We had a few years ago to install a 1930's era phone (made in Germany, still with a small swastika inside) that was used in a oil refinery. It was an "anti-explosion" phone, where all the electric part was double isolated from the outside so as not to spark any inflammables.
We tried to make it work with a Cisco ATA device. The device was already changed in the 80's to support nowadays electrical voltage, but otherwise still worked fine. The rotary dial was useless, as the ATA did not support it. But as it was configured as a PLAR line, it did its job flawlessly.
It kinda looked like it was like that... but the lack of any practical example makes me think this might be vaporware, not as practical as it seems or does not yet exist.
And you are? His mother? Father? Wife? Even those people have no right to say that he must change his diet! Anyway, as far as I know, and he describes it, his plane was not even full. If things are as he said (there's always the version, of course - and I've read nothing about it) than I think it's discrimination. Period!
I think it was intended to sound like an European site (it's true, ESA is European, not just French), like when you refer to the American Base at Okinawa, and not the Japanese Base at Okinawa.
Really? Not here in Portugal. Sure you see a lot of computers (mainly HP) with HD-DVD drives (I have one myself), but although HD format has had a slow adoption, Blu-ray is definitely here - you can see them in any store and video rentals. Only trouble tough are the HIGH prices and crappy movies.
Flawed!! To get a correct fuel efficiency you should know how much fuel per passenger or how much fuel per mass transported. A modern airplane can take from 4 to 600 people. A Prius can take what, 5 people? Amtrak can take hundreds? Probably you'll get surprised!!
You figured it all wrong: in Europe you need MORE antennae installed to cover all the population that is widely scattered. You don't have VERY LARGE areas uninhabited in Europe. And because you have more people, it makes sense to have a standard across different countries.
Yeah, 41 to get there... Best chance they decode it in 1 month, send reply, another 41... Well, totals 82 years to get an answer. Expecting you don't send it as a baby, let's take it while in college, add another 15~18 years... you get it around your 97~100th birthday... Hardly in most folks life time. But I get your point!
First of all: JAR ain't a Javascript file, but a JAVA Executable/Package, so, as IE (XP SP2) blocks and asks for permission to RUN ActiveX content, why shouldn't FF ask if you wanted to download that JAR archive?
Second: Never confuse Javascript with Java, they are both Java, but one depends on the browser and the other depends on Sun's Java.
Third: Excluding some exploits that exist within JPEG, why should I consider "dangerous" that the browser CACHES GIF, JPG or PNG files?
I guess when you have about 350 IP phones, 140 cameras and about 13 APs (all of the use PowerOver Ethernet)and about 200 computers, you'd probably prefer to buy 60 Catalyst 3550 than to make all new cabling to support all the powering needs. Let's not include the necessary power "bricks" for all the phones: they're big and each one costs about $40.
I have here a € 5 note, and if you pass your fingers on the medium size five (bottom left on the side that has the arch) you can feel the number five very well.
Driving through Lisbon, in Portugal, with my laptop and using netstumbler, in 20 minuts, I picked 72 APs... Of theese, about 60% where wide open, many of them being Linksys. I know for sure that many of them are from a popular cable company that sells this APs without any protection, or indication for regular users in how to activate it. One of the most hilarious stories I found was about a guy that since he bought the AP he never payed any traffic (yes, here you have a fixed ammount for downloads, about € 37,00 a month. Any extra megabytes are payed as a surplus)... I'm just sorry for the guy he was "borowing" the net from.
And yours to keep your mouth shut when you don't know what you're talking about?
Bravo! Still laughing!
We had a few years ago to install a 1930's era phone (made in Germany, still with a small swastika inside) that was used in a oil refinery. It was an "anti-explosion" phone, where all the electric part was double isolated from the outside so as not to spark any inflammables.
We tried to make it work with a Cisco ATA device. The device was already changed in the 80's to support nowadays electrical voltage, but otherwise still worked fine. The rotary dial was useless, as the ATA did not support it. But as it was configured as a PLAR line, it did its job flawlessly.
It kinda looked like it was like that... but the lack of any practical example makes me think this might be vaporware, not as practical as it seems or does not yet exist.
I saw a lot of what it could do, how it could change the world... but I did not see how it works!!!
"Being obese will shorten his lifespan."
And you are? His mother? Father? Wife? Even those people have no right to say that he must change his diet!
Anyway, as far as I know, and he describes it, his plane was not even full.
If things are as he said (there's always the version, of course - and I've read nothing about it) than I think it's discrimination. Period!
Touché!
I think it was intended to sound like an European site (it's true, ESA is European, not just French), like when you refer to the American Base at Okinawa, and not the Japanese Base at Okinawa.
Really? Not here in Portugal. Sure you see a lot of computers (mainly HP) with HD-DVD drives (I have one myself), but although HD format has had a slow adoption, Blu-ray is definitely here - you can see them in any store and video rentals. Only trouble tough are the HIGH prices and crappy movies.
With Virtual Box mine booted in 23 seconds.
Flawed!!
To get a correct fuel efficiency you should know how much fuel per passenger or how much fuel per mass transported.
A modern airplane can take from 4 to 600 people.
A Prius can take what, 5 people?
Amtrak can take hundreds?
Probably you'll get surprised!!
Europe's area: 10,180,000 km (3,930,000 sq mi)
Density: 70/km (181/sq mi)
Population: 710,000,000
USA's area: 9,826,630 km (3,794,066 sq mi )
Density: 31/km (80/sq mi)
Population: 303,151,000
You figured it all wrong: in Europe you need MORE antennae installed to cover all the population that is widely scattered. You don't have VERY LARGE areas uninhabited in Europe. And because you have more people, it makes sense to have a standard across different countries.
The Timex Sinclair 1000 was a remake of the ZX-81... It's there!
Yeah, 41 to get there... Best chance they decode it in 1 month, send reply, another 41... Well, totals 82 years to get an answer. Expecting you don't send it as a baby, let's take it while in college, add another 15~18 years... you get it around your 97~100th birthday... Hardly in most folks life time. But I get your point!
Have we contacted the Asgard? Smells like trouble to me!
First of all: JAR ain't a Javascript file, but a JAVA Executable/Package, so, as IE (XP SP2) blocks and asks for permission to RUN ActiveX content, why shouldn't FF ask if you wanted to download that JAR archive?
Second: Never confuse Javascript with Java, they are both Java, but one depends on the browser and the other depends on Sun's Java.
Third: Excluding some exploits that exist within JPEG, why should I consider "dangerous" that the browser CACHES GIF, JPG or PNG files?
When I tried to open the page he shows as the source of infection, my TrendMicro Antivirus Software automaticaly detected it and trashed it.
What scares me most, is that FF didn't ask to download the file, it just downloaded the JAR into the cache folder.
I guess when you have about 350 IP phones, 140 cameras and about 13 APs (all of the use PowerOver Ethernet)and about 200 computers, you'd probably prefer to buy 60 Catalyst 3550 than to make all new cabling to support all the powering needs. Let's not include the necessary power "bricks" for all the phones: they're big and each one costs about $40.
That means I can't buy parts for my old HP Netserver??
Like we say arround here: "You missed a good chance if you shutted your mouth"
It's not braille, but the marker is there!
Driving through Lisbon, in Portugal, with my laptop and using netstumbler, in 20 minuts, I picked 72 APs... Of theese, about 60% where wide open, many of them being Linksys. I know for sure that many of them are from a popular cable company that sells this APs without any protection, or indication for regular users in how to activate it. One of the most hilarious stories I found was about a guy that since he bought the AP he never payed any traffic (yes, here you have a fixed ammount for downloads, about € 37,00 a month. Any extra megabytes are payed as a surplus)... I'm just sorry for the guy he was "borowing" the net from.
Are there any "fundamental" differences with American transportation habits and other transportation habits around the world (namely Europe)?
Is there anyway to make a cable compatible with SONY BUS CD Changer?? I haven't found anything yet to make it work...
I'm sure I still own an IBM PS/2 Model 30 (1987), that uses an Intel 8086 (16 bit bus).