On the bottom of the sea. Probably not much of a crater, but I'm sure the rocket made some kind of dent. Water currents will take care of that in no time.
Well... I'll give the/. editors a break here because the linked article says exactly what the quoted text says. So one could blame the editors over at Tom's Hardware.
Except that Palm probably doesn't own any of the BeOS code. Palm is the hardware remnants of Palm, Inc. The software part was spun off as PalmSource, which was bought by ACCESS.
I'm not sure that Palm owns any of the BeOS code anymore. Palm is surviving hardware part of the Palm, Inc. Formerly known as PalmOne. The software part became PalmSource, which was bought by ACCESS.
So Apple being Palm would get them a bunch of hardware. I don't think Apple needs their hardware.
Read the original/. story and you'll see that you're not likely to need to pay the fee. The fee is intended for high volume mailing lists. I doubt that your 500 subscribers is going to fall under the high volume limit.
These sales are pre-planned. Doesn't matter what the price of the stock was or if they felt that the stock was going up or down, the sale was going to happen. Read the end of the article:
But the Googlers' stock sales were carefully planned before the search giant went public. Unlike insider sales that are made by company executives accused of unloading stock right before a suspected downturn, the Google executives' sales were decided long ago. They were coordinated under a schedule that allows insiders to pre-arrange the sale of a certain number of shares over a period of time.
The plan, called a 10b5-1, allows them to sell stock on a regular basis without appearing as though they are reacting to market movements up or down. When they announced that they were adopting the plan in 2004, Google said that after the sales were completed Brin and Page would each retain more than 80 percent of their current holdings and Schmidt would retain nearly 85 percent.
Or check the Insider Transactions on Yahoo. Notice how it says "Automatic Sale"?
On Side A of the collector, the particles are from the comet. On Side B of the collector, the particles are from the cruise phase so that would be interstellar particles. However, none of this was "space junk".
"Space junk" is stuff left over in Earth orbit from stuff we've put up there. Stardust didn't collect "space junk" particles, just cometary particles. The collector was only deployed when it went through the comet's coma. During the trip to the comet and back, the collector was stowed.
The non-clear cover Western Digital 150GB SATA drive is being sold for $295 at Newegg. Also, the price quoted is direct from WD, so I imagine that the $350 is a bit higher than what you could get it for if you shop around.
Though announced yesterday, the phenomenon was first noted in 2001 in work by Sigurdur Thoroddsen and Amy Shen, who were then at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
For those who don't want to go through the Gamespot article, here's the direct link to the Halo 3 documentary on Bungie's page.
It's not funny to the 21 people who died.
Because version numbers don't mean anything nowadays. Back in the day, they used to mean something. Now the version numbers are just marketing.
Monkey Island 5
Skiff vs. CG and DDG, wonder how that's going to turn out.
On the bottom of the sea. Probably not much of a crater, but I'm sure the rocket made some kind of dent. Water currents will take care of that in no time.
The rocket crashed into the Pacific. There would be no crater. At least not on the surface.
Reminds me of something I read awhile back... A New Sith, or Revenge of the Hope, Reconsidering Star Wars IV in the light of I-III
Commercial Use of Shuttle Landing Facilities Planned
Well... I'll give the /. editors a break here because the linked article says exactly what the quoted text says. So one could blame the editors over at Tom's Hardware.
I'd rather read the AnandTech article on AM2
Uh, no. I suggest you go read Bad Astronomy's Moon Hoax stuff. It explains where there were no flames from the rocket and how the dust thing.
Except that Palm probably doesn't own any of the BeOS code. Palm is the hardware remnants of Palm, Inc. The software part was spun off as PalmSource, which was bought by ACCESS.
I'm not sure that Palm owns any of the BeOS code anymore. Palm is surviving hardware part of the Palm, Inc. Formerly known as PalmOne. The software part became PalmSource, which was bought by ACCESS.
So Apple being Palm would get them a bunch of hardware. I don't think Apple needs their hardware.
Read the original /. story and you'll see that you're not likely to need to pay the fee. The fee is intended for high volume mailing lists. I doubt that your 500 subscribers is going to fall under the high volume limit.
But the Googlers' stock sales were carefully planned before the search giant went public. Unlike insider sales that are made by company executives accused of unloading stock right before a suspected downturn, the Google executives' sales were decided long ago. They were coordinated under a schedule that allows insiders to pre-arrange the sale of a certain number of shares over a period of time.
The plan, called a 10b5-1, allows them to sell stock on a regular basis without appearing as though they are reacting to market movements up or down. When they announced that they were adopting the plan in 2004, Google said that after the sales were completed Brin and Page would each retain more than 80 percent of their current holdings and Schmidt would retain nearly 85 percent.
Or check the Insider Transactions on Yahoo. Notice how it says "Automatic Sale"?
On Side A of the collector, the particles are from the comet. On Side B of the collector, the particles are from the cruise phase so that would be interstellar particles. However, none of this was "space junk".
So I was correct 2 out of 3 times.
See the Press Kit on the Stardust mission
You've got selective memory in just recalling the Genesis mission. You forgot: Spirit, Opportunity, Cassini-Huygens, Deep Impact, and Swift.
And successful launches for things on it's way: Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter and MESSENGER.
I probably forget a few, too.
"Space junk" is stuff left over in Earth orbit from stuff we've put up there. Stardust didn't collect "space junk" particles, just cometary particles. The collector was only deployed when it went through the comet's coma. During the trip to the comet and back, the collector was stowed.
CableCard support is coming soon from ATI. See the AnandTech preview of ATI's OCUR.
The non-clear cover Western Digital 150GB SATA drive is being sold for $295 at Newegg. Also, the price quoted is direct from WD, so I imagine that the $350 is a bit higher than what you could get it for if you shop around.
Ive is British.
Because Google is high profile and has piles of cash.
Because they're getting their butts handed to them in the market. So in desperation, they have turned to the legal system. Sound familiar?
Though announced yesterday, the phenomenon was first noted in 2001 in work by Sigurdur Thoroddsen and Amy Shen, who were then at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.