What's important to browser developers is getting the upper hand in their constant pissing contest over Javascript execution speed. Nothing else matters. NOTHING.
Cell phone manufacturer had a chance to get it right, but for years they chose to use custom connectors and make a killing selling overpriced chargers and cables.
Sometimes the invisible hand of the market needs a little nudging from the mighty foot of the state.
Among other things, because BitTorrent has very poor latency (ie it takes a long time from the user's request to when you actually start receiving data).
An HTTP redirect is typically resolved in less than a second. If your download is going to take over a minute, that's less that 1% of your total download time.
But if you're using Akamai to serve web page content, one second is a huge delay. Adding one second to the download of a CSS stylesheet is likely to have a bigger impact on browsing speed than all of the JavaScript improvements browser makers have been boring us with this year.
How is that a catch? Once the data is converted, you can write a new application that accesses DB2 directly; but on top of that, you can also keep your old application running while you write the new one. That's not a catch, that's a feature.
But Chrome's bar is still annoying in its own way. For example, I type "sla" and the first suggestion is slashdot.org, but then I hit "s" and suddenly the first hit is "google search for slas", and it takes it a good second to remember about slashdot again. And that's after disabling google suggestions; the default was even worse. It seems to do a really crappy job at indexing my browsing history, and gives priority to its useless searches instead.
Tabs on the left side work very well for people who use tabs intensively and keep many pages open at the same time. The main advantages are:
you can display many more tabs while keeping the titles visible
you save precious vertical space and use horizontal space instead, which is often wasted (a side effect of monitors being wider than they are tall while pages are taller than they are wide, and also of the fact that most pages don't benefit from being given more width past a certain point - the extra space is left empty, or the lines of text are too long)
you can organize tabs into a hierarchy by simply indenting them (when I use Firefox, I use the excellent Tree Style Tabs extension for this.)
All these people complaining about the notation need to switch on their brains. Obviously, the parentheses (which were probably a circle or oval field on paper, anyway) are not the problem. How do I know that? It's simple: the students filled them in! They understood perfectly that the blank space was supposed to be filled in with a number.
But just as in a grammar problem you have to choose the right word to put in the blank to make the sentence correct, in a mathematical problem you have to choose a number that results in a correct formula, and that's where they failed. They didn't understand that a formula with an equal sign (an equation) is correct if and only if the two sides have the same value. This is what TFA means by "the meaning of the equal sign".
For the benefit of any present or former American students who might be reading this: the error is at step 5, when he divides by (a-b) which is equal to 0.
Music, of course. Mind you, I'm not saying sex or music are bad things, but there is a huge disproportion between the importance and attention our culture gives them and their actual worth.
Ted Stevens was aboard a small plane with eight others that crashed in remote southwest Alaska Monday night.
So, the eight others that traveled with Ted Stevens did crash. Since there are reports that he died, it seems likely that he crashed too, bringing the total up to nine.
But now I remember how much I hate both Geoge Lucas and getting blinded for life in a millisecond by assholes playing with lasers. Hopefully they will destroy each other!
I do. Well, not for laptops, since I use Macs, but for cell phones and the like, sure.
I want laptop internals to be standardized, which would help upgrades be much more bearable (and, in some cases, make them possible).
They're already standardized. SATA HDs, SODIMM RAM, etc.. If you want to upgrade your CPU or your GPU, just find something that's compatible with the bus/chipset your motherboard is using, desolder/rip out the old one, and solder the new one in. Replace the BIOS as needed. I don't want my laptop to be 1 cm thicker just because you need a slot or a socket to do upgrades.
I get the impression that after a bug has been sitting in Mozilla's Bugzilla for a few years, people begin thinking "there must be a reason if it hasn't been fixed in all this time", and you can basically give up on it.
I never use the back button. I hate having to wait for pages to load/render/whatever, so I got in the habit long ago of opening most links in new tabs so they load while I'm reading something else.
No, you're wrong. Look at this. If Mr. Smith has two children, at least one of whom is a boy, it is two times as likely for him to have a boy and a girl than it is for him to have a boy.
Your mistake is in believing that, by virtue of naming one of the boys Peter, the probabilities are magically equalized. They're not. The correct probabilties for your table are:
Peter, Boy = 1/6
Boy, Peter = 1/6
Peter, Girl = 1/3
Girl, Peter = 1/3
I just checked and XMPP now seems to work on port 443 as well, so I can finally use it from university.
What's important to browser developers is getting the upper hand in their constant pissing contest over Javascript execution speed. Nothing else matters. NOTHING.
Cell phone manufacturer had a chance to get it right, but for years they chose to use custom connectors and make a killing selling overpriced chargers and cables.
Sometimes the invisible hand of the market needs a little nudging from the mighty foot of the state.
Among other things, because BitTorrent has very poor latency (ie it takes a long time from the user's request to when you actually start receiving data).
An HTTP redirect is typically resolved in less than a second. If your download is going to take over a minute, that's less that 1% of your total download time.
But if you're using Akamai to serve web page content, one second is a huge delay. Adding one second to the download of a CSS stylesheet is likely to have a bigger impact on browsing speed than all of the JavaScript improvements browser makers have been boring us with this year.
How is that a catch? Once the data is converted, you can write a new application that accesses DB2 directly; but on top of that, you can also keep your old application running while you write the new one. That's not a catch, that's a feature.
I see it all the time on Italian trains.
But Chrome's bar is still annoying in its own way. For example, I type "sla" and the first suggestion is slashdot.org, but then I hit "s" and suddenly the first hit is "google search for slas", and it takes it a good second to remember about slashdot again. And that's after disabling google suggestions; the default was even worse. It seems to do a really crappy job at indexing my browsing history, and gives priority to its useless searches instead.
No.
Try using that little wheely thing between your mouse buttons. You're welcome.
You're a good dad.
I hope you showed her that "moving something to the other side" is actually shorthand for adding its opposite to both sides and simplifying.
All these people complaining about the notation need to switch on their brains. Obviously, the parentheses (which were probably a circle or oval field on paper, anyway) are not the problem. How do I know that? It's simple: the students filled them in! They understood perfectly that the blank space was supposed to be filled in with a number.
But just as in a grammar problem you have to choose the right word to put in the blank to make the sentence correct, in a mathematical problem you have to choose a number that results in a correct formula, and that's where they failed. They didn't understand that a formula with an equal sign (an equation) is correct if and only if the two sides have the same value. This is what TFA means by "the meaning of the equal sign".
For the benefit of any present or former American students who might be reading this: the error is at step 5, when he divides by (a-b) which is equal to 0.
Music, of course. Mind you, I'm not saying sex or music are bad things, but there is a huge disproportion between the importance and attention our culture gives them and their actual worth.
If you're having it, you know that it's really not that special after all. Honestly, sex is the second most overrated thing in our cultural landscape.
Ted Stevens was aboard a small plane with eight others that crashed in remote southwest Alaska Monday night.
So, the eight others that traveled with Ted Stevens did crash. Since there are reports that he died, it seems likely that he crashed too, bringing the total up to nine.
Ok, then maybe you can do better. Tell me, what is Wave, and why should I care? (Or should have cared.)
But now I remember how much I hate both Geoge Lucas and getting blinded for life in a millisecond by assholes playing with lasers. Hopefully they will destroy each other!
Who cares about the power brick
I do. Well, not for laptops, since I use Macs, but for cell phones and the like, sure.
I want laptop internals to be standardized, which would help upgrades be much more bearable (and, in some cases, make them possible).
They're already standardized. SATA HDs, SODIMM RAM, etc.. If you want to upgrade your CPU or your GPU, just find something that's compatible with the bus/chipset your motherboard is using, desolder/rip out the old one, and solder the new one in. Replace the BIOS as needed. I don't want my laptop to be 1 cm thicker just because you need a slot or a socket to do upgrades.
I get the impression that after a bug has been sitting in Mozilla's Bugzilla for a few years, people begin thinking "there must be a reason if it hasn't been fixed in all this time", and you can basically give up on it.
I never use the back button. I hate having to wait for pages to load/render/whatever, so I got in the habit long ago of opening most links in new tabs so they load while I'm reading something else.
No, you're wrong. Look at this. If Mr. Smith has two children, at least one of whom is a boy, it is two times as likely for him to have a boy and a girl than it is for him to have a boy.
Your mistake is in believing that, by virtue of naming one of the boys Peter, the probabilities are magically equalized. They're not. The correct probabilties for your table are:
Peter, Boy = 1/6
Boy, Peter = 1/6
Peter, Girl = 1/3
Girl, Peter = 1/3
You are literally thinking like the girl in this joke.
But ok, I guess the only way to settle this is by experiment. Start sending in women, and I'll get back to you in nine months.