Early pascal compilers wouldn't even compile that... ours would (VMS Pascal - it sucked in many ways but was more lenient if we were allowed to let it be, which we weren't) but consistent use of it *would* have failed you even if the program ran in other ways - it was a mantra repeated almost constantly.
The thing that killed me about pascal at college wasn't that you had to write it upside down (it was a single pass compiler so no forward references) but the complete lack of support for variable length strings. That made even writing simple applications a tortuous mess of counting spaces to get anything to compile (and made for the most non user-friendly apps in existence 'please type a 16 character string with your name in it. Do not deviate from 16 characters otherwise the app will crash'.).
I never went back to it even when things like turbopascal came out (which presumably had fixed some of the major shortcomings of the language). It might even be quite nice to use now, but can't imagine spending the time to re-learn it.
the Corresponding Source may be on a different server (operated by you or a third party) that supports equivalent copying facilities, provided you maintain clear directions next to the object code saying where to find the Corresponding Source.
Sourceforge is a difference server operated by a third party.
Following the logic of your other post there's no reason to believe that GPLv2 doesn't allow URLs either (as it clearly does - the internet is a medium 'commonly used for software interchange').
If a developer holds the copyright on the software then in theory they could license something under GPL then only distribute binaries... GPL isn't binding on them as they already have all distribution rights that the GPL grants. If would be a bit pointless though since nobody else could then redistribute that software without being in violation of the GPL since they wouldn't be able to distribute source code...
Which carrier is this? I've never heard of it or had it happen and I'd raise hell if one tried to pull it on me.
It doesn't even make sense - if your phone is off it isn't even on the network so there's nowhere for it to route.. the have no idea what country you're in.
US prices are commonly quoted without tax, so the US->UK price is actually about £173.. and the extra £20 isn't that much allowing for exchange rate fluctuations.
They may sell it separately but there wouldn't be a lot of point in owning an iphone without the phone contract.. and 2 years is a heck of a long time to be locked in to a single vendor (Personally I prefer 6 months.. 12 month contract + buyout after 6 months, since new phones come out all the time).
Also odd is that we apparently have to record of a distress call and/or an emergency transponder squawk. This indicates to me that, if he did have a problem in the air, it was so sudden and/or catastrophic that he didn't have time to send out a mayday. Or it could mean that he landed purposefully on one of these dry lake beds without any problems, but had a problem taking back off.
If that were the case he'd have activated his beacon (a TLA I forget but was mentioned on TV that he had one and knew how to use it) and there wouldn't have been a need for a search as they'd know where he was.
Sounds more like an 'oops where did that mountain come from?' moment to me (learned lots of new things today.. a desert with mountains! I thought Nevada was all sand before today..).
From what I understand, being able to bring an adult stem cell to be omni-potential means that it could be made to evolve into an embryo and then a living human being (a clone). So who is to say that this life should not be protected ? Does religion even have a point of view on the issue ? If every unicellular life is sacred as long as a
The only reference in the Bible I know of to abortion is the punishment for causing miscarriage by hitting a woman, but not otherwise hurting her (which has a separate, much greater, punishment) is only a fine (Exodus 21:22-23) so in the Judeo-Christian context the embryo is clearly *not* seen as a human being in any way... merely property.
I've got that but not to that degree probably.. I've heard top 40 tunes that have been really popular have off key notes and/or singers and nobody around me noticed.. I just can't listen to it. It's not perfect pitch - I couldn't name the note that's wrong.. it's just *wrong* dammit!
Get a life - you said the same about barcodes... I bet there are a few that say the same about credit cards (which actually fit the profile far better than rfid chips).
The problem with vague prophecy is, well, it's vague, and can be applied to just about any situation you want it to.
Dead easy on the N95.. just debrand it. Takes about 10 minutes.
Unlocking is separate but just as easy - just ask orange for the unlock code.. which they're legally obliged to give you. I think they charge about £20 for it.
Nobody is going to pay 12 grand for team suite. Get MSDN for about a grand (depending on where you live) and MS will send it to you along with visual studio etc. (in fact they send about 3 different versions). Even as a solo developer it makes sense to pay that if you're doing anything with MS products.
Most people who read the Bible attend a church, most of them in turn present a tithe to the church
In fact several studies have shown the opposite. As far as churchgoers tithing.. it's rather out of fashion - if the church were truly to have 10% of the income of its members it would be very, very rich - not having to raise money to fix the roof every couple of years (churches have to be *very* tight with their finances and account for every penny as their income is just not reliable.. just the other day I know of one in the middle of a city which had to abandon a project because it couldn't raise a measly £1000).
All the legislation that is trying to ban gay marriage can be traced to one thing, christian religion.
Well no actually.. it's politicians using it to promote an agenda (their re-election) rather than anything to do with christianity itself - in fact there's nothing against gay marriage in mainstream christian theology... in most readings it's pretty much mandated - if you accept the no sex without marriage bit (disputed, but I won't get into that) and accept that it's hard to avoid having sex (as the bible does, in several places) then to ban gay marriage is to force people into sin.. completely the opposite of christian values.
OTOH I've heard some pretty disturbing stuff coming out of the US that's labeled 'christian' - advocating violence against people, promoting hatred, even calling for political assassinations!! I live in hope that's just a tiny vocal minority rather than what you guys have to live with.
Superfetch is the first thing to disable on Vista if you want your machine back.
Firstly it runs the hard drive 100% of the time, so if you're on a laptop your battery dies really quickly and if your on a desktop it's as noisy as hell. Secondly it fills up *virtual* memory not physical memory - so your machine ends up mostly in swap and runs like a complete dog.
There's another app I forget the name of that does the same too that you need to disable.
You fail Pascal 101 - semicolon after end!!!
Early pascal compilers wouldn't even compile that... ours would (VMS Pascal - it sucked in many ways but was more lenient if we were allowed to let it be, which we weren't) but consistent use of it *would* have failed you even if the program ran in other ways - it was a mantra repeated almost constantly.
The thing that killed me about pascal at college wasn't that you had to write it upside down (it was a single pass compiler so no forward references) but the complete lack of support for variable length strings. That made even writing simple applications a tortuous mess of counting spaces to get anything to compile (and made for the most non user-friendly apps in existence 'please type a 16 character string with your name in it. Do not deviate from 16 characters otherwise the app will crash'.).
I never went back to it even when things like turbopascal came out (which presumably had fixed some of the major shortcomings of the language). It might even be quite nice to use now, but can't imagine spending the time to re-learn it.
Why do we as a free society keep rolling over for this particular religious group? Is it because they get angry and blow people up?
Sounds like a good reason to me!
So GPLv3 directly allows URLs:
the Corresponding Source may be on a different server (operated by you or a third party) that supports equivalent copying facilities, provided you maintain clear directions next to the object code saying where to find the Corresponding Source.
Sourceforge is a difference server operated by a third party.
Following the logic of your other post there's no reason to believe that GPLv2 doesn't allow URLs either (as it clearly does - the internet is a medium 'commonly used for software interchange').
If a developer holds the copyright on the software then in theory they could license something under GPL then only distribute binaries... GPL isn't binding on them as they already have all distribution rights that the GPL grants. If would be a bit pointless though since nobody else could then redistribute that software without being in violation of the GPL since they wouldn't be able to distribute source code...
You consider *that* NSFW?? Wow... I've seen worse things on the screensavers around here.
Which carrier is this? I've never heard of it or had it happen and I'd raise hell if one tried to pull it on me.
It doesn't even make sense - if your phone is off it isn't even on the network so there's nowhere for it to route.. the have no idea what country you're in.
Yeah but they'd probably only come into alignment for a couple of days every few years.
US prices are commonly quoted without tax, so the US->UK price is actually about £173.. and the extra £20 isn't that much allowing for exchange rate fluctuations.
They may sell it separately but there wouldn't be a lot of point in owning an iphone without the phone contract.. and 2 years is a heck of a long time to be locked in to a single vendor (Personally I prefer 6 months.. 12 month contract + buyout after 6 months, since new phones come out all the time).
That would be great except for one small problem.
No bluetooth.
Also odd is that we apparently have to record of a distress call and/or an emergency transponder squawk. This indicates to me that, if he did have a problem in the air, it was so sudden and/or catastrophic that he didn't have time to send out a mayday. Or it could mean that he landed purposefully on one of these dry lake beds without any problems, but had a problem taking back off.
If that were the case he'd have activated his beacon (a TLA I forget but was mentioned on TV that he had one and knew how to use it) and there wouldn't have been a need for a search as they'd know where he was.
Sounds more like an 'oops where did that mountain come from?' moment to me (learned lots of new things today.. a desert with mountains! I thought Nevada was all sand before today..).
They've cured alziemers and diabetes over the last few months too.
:p
I'm waiting for the Mail to announce a cure for death
Everytime you put someone on a life support machine you're playing god. Every time you use medical science to save a life you're playing god.
Me, I just wish we'd play god a bit more often. We seem to be a bit more enthusiastic about playing the other bloke.
From what I understand, being able to bring an adult stem cell to be omni-potential means that it could be made to evolve into an embryo and then a living human being (a clone). So who is to say that this life should not be protected ? Does religion even have a point of view on the issue ? If every unicellular life is sacred as long as a
The only reference in the Bible I know of to abortion is the punishment for causing miscarriage by hitting a woman, but not otherwise hurting her (which has a separate, much greater, punishment) is only a fine (Exodus 21:22-23) so in the Judeo-Christian context the embryo is clearly *not* seen as a human being in any way... merely property.
That's why I've never heard of this rubin bloke.. I can't *stand* either of those (and was born about 20 years too late to like them anyway).
I've got that but not to that degree probably.. I've heard top 40 tunes that have been really popular have off key notes and/or singers and nobody around me noticed.. I just can't listen to it. It's not perfect pitch - I couldn't name the note that's wrong.. it's just *wrong* dammit!
Get a life - you said the same about barcodes... I bet there are a few that say the same about credit cards (which actually fit the profile far better than rfid chips).
The problem with vague prophecy is, well, it's vague, and can be applied to just about any situation you want it to.
Dead easy on the N95.. just debrand it. Takes about 10 minutes.
Unlocking is separate but just as easy - just ask orange for the unlock code.. which they're legally obliged to give you. I think they charge about £20 for it.
Nobody is going to pay 12 grand for team suite. Get MSDN for about a grand (depending on where you live) and MS will send it to you along with visual studio etc. (in fact they send about 3 different versions). Even as a solo developer it makes sense to pay that if you're doing anything with MS products.
Most people who read the Bible attend a church, most of them in turn present a tithe to the church
In fact several studies have shown the opposite. As far as churchgoers tithing.. it's rather out of fashion - if the church were truly to have 10% of the income of its members it would be very, very rich - not having to raise money to fix the roof every couple of years (churches have to be *very* tight with their finances and account for every penny as their income is just not reliable.. just the other day I know of one in the middle of a city which had to abandon a project because it couldn't raise a measly £1000).
All the legislation that is trying to ban gay marriage can be traced to one thing, christian religion.
Well no actually.. it's politicians using it to promote an agenda (their re-election) rather than anything to do with christianity itself - in fact there's nothing against gay marriage in mainstream christian theology... in most readings it's pretty much mandated - if you accept the no sex without marriage bit (disputed, but I won't get into that) and accept that it's hard to avoid having sex (as the bible does, in several places) then to ban gay marriage is to force people into sin.. completely the opposite of christian values.
OTOH I've heard some pretty disturbing stuff coming out of the US that's labeled 'christian' - advocating violence against people, promoting hatred, even calling for political assassinations!! I live in hope that's just a tiny vocal minority rather than what you guys have to live with.
If you can read /etc/shadow you're root.. which means you aren't gaining anything by it.
/etc/passwd then it was a valid attack. Now much less so.
In the old days when passwords were in
He claims that it will get roughly 15 mpg using regular unleaded fuel.. at the cruising altitude of 20,000 ft and a speed of 290 mph.
So you'd need to carry 725 gallons of fuel just to run this thing for 10 minutes.
Not so much a sky car as a sky lorry!
Superfetch is the first thing to disable on Vista if you want your machine back.
Firstly it runs the hard drive 100% of the time, so if you're on a laptop your battery dies really quickly and if your on a desktop it's as noisy as hell. Secondly it fills up *virtual* memory not physical memory - so your machine ends up mostly in swap and runs like a complete dog.
There's another app I forget the name of that does the same too that you need to disable.
Solar powered calculators work perfectly well indoors in the UK - the ambient light is enough to power them. I have one sat on my desk here..
PV cells are used for lots of stuff in the UK including some of the the things you list above.