Unless, of course, many more people click play who would never have bought the track, kind of like they were using Spotify like a personalised radio service.
.co is short for COmpany or COmmercial depending on your viewpoint. The purpose of DNS is to organise things neatly. So, in the correct spirit of this the UK name space has a nice organised set of sub-domains (see above or below for someone posting the Wikipedia list of them). Because people are stupid/lazy they don't want to learn to understand why this is good, and someone proposed flattening the layout for DNS at-large (the proposed.apple.microsoft etc.) and Nominet thought maybe they should do the same with their bit of it.
English is beautiful in part because it is a mongrel collection of other languages and is never afraid to borrow a word or idea from somewhere else if it is needed. Part of the beauty is in the lack of stupid restrictions, and the fact that you can write the same sentence in more than one way, changing around word order, syntax, choosing from several different words with the same meaning etc.
Considering I had a commercially available, off the shelf java development environment in 1998/1999, I think you might like to reconsider - Java may not be 30 years old, but it's older than 10.
It's also because, with a gift card they get your money now, and have to give you goods at some later date. To look at it another way, it's the opposite of a credit card, you are lending the supplier your money, but you don't get interest or a handling fee.
Maybe, but in Valve's case adding Linux gaming is about value-add. If I can buy a game on Steam that I can then run on my choice of OS (Windows, Linux, Mac) without having to commit to one of the other (maybe it's Windows at work, Linux at home, or vice versa), then this is a huge additional choice for a percentage of the market - one that Microsoft will not be able to match. If they can ensure that cross-platform multiplayer works as expected, then they have a serious winner on their hands - buy your game from Steam and be able to play against any of your mates, without having to worry what computer they have, or buy from another app store and, well, maybe it works.
Or assembler.
Unless, of course, many more people click play who would never have bought the track, kind of like they were using Spotify like a personalised radio service.
Private Interconnection Environment
Let them tell the world you can't use Visa or Mastercard to buy PIEs
Ahh, AltaVista, Gopher, the original Keeper Of Lists. Back when the web was young and more interesting.
Sounds like perfect ones to me - read, write and execute everyone except himself and his group.
If the top 10% own more than 90% of the wealth, then yes, this is unfair. Simple economics. No need to swear about it.
Wouldn't that make the paper really heavy and inflexible?
No, surely he made a one-to-one video call, which the BBC then broadcast. He did not broadcast anything.
Maybe you killed off all the ants that like it, leaving only ants that don't like it.
That's clearly not true. It's because you can only see the gnomes *if you believe in them*.
There seems to be a lot of confusion here.
LHD = left hand drive = steering wheel on the left, driving on the right of the road (Europe, US, etc)
RHD = right hand drive = steering wheel on the right, driving on the left of the road (UK, Japan, etc)
No, he's dreaming he is piloting one of these, and you are the one doing the running...
.co is short for COmpany or COmmercial depending on your viewpoint. The purpose of DNS is to organise things neatly. So, in the correct spirit of this the UK name space has a nice organised set of sub-domains (see above or below for someone posting the Wikipedia list of them). Because people are stupid/lazy they don't want to learn to understand why this is good, and someone proposed flattening the layout for DNS at-large (the proposed .apple .microsoft etc.) and Nominet thought maybe they should do the same with their bit of it.
I believe you mean JANet and the NRS, which used names along the lines of UK.AC.
Or possibly, if you read the consultation documents and responses, Nominet asked it's members and listened to what they had to say.
If you think that is more readable than C, then you don't know how to write decent C.
The XP mode is still running x86 programs on an x86 processor though. To do it with ARM you have to emulate the entire x86 cpu and instruction set.
English is beautiful in part because it is a mongrel collection of other languages and is never afraid to borrow a word or idea from somewhere else if it is needed. Part of the beauty is in the lack of stupid restrictions, and the fact that you can write the same sentence in more than one way, changing around word order, syntax, choosing from several different words with the same meaning etc.
Considering I had a commercially available, off the shelf java development environment in 1998/1999, I think you might like to reconsider - Java may not be 30 years old, but it's older than 10.
In this case nanospook is correct. The plural of a normal mouse is mice, the plural of a computer mouse is also mouses.
http://oxforddictionaries.com/definition/english/mouse
" (plural mice or mouses) a small handheld device which is moved across a mat or flat surface to move the cursor on a computer screen:"
I guess you have a dictionary available but don't use it.
We do.
Come join the civilised world:
https://www.gov.uk/alcohol-young-people-law
"However if you’re 16 or 17 and accompanied by an adult, you can drink (but not buy) beer, wine or cider with a meal."
"It’s illegal to give alcohol to children under 5."
I read it on teh interwebs, so it must be
It's also because, with a gift card they get your money now, and have to give you goods at some later date. To look at it another way, it's the opposite of a credit card, you are lending the supplier your money, but you don't get interest or a handling fee.
Maybe, but in Valve's case adding Linux gaming is about value-add. If I can buy a game on Steam that I can then run on my choice of OS (Windows, Linux, Mac) without having to commit to one of the other (maybe it's Windows at work, Linux at home, or vice versa), then this is a huge additional choice for a percentage of the market - one that Microsoft will not be able to match. If they can ensure that cross-platform multiplayer works as expected, then they have a serious winner on their hands - buy your game from Steam and be able to play against any of your mates, without having to worry what computer they have, or buy from another app store and, well, maybe it works.