I mean... it seems like you could whip this out in a 10-20k program (tops).
Re:Just mentioned the Club...
on
The Big Kerplop
·
· Score: 1
I read and re-read Danny Dunn. Most of the stuff in his books has come true (such as the dragonfly telerobotic). "Although the series is science-fiction, its stories are firmly based on scientific fact. For instance, the Lamont Geological Laboratories furnished information for The Ocean Floor and I.B.M. contributed greatly to The Homework Machine. For The Heat Ray, I was shown one of the first lasers in use. An attamp has always been made to keep the science in the stories ahead of actual scientific developments. many of the inventions suggested in The Automatic House, then purely hypothetical--such as the video-telephone, the rotating house, and the door responding to voice control--actually appeared in public use within a year after the book was published. --Jay Williams "
Add to this the fact that IE already supports pop-up prevention (lock down the Internet zone, and open up only the trusted sites where you allow scripting).
Uh, no. Not "EVERYONE" with a PhD is in it for the job market... but the article quotes Garman as saying "If I can't talk about it, it's hard to get hired. It's hard to put 'classified' on your list of publications on your résumé."
Someone woke up on the wrong side of the bed today. Not EVERYONE wants to "obtain a position in higher education," something you say you want to do in your resume.
Well, see, what you do is prevent anyone from realizing the full extent of the damage, so that the astronauts can complete their mission without distraction.
I don't think this is it... but the benefits of Cholestic technology definitely looks interesting.
Reflectivity of ink, 0 power consumption after initial refresh, wide viewing angles, etc. etc. etc.
I still don't see what have you got to loose by communicating with your management. I mean, hey! If they fire you for your crazy ideas of time management... then you can at least accept unemployment...
It would be easier? Think of it... with inches, you can readily divide a foot by fourths, thirds, halfs, even sixths... all fairly common in carpentry. With metric, you get halfs and fifths. Everything else ends up in fractional decimeters/centimeters.
Just look at something like Savage. Granted, it has elements of fighting... but it merges a 64-player FPS with the RTS genre, allowing commanders to build, research technology branches, and command the 31-person FPS players.
Ah, but you see, with the 4600 you can turn on antialiasing, turn on all the shodowing and particle effects and other eye candy, and still run Neverwinter Nights at 1600x1200. That's the only reason why I upgraded from my Voodoo 3000. I went from 2fps (no, I'm not kidding) to 30-60 (depending on how much eye candy I really wanted)
No, didn't you read? They don't know what the spikes actually correlate too. So for all we know, every time it tries to jack off, it's really taking a step.
When I was growing up, my parents called in an exterminator for rats. He reeeealy wanted to sell us the "whole treatment." Several refusals later, he left with a smile. We were trying to get rid of roaches for years after that (and we hadn't had any problem before).
That's why you have to smell their breath. But then you catch them eating the stuff. But you can get back when their (baby) teeth start to fall out. "oh, well... you should have been brushing your teeth, eh?" hehehe. }:-)
Yes, the servers got bit by Slammer. But what do you think their support centers run to support customers? How are they supposed to do regression testing? With only the latest version of everything with all the latest patches? Obviously not. And yes, those machines were isolated. But it only takes one machine to saturate a hub, and that hub going down affects nearby architecture, etc. etc.
Not to mention 3rd party apps that used MSDE that were not patched. That opened up a whole new can of worms.
Not to mention what a joke that Gartner report is "Everyone should move to a different platform, because, well, attackers attack the most common platform."
Yeesh. I know, I know.
Shouldn't feed the trolls.
Re:And what is the target consumer?
on
Google Hacks
·
· Score: 1
If you had read the TOC, you would realize that there are some very interesting undocumented hacks, such as superceding the 10-keyword search limitation.
I mean... it seems like you could whip this out in a 10-20k program (tops).
I read and re-read Danny Dunn. Most of the stuff in his books has come true (such as the dragonfly telerobotic).
c eFictionBooks/
"Although the series is science-fiction, its stories are firmly based on scientific fact. For instance, the Lamont Geological Laboratories furnished information for The Ocean Floor and I.B.M. contributed greatly to The Homework Machine. For The Heat Ray, I was shown one of the first lasers in use. An attamp has always been made to keep the science in the stories ahead of actual scientific developments. many of the inventions suggested in The Automatic House, then purely hypothetical--such as the video-telephone, the rotating house, and the door responding to voice control--actually appeared in public use within a year after the book was published. --Jay Williams "
And you left off Tom Swift!
A great page of young-adult science books I found googling: http://community-2.webtv.net/parhampinkston/Scien
Add to this the fact that IE already supports pop-up prevention (lock down the Internet zone, and open up only the trusted sites where you allow scripting).
Uh, no. Not "EVERYONE" with a PhD is in it for the job market... but the article quotes Garman as saying "If I can't talk about it, it's hard to get hired. It's hard to put 'classified' on your list of publications on your résumé."
:)
Someone woke up on the wrong side of the bed today. Not EVERYONE wants to "obtain a position in higher education," something you say you want to do in your resume.
To much projection in this world today.
Well, see, what you do is prevent anyone from realizing the full extent of the damage, so that the astronauts can complete their mission without distraction.
And those break ups worked so well.
I believe "Assembly Optimized" and "Bug Fixed" are mutually exclusive terms. Especially when discussing entire operating systems.
I don't think this is it... but the benefits of Cholestic technology definitely looks interesting.
Reflectivity of ink, 0 power consumption after initial refresh, wide viewing angles, etc. etc. etc.
Uh, the economy?
I still don't see what have you got to loose by communicating with your management. I mean, hey! If they fire you for your crazy ideas of time management... then you can at least accept unemployment...
You're just making his point that much stronger. ;)
It would be easier? Think of it... with inches, you can readily divide a foot by fourths, thirds, halfs, even sixths... all fairly common in carpentry. With metric, you get halfs and fifths. Everything else ends up in fractional decimeters/centimeters.
Oh, and I forgot to say... it's made by a group of three devs!
Just look at something like Savage. Granted, it has elements of fighting... but it merges a 64-player FPS with the RTS genre, allowing commanders to build, research technology branches, and command the 31-person FPS players.
Ah, but you see, with the 4600 you can turn on antialiasing, turn on all the shodowing and particle effects and other eye candy, and still run Neverwinter Nights at 1600x1200. That's the only reason why I upgraded from my Voodoo 3000. I went from 2fps (no, I'm not kidding) to 30-60 (depending on how much eye candy I really wanted)
No, didn't you read? They don't know what the spikes actually correlate too. So for all we know, every time it tries to jack off, it's really taking a step.
When I was growing up, my parents called in an exterminator for rats. He reeeealy wanted to sell us the "whole treatment." Several refusals later, he left with a smile. We were trying to get rid of roaches for years after that (and we hadn't had any problem before).
There are many stories where stranger mistook a $20,000 tulip bulb for an onion.
That's why you have to smell their breath. But then you catch them eating the stuff. But you can get back when their (baby) teeth start to fall out. "oh, well... you should have been brushing your teeth, eh?" hehehe. }:-)
I probably was, because I don't get it. Is this yet a reference to cannabis?
I had to google why everyone laughed at "Mary Jane? That's my favorite name!" after I took the family to Scoobie Doo.
BS required, indeed.
You know it's bad when your first thought is "Don't you know this is Slashdot?"
And the second thought is, "Man, what a tired joke."
Yes, the servers got bit by Slammer. But what do you think their support centers run to support customers? How are they supposed to do regression testing? With only the latest version of everything with all the latest patches? Obviously not. And yes, those machines were isolated. But it only takes one machine to saturate a hub, and that hub going down affects nearby architecture, etc. etc.
Not to mention 3rd party apps that used MSDE that were not patched. That opened up a whole new can of worms.
Not to mention what a joke that Gartner report is "Everyone should move to a different platform, because, well, attackers attack the most common platform."
Yeesh.
I know, I know. Shouldn't feed the trolls.
If you had read the TOC, you would realize that there are some very interesting undocumented hacks, such as superceding the 10-keyword search limitation.
Might I point you to what I feel is the superior news.google.com
and
the fact that google does maps?