My keyboard is querty. I like to think of it as an extension of the mouse/keyboard interface. I have no problem using my laptop or any other setup for that matter.
I use this because the amount of time I spend working on my computer any improvement in comfort and effciency is worth it to me.
I have a touchstream keyboard and would not go back to using a mechanical one. The gestures are for the most part very intuitive. Mouse movement and text selection typically take only minutes to learn.
The enhanced gestures you mention are aimed at expert users and have simpler non-zonal equivalents.
I find the keyboard far more effcient and less stressful than any other setup and I've tried a few over the years!
Load the file with so tetris.vim,
start the game with [leader]te. Leader is the value set in the mapleader variable. If this is not set use \te. Try:help leader in vim.
In a previous job we had machines named after drugs. Developer conversations could be amusing.
"NFS isn't working"
"Which environment?"
"I'm on heroin but I guess I could switch to methadone"...
Having used ML in the past I'd agree with this; except for io which is horribly botched on the rest of the language. I guess I won't be using it to write device drivers any time soon.
Castle Technology sell ARM based PC's for not much more than the cost of this motherboard. This sort of computer is still popular amongst enthusiasts (and some schools) in the UK.
In my youth (c ~1975) I can recall lego clones. They fitted regular lego bricks but were made of cheaper flexible plastic. I remember being really annoyed lending out lego models only to have them returned with immitation bricks in them. No idea who made them though. They've probably been sued out of business.
Does anyone have a definitive list of machines that Plan9 will run on? The web site mentions compilers for x86, 68020, Sparc etc. I assume that getting it to work on a non x86 machine involves setting up a PC and cross-compiling it.
I have one of these. Sadly they're no longer in production since Apple bought them out.
Their sensor technology and subsequent patents comes from Fingerworks. I'm typing this on one of their keyboards!
There is a radiation hardened version of the Power PC.
My keyboard is querty. I like to think of it as an extension of the mouse/keyboard interface. I have no problem using my laptop or any other setup for that matter.
I use this because the amount of time I spend working on my computer any improvement in comfort and effciency is worth it to me.
The enhanced gestures you mention are aimed at expert users and have simpler non-zonal equivalents.
I find the keyboard far more effcient and less stressful than any other setup and I've tried a few over the years!I use one of these. Bought it myself, well worth it.
I always thought that ternary computers were theoretically more efficient, from a mathmatical point of view.
This story just reminded me of this
If people don't understand me, rather than learning their native language, I simply shout loudly and aggressively in my own.
:echo mapleader
Load the file with so tetris.vim, start the game with [leader]te. Leader is the value set in the mapleader variable. If this is not set use \te. Try :help leader in vim.
TeTrIs.vim : A tetris game in pure vim
In a previous job we had machines named after drugs. Developer conversations could be amusing. "NFS isn't working" "Which environment?" "I'm on heroin but I guess I could switch to methadone" ...
Will you be charging extra for first posts?
Especially with T9...
For me the real killer is not having a client that will tunnel through the strict http firewall we have at work :-(
IBM's Power 4 Architecture was designed to exploit SMT. They're looking to leapfrog Sun and Dec in server performance.
Having used ML in the past I'd agree with this; except for io which is horribly botched on the rest of the language. I guess I won't be using it to write device drivers any time soon.
Or even NewtonOS which IMHO still has one of the best PDA interfaces even several years after its demise.
Does this mean I can grow myself a new brain out of dog food? Full of marrowbone jelly and meaty goodness...
Flywheel energy storage looks particuarly promising, even for powering something as small as a laptop.
Funnily enough, you're not too far from the truth. My Nokia 9000 communicator detects when it is in a car kit and auto answers on the handsfree set.
Castle Technology sell ARM based PC's for not much more than the cost of this motherboard. This sort of computer is still popular amongst enthusiasts (and some schools) in the UK.
In my youth (c ~1975) I can recall lego clones. They fitted regular lego bricks but were made of cheaper flexible plastic. I remember being really annoyed lending out lego models only to have them returned with immitation bricks in them. No idea who made them though. They've probably been sued out of business.
Does anyone have a definitive list of machines that Plan9 will run on? The web site mentions compilers for x86, 68020, Sparc etc. I assume that getting it to work on a non x86 machine involves setting up a PC and cross-compiling it.