Well, grab yourself some fink and then fink commander and look for all those gnome things you used to love.
But, you'll definately want to grab LyX. Then, wonder off and get TeXShop and start churning out some TeX to amaze your friends with your superfine equation-writing sk1llz.
Don't worry -- if you wait long enough, some nice men will come to your door and let you know.
Actually, even better, you still don't need to do your taxes -- they will take care of taking away anything you have to ensure you are in compliance.
I looked at UML a while back as a way to provide students with their own "linux experience," but we decided it was cheaper to set up 8 old computers than one system that could support 8 interactive sessions.
Still, there were features that would make it ideal for such a situation. When the console boots, you can redirect the console output to a serial line or to a TCP port, so the system starts, then halts until you connect to the TCP port to monitor the progress, then it continues and you see the console output in a terminal window as if you were sitting at the console.
IANAMBA(yet), but take Economics 201 and you'll learn usually the point of professional certification is to create an artificial monopoly through collusion. The certificate is required to practice the trade, therefore you must hold the certificate to enter the market. The number of certificates can be controlled by the certifying agency, controlling supply and raising the price.
Of course, the economic cost of the certificate will rise until it eliminates the economic gains of the controlled supply, so it's not very useful. The best example is the cab medallion system in NYC.
The point is, no one really cares about safety. It's a trick for profits.
Forget lame-looking 2600 consoles -- I'd like to see emulation of the walkup boxes. I'd like to play the arcade Altered Beast (my jenny just wasn't the same) and definately Crystal Caverns (castles?) with Bently Bear. Of course, this box would need a roller to control Bently as well as centipede, but a guy can hope!
Are you making things up?
I purchased an xbox within the first week of their availability and have had 0 problems with Live. What is the hardware upgrade called?
I believe the network traffing doubling every two years was stated by WorldCom as justification for their laying so much fiber. I believe the true number is well below that, and 2000 actually saw 0% growth in network traffic.
What many people don't realize is that US Government has a mission statement (written before mission statements became vogue) --actually it's for the constitution, but it lays out the guidelines for government -- and like any organization, questions such as this can be analyzed in light of this mission statement. You might be familiar with it:
We the People of the United States, in Order to form a more perfect Union, establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquillity, provide for the common defence, promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States of America.
So, according to this, it seems providing for the common defence comes before promoting the general Welfare. Now, I'm all for the general Welfare (as opposed to welfare;) but given a limited pool of resources, my views are the same as the Preamble's.
As an xbox live subscriber, I take comfort that the 13-year old blowing me to bits (and bits and bits) hasn't downloaded hack o' the week to beat me. There are so many ways to subvert online gaming it really is getting tiresome.
So, preventing modded boxes is an effective way of prevention.
Btw, users can nark on anyone for foul language -- it doesn't have to be caught by an admin. (Again, foul language seems to mainly come from 13-year olds who think it makes them sound older.)
Check out this article that answers your question. It shows how the new Intel chip in a Dell workstation blows the pants off a dual-cpu Apple computer for less cost.
We eMailed our final candidates a series of questions during recent interviews. I'm not sure if this would be included as a test, though.
Our rationale was that we would discuss experience during an interview, but too often during tech interviews, someone would be asked questions such as "What would you do if the system came up with error xxx?" That isn't representative of the work environment.
So, we sent a series of questions, letting the person know they had a few days to work on it and that they should use whatever resources they could. That way, we could more directly test their ability to discover the answers to the problems they would face in the job.
Surprisingly, we often would find out more about the person's personality than their technical skill. Some wouldn't reply. Others grumbled. Others sat down and really researched the questions, answering with their own experience. It seemed in some cases, people would put on a happy face when they put on a suit, but when doing "homework," you got to see their true work attitude. Overall, I thought it was an effective measure of how much they would work on a problem and what skills they had to research a problem.
And, it's not that it's "Against God's Plan" -- it's that it simply is conjecture that didn't happen.
The better example is the dog born with 5 legs. Some would say this could be a transitional form that if things were right could lead to a new breed of super dog. We see a dog flopping around looking embarrassed because it has a serious problem.
The main issue is that there should be tranisitional forms all around us -- and that evolution should be observed. Peppered moths are nursery stories and have little correspondance to anything. I could throw away all my yellow sheets of paper, but that wouldn't make my white paper turn into monkeys.
Mutations and diseases are not part of God's Plan. They are the result of choosing another plan.
I used a phonenet solution for two years (a townhouse and then when we purchased a house). It worked well, but I felt that there was some latency at the beginning of transfers that could have simply been Windows networking. I replaced it with 802.11, though, and haven't looked back.
It never interfered with anything regarding the phone, and I even had it going through the surge bar's phone protection, but I don't know how much good that will do. The biggest problem was getting phone cables to all the places I would sit with the laptop.
No doubt very true overall, but the question is whether it was a fair comparison. Someone who knows and cares enough to spend hours writing a routine in assembler and who *just* wrote it in assembler probably wrote his C code to compile optimally.
Now, what would be fair is if someone took *my* code and compared gcc's output of it with what Rastman might produce in assember. That would be interesting.;)
From http://www.markwelch.com/faxlaw.htm (referencing 47USC227):
Under United States law, it is unlawful "to use any telephone facsimile machine, computer, or other device to send an unsolicited advertisement" to any "equipment which has the capacity (A) to transcribe text or images (or both) from an electronic signal received over a regular telephone line onto paper." The law allows individuals to sue the sender of such illegal "junk fax" or (arguably) "junk email" for $500 per copy. Most states will permit such actions to be filed in Small Claims Court.
The purpose of a tax is to remedy negative externalities that are not accounted for when a free market finds its own equilibrium point.
In other words, when supply meets demand on the chart, it takes into account the suppliers' costs, but doesn't take into account the cost to society. Therefore, suppliers produce more than is ultimately beneficial to society. An effective tax pushes demand back to the societal optimum. A well-designed tax then pumps money into programs to further offset the externalities.
If you see two different taxes on the same good used for different purposes, it's because the negative externalities are probably different for those two puposes.
Uhm, that's b/c in 5 years, Motorola only had two revisions of the PowerPC. ;)
But, you'll definately want to grab LyX. Then, wonder off and get TeXShop and start churning out some TeX to amaze your friends with your superfine equation-writing sk1llz.
But your Entourage has a rosey Outlook.
But isn't water incredibly heavy, therefore expensive, to send to space. I would bet water weighs more than alumninum and other building materials.
Don't worry -- if you wait long enough, some nice men will come to your door and let you know.
Actually, even better, you still don't need to do your taxes -- they will take care of taking away anything you have to ensure you are in compliance.
A google is 10^100.
A googleplex is 10^google.
These were number terms before the search engine existed. The connotation is obvious.
Forget the fear of VPC being dropped for the Mac -- MS makes plent of Mac software. The real fear is that VPC for OS/2 will be eliminated tomorrow!
And that's what rundll32 is for!
Oh, you meant tasks, not functions?
Still, there were features that would make it ideal for such a situation. When the console boots, you can redirect the console output to a serial line or to a TCP port, so the system starts, then halts until you connect to the TCP port to monitor the progress, then it continues and you see the console output in a terminal window as if you were sitting at the console.
Of course, the economic cost of the certificate will rise until it eliminates the economic gains of the controlled supply, so it's not very useful. The best example is the cab medallion system in NYC.
The point is, no one really cares about safety. It's a trick for profits.
Forget lame-looking 2600 consoles -- I'd like to see emulation of the walkup boxes. I'd like to play the arcade Altered Beast (my jenny just wasn't the same) and definately Crystal Caverns (castles?) with Bently Bear. Of course, this box would need a roller to control Bently as well as centipede, but a guy can hope!
Are you making things up? I purchased an xbox within the first week of their availability and have had 0 problems with Live. What is the hardware upgrade called?
I once ran os360 on hercules (s/360 emulator) on linux in a vmware session in a windows terminal server session. Does that get me anything?
I believe the network traffing doubling every two years was stated by WorldCom as justification for their laying so much fiber. I believe the true number is well below that, and 2000 actually saw 0% growth in network traffic.
This probably isn't it, but it wouldn't hurt for you to open the file and change the cr to crlf since that is a distinction b/t dos and bsd.
We the People of the United States, in Order to form a more perfect Union, establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquillity, provide for the common defence, promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States of America.
So, according to this, it seems providing for the common defence comes before promoting the general Welfare. Now, I'm all for the general Welfare (as opposed to welfare ;) but given a limited pool of resources, my views are the same as the Preamble's.
Btw, users can nark on anyone for foul language -- it doesn't have to be caught by an admin. (Again, foul language seems to mainly come from 13-year olds who think it makes them sound older.)
Check out this article that answers your question. It shows how the new Intel chip in a Dell workstation blows the pants off a dual-cpu Apple computer for less cost.
Our rationale was that we would discuss experience during an interview, but too often during tech interviews, someone would be asked questions such as "What would you do if the system came up with error xxx?" That isn't representative of the work environment.
So, we sent a series of questions, letting the person know they had a few days to work on it and that they should use whatever resources they could. That way, we could more directly test their ability to discover the answers to the problems they would face in the job.
Surprisingly, we often would find out more about the person's personality than their technical skill. Some wouldn't reply. Others grumbled. Others sat down and really researched the questions, answering with their own experience. It seemed in some cases, people would put on a happy face when they put on a suit, but when doing "homework," you got to see their true work attitude. Overall, I thought it was an effective measure of how much they would work on a problem and what skills they had to research a problem.
You are correct on micro/macro.
And, it's not that it's "Against God's Plan" -- it's that it simply is conjecture that didn't happen.
The better example is the dog born with 5 legs. Some would say this could be a transitional form that if things were right could lead to a new breed of super dog. We see a dog flopping around looking embarrassed because it has a serious problem.
The main issue is that there should be tranisitional forms all around us -- and that evolution should be observed. Peppered moths are nursery stories and have little correspondance to anything. I could throw away all my yellow sheets of paper, but that wouldn't make my white paper turn into monkeys.
Mutations and diseases are not part of God's Plan. They are the result of choosing another plan.
It never interfered with anything regarding the phone, and I even had it going through the surge bar's phone protection, but I don't know how much good that will do. The biggest problem was getting phone cables to all the places I would sit with the laptop.
Now, what would be fair is if someone took *my* code and compared gcc's output of it with what Rastman might produce in assember. That would be interesting. ;)
<old timer mode>I remember Netscape .9, and wondering if it would ever reach 1.0. We'd say, what more could 1.0 do -- it's such a revolution!</otm>
From http://www.markwelch.com/faxlaw.htm (referencing 47USC227):
Under United States law, it is unlawful "to use any telephone facsimile machine, computer, or other device to send an unsolicited advertisement" to any "equipment which has the capacity (A) to transcribe text or images (or both) from an electronic signal received over a regular telephone line onto paper." The law allows individuals to sue the sender of such illegal "junk fax" or (arguably) "junk email" for $500 per copy. Most states will permit such actions to be filed in Small Claims Court.
In other words, when supply meets demand on the chart, it takes into account the suppliers' costs, but doesn't take into account the cost to society. Therefore, suppliers produce more than is ultimately beneficial to society. An effective tax pushes demand back to the societal optimum. A well-designed tax then pumps money into programs to further offset the externalities.
If you see two different taxes on the same good used for different purposes, it's because the negative externalities are probably different for those two puposes.
IANAMBA (yet)