I didn't have this problem, we had a large antenna that was on the roof of the house and picked up all stations in the area really well.
With MythTV, of witch I also use, you could have multiple tuner cards each connected to a diffrent antenna that is pre tuned for a group of stations. Then tell MythTV which stations are on which tuner card. Disadvantage would be cost and multiple antennas, advantage would be multiple feeds and ability to record multiple shows on the diffrent channel groups.
yea this actually seems rather easy to acomplish. just do something similar to an md5sum but much more intensive on the message + outgoing emails and attache it to the email. a PGP signiature would be a good idea for something to use as well.
Why isn't PGP/GPG setup and configured on installation of all OSS mail readers?
Linus is clevererester than you think. He used a common karma whoring technique to insure Linux's success. When announced he said paraphrased "this is just a toy project wont be anything big" of course this just made people want to prove him wrong.
It is very useful, more so than cable I would say. OTA transmissions give you few choices and less time slots. I'd get a Tivo long before getting cable. When I first moved into my house I just had rabbit ears hooked to my tivo for the first 3 months. I would rather have Broadcast TV/Tivo than Cable TV w/o Tivo. Although Tivo + Cable is a good combination as well. I don't even bother renting movies, hurrying home for a show, or missing out on Friday night Sci-Fi to go out with friends, just pick the from the list during the week and watch them on the weekend when I have 2-3 hours to spend.
Thank you, When I was a kid about 20+ years ago my father told me that Cold was just the absence of heat. I naively argued asking "How come heat is not just an absence of cold?" He had no way of explaining it to me that time that I could understand so it just got filed in my head as trivial fact.
Your light analogy just explained that known fact into an understood fact.
Looking through the list of icons I see a lot of derogatory ones, lets see:
America Online - Well that's just derogatory on its own. BSD - what a wimpy looking little devil, I don't think the BSD people would want to be associated with that icon. BUG - Does it have to be a roach? Couldn't they use a cool bug like a preying mantis? Communications - Come on a rotary phone? Education - 2 + 2 = 5 what are they teaching? GUI - What the hell is that anyway Linux Business - Tux in a tie, that's just plain insulting Perl - Camel, something about design by committee reference I'm sure PHP - now that's just bad no disputing that one Sci-Fi - An alien getting probed Software - picture of a gold CDR obviously referring to piracy Television - that is one of the most obscene and irrelevant Icons there is on the list Ximian - a monkey scratching it's ass seems at least a little derogatory
I understand the Bill-borg derogatory (although old still kinda funny) icon but what is derogatory of the Windows Icon? I keep hearing it is derogatory but when I look at it it just looks like a non flag version of the real windows logo as it would look in doomII or Quake. (just put it in the doom shades of brown colors)
Front projectors are not for everyone. I have one and I love it. but there are a lot of setbacks that can make them unreasonable for many. Things like bulb life, luminescence of the room, space, etc can easily turn people off of the projector. I have minimized these by also using a 27" CRT just to the right of the screen that is used for watching news and regular tv shows. The projector is then used for video games and movies, or other desired to be big entertainment.
Most of this was put into place when I had to replace the bulb. $280 repair bill on the projector will help to make you limit it's use. Some research into the new sub $1k projectors do show a decrees in the bulb cost to about $100 but still a pretty high cost.
A basic economics study will introduce you to the concepts of supply and demand. Price of an object has nothing to do with the cost of makeing it and only with an agreement between the seller's willingness to sell at a price and a buyer's willingness to buy at a price.
Of course if manufactureing costs go down and margins go up seller's are willing to sell at a lower price, while at a lower price more buyer's are willing to buy, until a state of equilibrium is reached.
It doesn't matter if it only costs a nikle to build something. If the market will pay $100 for it that's what I will sell it for. Once everyone that will pay $100 for it has bought one, I will lower the price.
yea, perl's abilility to reverce loops for readability I think is one thing that makes it more readable. I also think it is something that a lot of people look at and say "That's just confuseing."
RTFA!!! It uses GPS and proximity generated sonic cameras (cool tech, uses ultra sonic emiters to generate 3D images) to see what your are doing and where you are at all times. The insurance companies then take this information and send it to the NSA wher they process everything you have done over the past year and give you a terrist rating. This is then used to prioritize the people that it tracks with greater details. If you are given a high enough rateing a thought monitor will be installed. Unfortantly the thought monitor comes in the form of a very uncomfortable anal probe.
Maybe IBM should put a huge patent lawsuit anouncement that if it is decided that SCO owns the copyright to Linux that they are then infringing on 57 of IBM's patents (or what ever number.) And leave it as pending the outcome of the current case.
People like to argue stability but I work in an environment where we can actually take a large scale measurement. we have over 1k Windows servers and 250 Linux servers. Windows gave us 98.954% uptime over the past year. Linux has given us 100% uptime. Yes that is 0 minutes 0 seconds downtime from Linux over the past year. All these servers are on mixtures of HP and Dell systems with hot swap raid and some random hardware scattered throughout. I have seen Linux crash. I have crashed Linux. I could crash my Linux machine that I am on right now. But in a production environment Linux is hands down far more stable than Windows NT/2000/2004.
Binary 0 based robots.
Rule 0:
Rule 1:
Rule 10:
of course
I didn't have this problem, we had a large antenna that was on the roof of the house and picked up all stations in the area really well.
With MythTV, of witch I also use, you could have multiple tuner cards each connected to a diffrent antenna that is pre tuned for a group of stations. Then tell MythTV which stations are on which tuner card. Disadvantage would be cost and multiple antennas, advantage would be multiple feeds and ability to record multiple shows on the diffrent channel groups.
yea this actually seems rather easy to acomplish. just do something similar to an md5sum but much more intensive on the message + outgoing emails and attache it to the email. a PGP signiature would be a good idea for something to use as well.
Why isn't PGP/GPG setup and configured on installation of all OSS mail readers?
Linus is clevererester than you think. He used a common karma whoring technique to insure Linux's success. When announced he said paraphrased "this is just a toy project wont be anything big" of course this just made people want to prove him wrong.
It is very useful, more so than cable I would say. OTA transmissions give you few choices and less time slots. I'd get a Tivo long before getting cable. When I first moved into my house I just had rabbit ears hooked to my tivo for the first 3 months. I would rather have Broadcast TV/Tivo than Cable TV w/o Tivo. Although Tivo + Cable is a good combination as well. I don't even bother renting movies, hurrying home for a show, or missing out on Friday night Sci-Fi to go out with friends, just pick the from the list during the week and watch them on the weekend when I have 2-3 hours to spend.
Thank you, When I was a kid about 20+ years ago my father told me that Cold was just the absence of heat. I naively argued asking "How come heat is not just an absence of cold?" He had no way of explaining it to me that time that I could understand so it just got filed in my head as trivial fact.
Your light analogy just explained that known fact into an understood fact.
Again
Thank you.
obviouslly those ones are not derogatory.
**Whoosh Whoosh**
(that was my lousy attempt at humor completely blowing by you)
I didn't like them, discussion was to hard to follow. it was always hard to find replies to the story in it i was intrested in.
Looking through the list of icons I see a lot of derogatory ones, lets see:
America Online - Well that's just derogatory on its own.
BSD - what a wimpy looking little devil, I don't think the BSD people would want to be associated with that icon.
BUG - Does it have to be a roach? Couldn't they use a cool bug like a preying mantis?
Communications - Come on a rotary phone?
Education - 2 + 2 = 5 what are they teaching?
GUI - What the hell is that anyway
Linux Business - Tux in a tie, that's just plain insulting
Perl - Camel, something about design by committee reference I'm sure
PHP - now that's just bad no disputing that one
Sci-Fi - An alien getting probed
Software - picture of a gold CDR obviously referring to piracy
Television - that is one of the most obscene and irrelevant Icons there is on the list
Ximian - a monkey scratching it's ass seems at least a little derogatory
I understand the Bill-borg derogatory (although old still kinda funny) icon but what is derogatory of the Windows Icon? I keep hearing it is derogatory but when I look at it it just looks like a non flag version of the real windows logo as it would look in doomII or Quake. (just put it in the doom shades of brown colors)
If you go on microsoft.com, they don't call linux "linsux" and have pictures of tux fucking a hooker.
No, they just call it a cancer
Front projectors are not for everyone. I have one and I love it. but there are a lot of setbacks that can make them unreasonable for many. Things like bulb life, luminescence of the room, space, etc can easily turn people off of the projector. I have minimized these by also using a 27" CRT just to the right of the screen that is used for watching news and regular tv shows. The projector is then used for video games and movies, or other desired to be big entertainment.
Most of this was put into place when I had to replace the bulb. $280 repair bill on the projector will help to make you limit it's use. Some research into the new sub $1k projectors do show a decrees in the bulb cost to about $100 but still a pretty high cost.
A basic economics study will introduce you to the concepts of supply and demand. Price of an object has nothing to do with the cost of makeing it and only with an agreement between the seller's willingness to sell at a price and a buyer's willingness to buy at a price.
Of course if manufactureing costs go down and margins go up seller's are willing to sell at a lower price, while at a lower price more buyer's are willing to buy, until a state of equilibrium is reached.
It doesn't matter if it only costs a nikle to build something. If the market will pay $100 for it that's what I will sell it for. Once everyone that will pay $100 for it has bought one, I will lower the price.
Fair? maybe/maybe not, but truth it is.
"let me bring it up on my ass-cam"
everyone looks at ass while nothing shows up
"do we have ass-cams?"
"No, no we don't"
paraphrased from UCB, great show.
how very bi-partisan of you.
What kind of supper floppy disk do you have that you can copy 1-1.44M of data to in less than 8 seconds includeing detection?
jffs
yea, perl's abilility to reverce loops for readability I think is one thing that makes it more readable. I also think it is something that a lot of people look at and say "That's just confuseing."
die unless imright();
It was one of the upper rotors that hit the lower rotors
I think it was one of the lower roters that hit the upper roter.
(was that right)
It may be Correct, I don't think it was right.
foreach ( @collection ) {
$_->DoSomething();
}
RTFA!!! It uses GPS and proximity generated sonic cameras (cool tech, uses ultra sonic emiters to generate 3D images) to see what your are doing and where you are at all times. The insurance companies then take this information and send it to the NSA wher they process everything you have done over the past year and give you a terrist rating. This is then used to prioritize the people that it tracks with greater details. If you are given a high enough rateing a thought monitor will be installed. Unfortantly the thought monitor comes in the form of a very uncomfortable anal probe.
I know because I beta tested this system.
Maybe IBM should put a huge patent lawsuit anouncement that if it is decided that SCO owns the copyright to Linux that they are then infringing on 57 of IBM's patents (or what ever number.) And leave it as pending the outcome of the current case.
People like to argue stability but I work in an environment where we can actually take a large scale measurement. we have over 1k Windows servers and 250 Linux servers. Windows gave us 98.954% uptime over the past year. Linux has given us 100% uptime. Yes that is 0 minutes 0 seconds downtime from Linux over the past year. All these servers are on mixtures of HP and Dell systems with hot swap raid and some random hardware scattered throughout. I have seen Linux crash. I have crashed Linux. I could crash my Linux machine that I am on right now. But in a production environment Linux is hands down far more stable than Windows NT/2000/2004.
just to name a few