I remember that game. Was a ton of fun, especially considering the upgrades and other various components that you could mess with in the game. Did you sport for those new tires or upgrade to a Hovercraft?
I also took a memorable quote from the game, "Sit down, strap up and shut up."
awww man. I would have loved this for updates, especially when using ancient ghost images. I've been keeping a batch file that runs all the latest updates I downloaded for that image. With this, I coulda just ran it and not give a damn about any patch level.
is what the Judge actually did to learn what RAM does and the suitable means to archive it. Was it the responsibility of the plantiff or TorrentSpy to educate her on what RAM actually does? Or was she left to her own devices as to how she sees RAM fitting into information storage, namely the sheer amount of data a single stick can hold?
After buying and playing through the game myself, it is indeed a beautiful game. It's a shame that, much like Rapture in game, has been marred of the beauty it dreamed of.
In some of the fights, I encountered AI that got stuck at times and sorta ruined the combat scheme. I remember a big daddy getting stuck twice, making it easy to pick them off.
On the other hand, I was constantly scooping out the environment, seeing if there was some advantage I could use that corridor I just walked through in entrapping a slew of splicers or setting up for taking down a big daddy.
The big daddy/little sister dynamic is just flat out neat concept. I saw a little sister walking along and the big daddy tugged at her to go a different way. Weird, yet what other game would combine setting said big daddy on fire then harvesting/saving little girl?
The game, taken by itself, was very enjoyable. I know with the rootkit, many people will justifiably pirate/refuse to purchase the game. I just find it a shame that people will miss an enjoyable yet poignant game because of lame copyright protection. I myself will face it again with a fresh XP install in the next day or two. Do I risk putting the game back on? I dunno.
He was collecting a good bit of data there. If he pulled the drive out before doing that, he would of lost all volatile data, including possible info that hadn't been garbage collected. Granted, a dump of the RAM should have been his first command, since everything before it risks trampling de-referenced addresses.
If your going for a court case, your better off with the mountain of information than just a sheet of what really matters.....unless your the RIAA, then you make accusations at dead grandmothers.
How server was accessed in the first place is what I really want to know.
I actually have removed those. Had a friend, with an old maxima, whose key broke off in the ignition. The maxima actually has a bypass starter located in the dash, but it doesn't free the steering wheel. What I ended up doing is cutting slots into the steering lock mechanisms break-off bolts and removing them. After that, the steering wheel was free and the car started via the bypass.
After taking a quick look at it, I'd say doing this would take 4 minutes at most on his car, now that I'm familiar with it.
His "key" is a flathead screwdriver. Still does it to this day.
Them and ZDNet do pretty good. You should check out the one from APC on Linus earlier.
Topic On...
with the amount of change amount to be thrown around for this spectrum, what I'm really wondering is the complete package to deployed over it. No one, to my knowledge, has yet to say what their plans, all-inclusive are.
c'mon this is/. if editors edited and readers read...
well at this point I am supposed to have a handy saying. Guess I'm not the "Insightful" kind of guy.
Anywho, this sorta data reminds me of the Google StreetView criticism. Is it really your privacy if anybody can see it? Then again, not everybody has access to a high powered, multi-spectrum satellite at their disposal.
Same here. We've been trickling XP's in since SP1b was put out. We're finally taking the plunge this fall by putting XP's out on every desk. I'm not touching Vista till I get the means to support it.
Something positive came out of a lawsuit? Not just mutual losses?
Seriously though, as with all things legal, it is anything but set in stone. Still, cautious optimism is deserved.
Wait....y'all actually read the summary? I click reply as fast as possible and rant about whatever I'm feeling like. Bonus points if it actually is related to the subject.
Moe:"Now see here chowder heads, we gots us a job to do."
Curly:"Oh boy! I can't wait to work on those litho machines with their copy lights!"
Moe:"No you numbskull! It's copyright! Why I ought-"(Moves to clobber him)
Larry:"Hey Moe, why'd we get these bats if we're enforcing intellectual property!"(holding bat)
Moe:"Cause you nitwit, we need to make sure those tubes aren't sending dem phonorecordings to illegitimate users. And we fix the users to make sure they don't use any tubes anymore "
Curly:"Intellectual property? Why I know all about that!"
Larry:"Really? How?"
Curly:"Yeah, I lectured all around colleges."
Moe:"The only thing your gonna lecture around is the pavement if you don't get to breaking that computer into a thousand pieces while looking for a p2p client!"(Ensuing Stoogiery occurs)
I'd suggest extreme emergency supplies for situations where extra cables and backup supplies will prove fruitless. This includes, but not limited to: A bottle of whisky A bottle of scotch A glass A Shotgun, pref with ammo Sleeping pills Pep pills....
In all seriousness, a good first aid kit should be in the center. Nothing sucks more than a dull headache and not having any asprin for it. Plus, when someone cuts their hand on a server rack, it'll patch their hands up to keep them from bleeding all over them.
You forgot to mention the fact that you'd need a good CPU ton convert on-the-fly or the best source for WMV/A. After all, Xbox360's can't play those pirate formats. Only good little children with their little WMV's can play without any workarounds.
I've been wondering that myself. The only thing most "Add/Remove" ones do is dump the registry file,[HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Window s\currentversion\uninstall](IE-programs that register with windows).
Man. Sprint dropping customers isn't that bad of an idea at all! Saves the problem of lawsuits and class actions suits...
Anyways, here's my Sprint horror stories.
1. After moving, I didn't get Verizon Service there. So I got a new service with Sprint which happened to be the free phone. Apparently, the network was so bad in the home area I lived in, it would go over to roaming while I was in a cinderblock room. Calls to Sprint showed "Oh yeah. Your roaming in your home area....that'll be still be $120." 2. After letting the contract run out back in 04', I signed up with Cingular(maybe not better...). It wasn't till this past March I got a bill from a collection agency on behalf of sprint for over $700 from July 14, 2004. I call Sprint, and basically get a runaround in customer service. I didn't get a phone number or account # with the notice. I called Sprint and painfully explained why I did not have a phone number to give them for an account. After many transfers, I was told it'd be taken care of by a person in a Texas call center....which made me feel doubtful. I know this isn't over.
Pass 3 months...
Another letter arrives from the collection agency. This time, they finally got around to sending me the papers to actually verify the debt in question. It was my name all right....at the wrong address and phone number. Nice! A credit report turned up no other offenses of course. Thanks Sprint for your safeguarding my identity/account!
Heh. Nickleback. An good, albeit already done, trick is to take "This is how you remind me" and "Someday,Somehow". Put on one the left channel and the other on the right. Listen to the result. Concidently, Nickelback's new song, "This is how you remind me of Someday when I had talent but got so bad that we had to start ripping ourselves off".
Your right. For the most part, we already have one, regardless of nation-wide laws. Services require you to provide an ID, such as boarding an airplane, making a rather large purchase and so on. If you didn't have a Driver's License or ID card, it'd be a work ID, which usually means the employer had to get documentation, etc. If your EXPECTED to have your ID with you, no matter where you go, it just lends itself to becoming open to abuse. At least now, I can walk down the street or the grocery store and not be asked for ID to prove that I'm really going to the store, and that I live and work in the area and that I am who I say I am.
My Yacht isn't as much about the company but the installers they choose to come out and put the modem in. They were pleasent enough and were expedient. They set the modem up, registered us via the comcast email they gave us and were all-in-all a stand up crew. We paid them with a check and thanked them.
2 weeks later, the friend whos name was on the service/check, was suddenly out of funds. We took a look at the charges, especially one under INTERNET DADDY KING or something, and, after calls being made, found out that our friend's account had been used to purchase pr0n account @ the tune of 39.95 a month.
After some questioning and a group hug, we'd eliminated all three of us fr. We'd gotten an email account that had been used to sign up for the, um, account. You guessed it. The Comcast email, that only 3 people knew the password and name to, had been used to sign up for the service as a bank draft. We figured that the installers were the aim of our charge here.
Oh man. My first Troll and informative mod. This a journal entry in the making. I do agree that, yes, the OS will be a good move, allowing those who want to disable possible software to do so easily. How many of those that are able to afford these pc's are going just use it? They'll simply use that computer, not have to reformat, etc just to get rid of stuff. However, the fact the gov't is actually trying to get it's people caught up is to be applauded.
it will be till somebody pokes around the prepackage and finds it able to only load approved state software, calls home, etc. It is good to see a government spreading technology at an affordable price and not entirely gimping them. Even better that they are encouraging a good OS. The site with TFA is also a bit too, um, "orientated" to support whatever Chavez's Gov't spits out. Take a look at the article "Venezuela, RCTV, And Media Freedom: Just The Facts, Please".
Usually, the password can be reset with clearing the bios, usually by moving the jumper.
I remember that game. Was a ton of fun, especially considering the upgrades and other various components that you could mess with in the game. Did you sport for those new tires or upgrade to a Hovercraft?
I also took a memorable quote from the game, "Sit down, strap up and shut up."
Here and here. Regardless, if you dry up on producing machines, I'm sure you'll eventually sell them.
awww man. I would have loved this for updates, especially when using ancient ghost images. I've been keeping a batch file that runs all the latest updates I downloaded for that image. With this, I coulda just ran it and not give a damn about any patch level.
is what the Judge actually did to learn what RAM does and the suitable means to archive it. Was it the responsibility of the plantiff or TorrentSpy to educate her on what RAM actually does? Or was she left to her own devices as to how she sees RAM fitting into information storage, namely the sheer amount of data a single stick can hold?
After buying and playing through the game myself, it is indeed a beautiful game. It's a shame that, much like Rapture in game, has been marred of the beauty it dreamed of.
In some of the fights, I encountered AI that got stuck at times and sorta ruined the combat scheme. I remember a big daddy getting stuck twice, making it easy to pick them off.
On the other hand, I was constantly scooping out the environment, seeing if there was some advantage I could use that corridor I just walked through in entrapping a slew of splicers or setting up for taking down a big daddy.
The big daddy/little sister dynamic is just flat out neat concept. I saw a little sister walking along and the big daddy tugged at her to go a different way. Weird, yet what other game would combine setting said big daddy on fire then harvesting/saving little girl?
The game, taken by itself, was very enjoyable. I know with the rootkit, many people will justifiably pirate/refuse to purchase the game. I just find it a shame that people will miss an enjoyable yet poignant game because of lame copyright protection. I myself will face it again with a fresh XP install in the next day or two. Do I risk putting the game back on? I dunno.
In fact, forget the RFC 2821 and blackjack!
He was collecting a good bit of data there. If he pulled the drive out before doing that, he would of lost all volatile data, including possible info that hadn't been garbage collected. Granted, a dump of the RAM should have been his first command, since everything before it risks trampling de-referenced addresses.
If your going for a court case, your better off with the mountain of information than just a sheet of what really matters.....unless your the RIAA, then you make accusations at dead grandmothers.
How server was accessed in the first place is what I really want to know.
I actually have removed those. Had a friend, with an old maxima, whose key broke off in the ignition. The maxima actually has a bypass starter located in the dash, but it doesn't free the steering wheel. What I ended up doing is cutting slots into the steering lock mechanisms break-off bolts and removing them. After that, the steering wheel was free and the car started via the bypass.
After taking a quick look at it, I'd say doing this would take 4 minutes at most on his car, now that I'm familiar with it.
His "key" is a flathead screwdriver. Still does it to this day.
Them and ZDNet do pretty good. You should check out the one from APC on Linus earlier.
Topic On...
with the amount of change amount to be thrown around for this spectrum, what I'm really wondering is the complete package to deployed over it. No one, to my knowledge, has yet to say what their plans, all-inclusive are.
c'mon this is /. if editors edited and readers read...
well at this point I am supposed to have a handy saying. Guess I'm not the "Insightful" kind of guy.
Anywho, this sorta data reminds me of the Google StreetView criticism. Is it really your privacy if anybody can see it? Then again, not everybody has access to a high powered, multi-spectrum satellite at their disposal.
Wait, I'm the ambiguous metaphor guy!
Same here. We've been trickling XP's in since SP1b was put out. We're finally taking the plunge this fall by putting XP's out on every desk. I'm not touching Vista till I get the means to support it.
On the plus side, Yea for script standardization.
Something positive came out of a lawsuit? Not just mutual losses? Seriously though, as with all things legal, it is anything but set in stone. Still, cautious optimism is deserved.
Wait....y'all actually read the summary? I click reply as fast as possible and rant about whatever I'm feeling like. Bonus points if it actually is related to the subject.
Moe:"Now see here chowder heads, we gots us a job to do."
Curly:"Oh boy! I can't wait to work on those litho machines with their copy lights!"
Moe:"No you numbskull! It's copyright! Why I ought-"(Moves to clobber him)
Larry:"Hey Moe, why'd we get these bats if we're enforcing intellectual property!"(holding bat)
Moe:"Cause you nitwit, we need to make sure those tubes aren't sending dem phonorecordings to illegitimate users. And we fix the users to make sure they don't use any tubes anymore "
Curly:"Intellectual property? Why I know all about that!"
Larry:"Really? How?"
Curly:"Yeah, I lectured all around colleges."
Moe:"The only thing your gonna lecture around is the pavement if you don't get to breaking that computer into a thousand pieces while looking for a p2p client!"(Ensuing Stoogiery occurs)
I'd suggest extreme emergency supplies for situations where extra cables and backup supplies will prove fruitless.
This includes, but not limited to:
A bottle of whisky
A bottle of scotch
A glass
A Shotgun, pref with ammo
Sleeping pills
Pep pills....
In all seriousness, a good first aid kit should be in the center. Nothing sucks more than a dull headache and not having any asprin for it.
Plus, when someone cuts their hand on a server rack, it'll patch their hands up to keep them from bleeding all over them.
Max Payne was also a great. Film Noir meets physics engine meets killing lots of stuff. The Cello accompaniment in the Max Payne 2 still haunts me.
You forgot to mention the fact that you'd need a good CPU ton convert on-the-fly or the best source for WMV/A. After all, Xbox360's can't play those pirate formats. Only good little children with their little WMV's can play without any workarounds.
I've been wondering that myself. The only thing most "Add/Remove" ones do is dump the registry file,[HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Window s\currentversion\uninstall](IE-programs that register with windows).
Man. Sprint dropping customers isn't that bad of an idea at all! Saves the problem of lawsuits and class actions suits...
Anyways, here's my Sprint horror stories.
1. After moving, I didn't get Verizon Service there. So I got a new service with Sprint which happened to be the free phone. Apparently, the network was so bad in the home area I lived in, it would go over to roaming while I was in a cinderblock room. Calls to Sprint showed "Oh yeah. Your roaming in your home area....that'll be still be $120."
2. After letting the contract run out back in 04', I signed up with Cingular(maybe not better...). It wasn't till this past March I got a bill from a collection agency on behalf of sprint for over $700 from July 14, 2004. I call Sprint, and basically get a runaround in customer service. I didn't get a phone number or account # with the notice. I called Sprint and painfully explained why I did not have a phone number to give them for an account. After many transfers, I was told it'd be taken care of by a person in a Texas call center....which made me feel doubtful. I know this isn't over.
Pass 3 months...
Another letter arrives from the collection agency. This time, they finally got around to sending me the papers to actually verify the debt in question. It was my name all right....at the wrong address and phone number. Nice! A credit report turned up no other offenses of course. Thanks Sprint for your safeguarding my identity/account!
Heh. Nickleback. An good, albeit already done, trick is to take "This is how you remind me" and "Someday,Somehow". Put on one the left channel and the other on the right. Listen to the result. Concidently, Nickelback's new song, "This is how you remind me of Someday when I had talent but got so bad that we had to start ripping ourselves off".
Your right. For the most part, we already have one, regardless of nation-wide laws. Services require you to provide an ID, such as boarding an airplane, making a rather large purchase and so on. If you didn't have a Driver's License or ID card, it'd be a work ID, which usually means the employer had to get documentation, etc. If your EXPECTED to have your ID with you, no matter where you go, it just lends itself to becoming open to abuse. At least now, I can walk down the street or the grocery store and not be asked for ID to prove that I'm really going to the store, and that I live and work in the area and that I am who I say I am.
My Yacht isn't as much about the company but the installers they choose to come out and put the modem in. They were pleasent enough and were expedient. They set the modem up, registered us via the comcast email they gave us and were all-in-all a stand up crew. We paid them with a check and thanked them.
2 weeks later, the friend whos name was on the service/check, was suddenly out of funds. We took a look at the charges, especially one under INTERNET DADDY KING or something, and, after calls being made, found out that our friend's account had been used to purchase pr0n account @ the tune of 39.95 a month.
After some questioning and a group hug, we'd eliminated all three of us fr. We'd gotten an email account that had been used to sign up for the, um, account. You guessed it. The Comcast email, that only 3 people knew the password and name to, had been used to sign up for the service as a bank draft. We figured that the installers were the aim of our charge here.
Fraud complaints to Comcast are still ongoing.
Oh man. My first Troll and informative mod. This a journal entry in the making. I do agree that, yes, the OS will be a good move, allowing those who want to disable possible software to do so easily. How many of those that are able to afford these pc's are going just use it? They'll simply use that computer, not have to reformat, etc just to get rid of stuff. However, the fact the gov't is actually trying to get it's people caught up is to be applauded.
it will be till somebody pokes around the prepackage and finds it able to only load approved state software, calls home, etc. It is good to see a government spreading technology at an affordable price and not entirely gimping them. Even better that they are encouraging a good OS. The site with TFA is also a bit too, um, "orientated" to support whatever Chavez's Gov't spits out. Take a look at the article
"Venezuela, RCTV, And Media Freedom: Just The Facts, Please".