Video sampling was popularized by Coldcut who even produced their own software, VJamm, for this sort of stuff. VJamm was likely what was used to put together Mother of All Funk Chords. For more of this, Coldcut's video of Timber is a classic produced with VJamm.
IANAL, Yet.
Guess what, "The CAN-SPAM Act of 2003 (Controlling the Assault of Non-Solicited Pornography and Marketing Act) establishes requirements for those who send commercial email"
Parent did not specify that it was commercial email and "newsletter" indicates that it likely is not. Even if they were of a commercial nature they would likely be exempted under the CAN-SPAM act as they would qualify as "relationship" messages.
All he needs is a marker. Visit the prosecutor. Write "Peter Fleischer is a poopie head" on his desk. File a counter suit over the defamatory content written on his desk.
I helped run a lab for a journalism class on horrible ancient hardware. We named the stations after South Park characters with the machine notorious for failing named Kenny. This naming convention came about for no other reason than it allowed us to shout, "They killed Kenny. You bastards!" whenever something happened to that box.
where an off topic flame war about America's school system, started over a post, from a submission, about a post, on an unamed forum, from an unnamed person, about an unnamed teacher, at an unnamed school, in an unnamed country, which may or may not be the USA, is considered "news".
When I was in Germany I saw a magazines (Bravo?) equivalent to something like Teen People in the US that had nude teenagers with stats like age/height/etc with one male and one female per issue in with information on Fools Garden or whatever other German pop was popular at the time. I think the intent was to provide a basis for comparison for the body changes teens go through. In the US this would likely be considered child pornography and land you in jail.
The most reliable drive I had was a Quantum Bigfoot. One of those monster 5.25 HDDs made in the early 90s. The reliability may have been because of the slow speed. It came out of a Compaq returned to an Office Max and sat on a shelf for months. When I started work there they said I could have it. I wanted the magnets out of it. It bounced around in a backpack and was hauled from class to class for several months. A group of friends and I put together a Linux server on the cheap and I offered it up if there was any possibility it was still working. That drive powered our server for 4 years before being replaced with a new drive and used as a secondary drive. The primary drive failed 2 years later and the entire server was scrapped. I'm going to have to see if that Bigfoot is still around somewhere and see if it still runs.
I've hear they make you wear white long underwear with a big red G on the chest to work in their facilities!
Their facility in The Dalles out here in Oregon has security like a Vegas casino. I always found it odd their job listings required forfeiting your soul for a job turning a light switch on and off in their facility.
Your argument is circular. You can't steal something that is intellectual property as it is not physical. There is nothing to steal. The only way this is theft is if you say that it is theft to somehow duplicate this material. You then have created the idea of copyrights if only in practice if not in name, and are basing your argument upon that.
I worked as a geek for a hospital a few years ago. We had a TAP server and Motorola pagers. The vibrate on them was super powerful. On breaks we'd line them up on a table and send a department page and race them. With the cost of cell phones and SMS messaging what it is now they've been replaced. All of the features you couldn't get at the time such as the ability to convert a network alert email in to a alphanumeric page or send a page from a web interface can all be done through SMS. The hospital I'm told now issues blackberries to everyone and the pager provider has gone back to just providing trunked radio service for the city and small businesses.
This is exactly why the iPhone sells so well and will continue to sell well. Phones are not sold based upon usability
but upon how they look and what trendy celebrities are seen carrying them. I wonder what Masi Oka carries.
Your average criminal doesn't read/. and likely hasn't discovered bump keys yet. It will take another year or two
for someone to bump a lock in a dorm, witness by a frat boy, who will repeat the trick at a party, witnessed by a high school
dropout who will unsuccessfully repeat it for a criminal that will eventually figure it out through trial and error. He'll then
go on a crime spree and be caught. The method will be mentioned in a newspaper article on the arrest. The criminals will read
it. Their brother-in-laws will look up how to do it online. And then there will be a small rise in crime. I give it two years.
But the rise in crime will be small as the risk is in removing stolen items not in gaining entry. Criminals care little about entering
without destroying the lock or door because you are going to notice your property missing. It will remain primarily a geek parlor trick
like shimming wafer padlocks or the methods used to break combination locks.
And I went up there, I said, "Shrink, I want to kill. I mean, I wanna, I
wanna kill. Kill. I wanna, I wanna see, I wanna see blood and gore and
guts and veins in my teeth. Eat dead burnt bodies. I mean kill, Kill,
KILL, KILL." And I started jumpin up and down yelling, "KILL, KILL," and
he started jumpin up and down with me and we was both jumping up and down
yelling, "KILL, KILL." And the sargent came over, pinned a medal on me,
sent me down the hall, said, "You're our boy."
I'd go with a web based system and integrate zone minder in as a security camera system to have a single application for everything. You could also include a Tivo Control or a media center like XBMC. Web based also gives you flexibility as more and more devices include built in browsers. You could control your house from a Wii or pull up a web page on the screen on your internet refrigerator.
Web based is the way to go. With home automation or any interface to physical objects if you make it externally accessible you better have secure code. SQL injection may be dropping tables in a more literal sense when your house floods and your first floor meets the basement.
Video sampling was popularized by Coldcut who even produced their own software, VJamm, for this sort of stuff. VJamm was likely what was used to put together Mother of All Funk Chords. For more of this, Coldcut's video of Timber is a classic produced with VJamm.
How many of you not only don't RTFA, but don't even read the Slashdot article summary, and only grep the Comments for the "Funny" tag?
My app handles all of that grep work for me. You'll find it available for sale in the App Store.
IANAL, Yet.
Guess what, "The CAN-SPAM Act of 2003 (Controlling the Assault of Non-Solicited Pornography and Marketing Act) establishes requirements for those who send commercial email"
Parent did not specify that it was commercial email and "newsletter" indicates that it likely is not. Even if they were of a commercial nature they would likely be exempted under the CAN-SPAM act as they would qualify as "relationship" messages.
All he needs is a marker. Visit the prosecutor. Write "Peter Fleischer is a poopie head" on his desk. File a counter suit over the defamatory content written on his desk.
I helped run a lab for a journalism class on horrible ancient hardware. We named the stations after South Park characters with the machine notorious for failing named Kenny. This naming convention came about for no other reason than it allowed us to shout, "They killed Kenny. You bastards!" whenever something happened to that box.
I think you mean English 4.0. You is forgettin Ebonics ya jive turkey.
KDE comes with a big red Staples button?
You were also turned in to a newt?
In Soviet Russia, open source monitors you!
Can someone drag this meme out back and kill it.
where an off topic flame war about America's school system, started over a post, from a submission, about a post, on an unamed forum, from an unnamed person, about an unnamed teacher, at an unnamed school, in an unnamed country, which may or may not be the USA, is considered "news".
When I was in Germany I saw a magazines (Bravo?) equivalent to something like Teen People in the US that had nude teenagers with stats like age/height/etc with one male and one female per issue in with information on Fools Garden or whatever other German pop was popular at the time. I think the intent was to provide a basis for comparison for the body changes teens go through. In the US this would likely be considered child pornography and land you in jail.
The most reliable drive I had was a Quantum Bigfoot. One of those monster 5.25 HDDs made in the early 90s. The reliability may have been because of the slow speed. It came out of a Compaq returned to an Office Max and sat on a shelf for months. When I started work there they said I could have it. I wanted the magnets out of it. It bounced around in a backpack and was hauled from class to class for several months. A group of friends and I put together a Linux server on the cheap and I offered it up if there was any possibility it was still working. That drive powered our server for 4 years before being replaced with a new drive and used as a secondary drive. The primary drive failed 2 years later and the entire server was scrapped. I'm going to have to see if that Bigfoot is still around somewhere and see if it still runs.
Second study finds that after two cups of coffee you may mistake your first cup of shroom tea for your third of coffee.
I've hear they make you wear white long underwear with a big red G on the chest to work in their facilities! Their facility in The Dalles out here in Oregon has security like a Vegas casino. I always found it odd their job listings required forfeiting your soul for a job turning a light switch on and off in their facility.
The little boat flipped over. A virus in the Gibson computer system claimed responsibility.
mIcRoSoft is the IRS!
Union made in the USA!
Your argument is circular. You can't steal something that is intellectual property as it is not physical. There is nothing to steal. The only way this is theft is if you say that it is theft to somehow duplicate this material. You then have created the idea of copyrights if only in practice if not in name, and are basing your argument upon that.
I worked as a geek for a hospital a few years ago. We had a TAP server and Motorola pagers. The vibrate on them was super powerful. On breaks we'd line them up on a table and send a department page and race them. With the cost of cell phones and SMS messaging what it is now they've been replaced. All of the features you couldn't get at the time such as the ability to convert a network alert email in to a alphanumeric page or send a page from a web interface can all be done through SMS. The hospital I'm told now issues blackberries to everyone and the pager provider has gone back to just providing trunked radio service for the city and small businesses.
I didn't really like G1 phone. Just looks weird
This is exactly why the iPhone sells so well and will continue to sell well. Phones are not sold based upon usability but upon how they look and what trendy celebrities are seen carrying them. I wonder what Masi Oka carries.
Your average criminal doesn't read /. and likely hasn't discovered bump keys yet. It will take another year or two
for someone to bump a lock in a dorm, witness by a frat boy, who will repeat the trick at a party, witnessed by a high school
dropout who will unsuccessfully repeat it for a criminal that will eventually figure it out through trial and error. He'll then
go on a crime spree and be caught. The method will be mentioned in a newspaper article on the arrest. The criminals will read
it. Their brother-in-laws will look up how to do it online. And then there will be a small rise in crime. I give it two years.
But the rise in crime will be small as the risk is in removing stolen items not in gaining entry. Criminals care little about entering
without destroying the lock or door because you are going to notice your property missing. It will remain primarily a geek parlor trick
like shimming wafer padlocks or the methods used to break combination locks.
And I went up there, I said, "Shrink, I want to kill. I mean, I wanna, I wanna kill. Kill. I wanna, I wanna see, I wanna see blood and gore and guts and veins in my teeth. Eat dead burnt bodies. I mean kill, Kill, KILL, KILL." And I started jumpin up and down yelling, "KILL, KILL," and he started jumpin up and down with me and we was both jumping up and down yelling, "KILL, KILL." And the sargent came over, pinned a medal on me, sent me down the hall, said, "You're our boy."
I'd go with a web based system and integrate zone minder in as a security camera system to have a single application for everything. You could also include a Tivo Control or a media center like XBMC. Web based also gives you flexibility as more and more devices include built in browsers. You could control your house from a Wii or pull up a web page on the screen on your internet refrigerator.
Web based is the way to go. With home automation or any interface to physical objects if you make it externally accessible you better have secure code. SQL injection may be dropping tables in a more literal sense when your house floods and your first floor meets the basement.
You must mean Windows bzzz.