Without being too modest, I was still more capable then then all the final-year students are now. As I was already doing work for them, they could see that I had the skills they required so they hired me on the spot. I now manage servers on both campuses, as well as the network infrastructure.
Ok if you managed to read all that, you're probably wondering what's the point to this? Well there are two. Firstly, qualifications _can_ get you jobs. A college degree is good, but if I'm hiring someone it is based on their other qualifications, for example Cisco or Microsoft certs. The second point is that its an unfair world, and even if you are way more qualified for the position, they would rather hire somebody they know. SO to sum up, if there is a particular job you are after, you are better to do some freelance work for the comapny first in order to get them acquainted. Then chances are when a position is available they will hire you on the spot.
I know i have not been entirely clear, so please forgive any inaccuracies.. my head works in a strange way...
Every job I have ever worked there has been a contract. If you won't do the work required of you by your employer, they have every right to dismiss you. Not that I don't agree with that, but law is law, as unfortunate as it may be.
Don't forget the larger you make the filament the more current is required to heat up the filament to produce the light. That's why they are as small as they are.
There is a difference between bandwidth and latency. Satellites push umpteen gigabits per second yet they have a ping time 5 times slower than dialup.
My home network is 100mbs, too bad i only have 512kbs cable, whos upstream is limited to 128kbs. I'll be moving soon though and getting 2meg down, 256k up (both are blueyonder cable). At least Britain has the idea that charging for transfer is bad :)
Of course it can survive. The rest of the world isn't governed by USA law. It just means you won't be able to broadcast from inside the USA.
Wow you saved me having to write a post about this :) There is another great one i use called lbt (linuxcare bootable toolkit - which was the precursor of LNX-BBC) and you can find it here: http://lbt.linuxcare.com/. The other distribution is demolinux which needs a 700meg cd, but contains a whole operating system including KDE and Gnome that runs off the cd.
Probably the reason they have opted to choose it is it is good value for money in that it has all the elements of a software recording studio in one package. If you are interested in music production as a career though, Reason is just a toy. I have never been to a studio that used Reason.
If you think Reason is powerful, you need to be shot. It is a simple sequencer with a few built in samplers, synths and effects. Perhaps you were thinking of Reaktor, made by Native Instruments. There are countless sequencers, effects and instruments out there that can be combined in any way you can imagine. Here are a few links to get you started:
Native Instruments
Cubase VST
K-v-R (huge VST resource)
BTW, OC Remix has perpetual bandwidth problems.
Rubbish. Ever since I started using a few months ago it has been a-ok.
I really hope they will port it to the PC platform. It will bring together the user-friendliness of windows along with the stability of Unix :o)
Data is actually stored on the reverse of the label and not the plastic underneath. Get a blank or useless cd and scratch off the label, and you'll see the shiny surface on the reverse :o) Watch out thoough, it tends to end up like confetti
No, i just happen to admin a couple of 2k server boxes (unfortunately, the rest being a combination of Linux and BSD). I'm studying for CCNA, and after that I hope to achieve a CCNP. I have not and would not consider getting a certification from Microsoft. They are more hinderance than use to someone interested in Unix and networking :)
It can be done with 2k server and advanced server in the routing and remote access section of administrative tools. go to [Computer Name]->Ip Routing->Network Address Translation (NAT) and right click, and choose 'New Interface...', and add the NIC that is connected to your internet access device (usually a cable or DSL modem). In the properties choose 'Public interface connected to the internet'. Also tick the box 'Translate TCP/UDP headers, then hit OK.