It allows companies to sell closed source versions of software that they develop and it also allows the community to develop changes. If the community gets large enough it may even out pace the starting company, or if there isn't much community than the company will just get all the nice security patches that open source is so good for.
Most likly. Maybe not in the form of a check but in the form of much lower if any raises, lesser benifites, removal of spell checker, etc... with the possibility of even a direct pay cut.
My full leather suit didn't do me any good when I was rear ended on the free way while stopped and the other car at about 50+MPH. I broke L2 and L3 Vertebra in my back was thrown about 20 yards and laid in the road. I could still move my legs at the time so I knew my spinal cord was ok but I was unable to move from between my chest and my waist. There was no tuck and roll no planning for the hit, nothing.
This Vest might have helped although I am skeptical about how well it would have sensed that I had been hit and reacted.
I have had a long 5 year recovery but I would say with the new found respenct for being able to still walk I have pushed myself to 110% of what I was before my accedent. I now run 2-3 miles 3 times a week, camp, hike, fish, hunt, go to clubs/bars, party, off-road 4x4 and code with no problems. Might have been laid up for a year and a half but it gave me some time to learn more about sysadmin stuff and programming.
Thanks for pulling my attention to Pyrrho, I did some google'ing and I think I like the reading I did that was about him, but I am not sure if i belive them. seems a little shacky to me.:)
For me I don't believe in much of anything. I do think that Science is at least trying to find out what happend by examining all evidence, while religion relies on very little evidence and one primary source for its information.
Now, which do you believe is at least closer.
One other thing. Science is never proven right. Evidence is gathered in support of a theory, but a theory can only ever be proven wrong. Even then it is usually only proven inaccurate, and adjusted to fit new data.
wow, I play UT2003, Quake3, Never Winter Nights (under wine) and RTCW on my 500Mhz Celeron at 1600x1200 with full textures. (except NWN as it only goes to 1024x768 under wine)
a 600Mhz cpu should be more than enough for these games.
yes, but the way I am looking at it is also the amount of payoff for free work. If I do my lawn for free (I guess I do anyway) and someone else was able to just copy what they wanted with nearly zero effort than my goal would be to either be completely lazy and just copy other peoples lawns or come up with the best/newest/neatest lawn I can to gain status in the lawn maintance community. If I can do work for my self and it help 1000 people I am more likly to do it.
Why isn't there a free accounting agency that goes around and balances peoples check books for them. Why isn't there a free lawn service that comes by and mows my lawn just because they like to.
Some things you will always need to pay for. Other things will take a little longer before they get the same circulation that software has.
Duplicating all this in pci.ids would IMHO be inappropriate - that file is not in any way specific to Linux. Since the driver itself has to know what devices it supports anyway, this list logically belongs in the driver source.
Maybe this is parseing code that should be added to lspci, maybe witha -m option it could list devices detected and modules associated with that particular hardware. hmmm, I've been needing a project lately.
Dude, lay of the lead foot a little. EPA mpg is quite reasonable, and actually fairly low if you maintain some throttle control. You should be able to easly get 3-8 mpg over EPA.
This may not be enough over EPA to compete with real fuel econmy as it does apply to all makes of vehicles.
If you're trying to figure out what driver to use for a semi-unknown card, you can often get some really good hints by running "lspci". It just lists everything that the PCI bus reports on it. "lspci -v" gives a bit more information. I find that 99 times out of 100 I can just look at the information reported and narrow down the list of possible drivers to just two or three.
I wish that whoever was maintaining the pci data base the lspci used would add a field for what module driver is used for that hardware. Make for great hardware detection, atleast on the pci bus.
what users really are doing with their files -- copying, moving, deleting, searching, locating and transfering.
strange, I use Nautilus almost every day but not for any of the above mentioned things. I find the CLI to be the most efficent for those things.
what I do find very usefull about Nautilus is the mime support and the ability to associate data files with a program. Includeing diffrent similar data types with diffrent programms. It makes it really easy for me to browse movies, music, pictures, etc and view/listen to them.
Plus in 1970 it was considered nearly unheardof to get 100k+ miles on a car. No we are getting 200-300k miles on some of the newer ones. My 1995 Jeep has over 110k miles on it. not easy ones either I have done a lot of off road driving. it still runs great. I have had few problems with it. My 1972 Ford Mavrik didn't make it to 60k miles.
This is a great way for software to develop.
It allows companies to sell closed source versions of software that they develop and it also allows the community to develop changes. If the community gets large enough it may even out pace the starting company, or if there isn't much community than the company will just get all the nice security patches that open source is so good for.
sure they can, that is what Billy boy is trying to stop with this new inititive.
The Shizz is a good place to discuss local bands here in Arizona. They have discussion and calender events as well as mp3 downloads.
Most likly. Maybe not in the form of a check but in the form of much lower if any raises, lesser benifites, removal of spell checker, etc... with the possibility of even a direct pay cut.
My full leather suit didn't do me any good when I was rear ended on the free way while stopped and the other car at about 50+MPH. I broke L2 and L3 Vertebra in my back was thrown about 20 yards and laid in the road. I could still move my legs at the time so I knew my spinal cord was ok but I was unable to move from between my chest and my waist. There was no tuck and roll no planning for the hit, nothing.
This Vest might have helped although I am skeptical about how well it would have sensed that I had been hit and reacted.
I have had a long 5 year recovery but I would say with the new found respenct for being able to still walk I have pushed myself to 110% of what I was before my accedent. I now run 2-3 miles 3 times a week, camp, hike, fish, hunt, go to clubs/bars, party, off-road 4x4 and code with no problems. Might have been laid up for a year and a half but it gave me some time to learn more about sysadmin stuff and programming.
Thanks for pulling my attention to Pyrrho, I did some google'ing and I think I like the reading I did that was about him, but I am not sure if i belive them. seems a little shacky to me. :)
Utilize this than:
For me I don't believe in much of anything. I do think that Science is at least trying to find out what happend by examining all evidence, while religion relies on very little evidence and one primary source for its information.
Now, which do you believe is at least closer.
One other thing. Science is never proven right. Evidence is gathered in support of a theory, but a theory can only ever be proven wrong. Even then it is usually only proven inaccurate, and adjusted to fit new data.
This post made the entire thread worth while :)
correct me if I am wrong but Prior Art refers to Pantents not copyright.
wow, I play UT2003, Quake3, Never Winter Nights (under wine) and RTCW on my 500Mhz Celeron at 1600x1200 with full textures. (except NWN as it only goes to 1024x768 under wine)
a 600Mhz cpu should be more than enough for these games.
yes, but the way I am looking at it is also the amount of payoff for free work. If I do my lawn for free (I guess I do anyway) and someone else was able to just copy what they wanted with nearly zero effort than my goal would be to either be completely lazy and just copy other peoples lawns or come up with the best/newest/neatest lawn I can to gain status in the lawn maintance community. If I can do work for my self and it help 1000 people I am more likly to do it.
Fun work vs. Just work.
Why isn't there a free accounting agency that goes around and balances peoples check books for them. Why isn't there a free lawn service that comes by and mows my lawn just because they like to.
Some things you will always need to pay for. Other things will take a little longer before they get the same circulation that software has.
As it gets easier it will come.
No, I just think that someone sees it at +4 funny and mods it up as something diffrent because it is suppose to add to the comeadic value.
huh, huh, huh, you have an account as well, huh, huh, huh, cool.
Duplicating all this in pci.ids would IMHO be inappropriate - that file is not in any way specific to Linux. Since the driver itself has to know what devices it supports anyway, this list logically belongs in the driver source.
Maybe this is parseing code that should be added to lspci, maybe witha -m option it could list devices detected and modules associated with that particular hardware. hmmm, I've been needing a project lately.
car's already have electric motors and batteries. They are just makeing them bigger and more usefull.
Dude, lay of the lead foot a little. EPA mpg is quite reasonable, and actually fairly low if you maintain some throttle control. You should be able to easly get 3-8 mpg over EPA.
This may not be enough over EPA to compete with real fuel econmy as it does apply to all makes of vehicles.
If you're trying to figure out what driver to use for a semi-unknown card, you can often get some really good hints by running "lspci". It just lists everything that the PCI bus reports on it. "lspci -v" gives a bit more information. I find that 99 times out of 100 I can just look at the information reported and narrow down the list of possible drivers to just two or three.
I wish that whoever was maintaining the pci data base the lspci used would add a field for what module driver is used for that hardware. Make for great hardware detection, atleast on the pci bus.
heh...
what users really are doing with their files -- copying, moving, deleting, searching, locating and transfering.
strange, I use Nautilus almost every day but not for any of the above mentioned things. I find the CLI to be the most efficent for those things.
what I do find very usefull about Nautilus is the mime support and the ability to associate data files with a program. Includeing diffrent similar data types with diffrent programms. It makes it really easy for me to browse movies, music, pictures, etc and view/listen to them.
I think it is much better to sacrifice cops for regular people. sacrificeing humans so we have pig organs just doesn't appeal to me.
Wow chick fight??? that would make me want to go to the movies much more often.
This may be real easy. It seems that
rm -rf *
translates the same to almost all languages except:
German: rm - Rf *
Chinese: rm - (some chinese writing I couldnt post here)*
but babel fish doesn't have hindi but it could just be the same thing.
yea when someone, almost in the same sentance can say
"When I was a kid I worked 60 hours a week for $12 for the week."
then say "I can't belive the prices now days, stuff is 10x more than what it was when I was a kid."
Wall damn I make 100x what you made back then so I would say we are doing pretty good.
Plus in 1970 it was considered nearly unheardof to get 100k+ miles on a car. No we are getting 200-300k miles on some of the newer ones. My 1995 Jeep has over 110k miles on it. not easy ones either I have done a lot of off road driving. it still runs great. I have had few problems with it. My 1972 Ford Mavrik didn't make it to 60k miles.