You want the fan to stay on a little longer than the lamp, because that greatly increased lamp life. Hence, no switch. A button will do, actually just a button on the remote will do because the projector will be up there close to the ceiling anyway.
"My PC (running Linux_)" and running the program wordplay translated "We haven't talked to a single user who has said they're using [open source] because it's better." into this statement: "A BACCALAUREATE BAD DEE HETEROGENEITY HETEROGENEOUS SHRUNKEN SWISH SWISS ITS VOLT PUT" at solution number 68467.
And strangely it makes more sense than the Microsoft statement.
A patient who had not been sick is not a contradiction in terms at all.
A person is a patient when under treatment, but that not necessarily requires the person to be sick. It can be a preventive treatment, or a misdiagnosis. You also are a patient when you are in the office to get a flu shot, or a vaccination, in which case, you are usually not sick.
It can also be a non illness-related treatment that causes a person visiting a doctor to be called a 'patient': Customers of plastic surgeons, or people getting a lasik eye surgery are also called patients, while they are not sick. Actually, I would not be surprised if a plastic surgeon or a lasik eye surgeon would refuse to operate on a patient that is sick.
Besides all that, you can be ill, and still may not be sick. You can also be ill, and not sick, but still require treatment, hence becoming a patient.
How many more examples of patients who had not been sick do you need?
Guess why nobody who "uses Open source because it's better" talks with Microsoft. They have no reason to talk with Microsoft, because they are using something that is better. Duh!
'We haven't talked to a single user who has said they're using [open source] because it's better.'
I for one am using open source because it is better, and yes it is also true: I have no reason at all to talk with Bradley Tipp or anybody else of Microsoft. Why? Because I don't depend on their software anymore.
Basically they are saying 'we haven't seen it so it doesn't exist'. Ask any mathematician how flawed that 'proof' is.
Isn't history full of example of people declaring victory, while that wasn't really true?
Yeah, and while it does that, in the slightly darkened room, a laser draws a grid all across your face and around your head as if to take detailed measurements, while the camera makes a 360 around you.
Some beeps in the background, and then in true hollywood fashion a very beautiful woman in laboratory clothes steps forward to do something with a little flashlight in your ear that looks remotely medical of nature. She then proceeds to inform you that the calibration procedure was successful.
You get up, and greet the group of 6 or so people in custom black suits standing across the room, who had been watching the whole procedure with respect. Now they are nodding their heads and smiling, obviously happy that the procedure went well. With a very big smile on your face, you crack some quick jokes while you shake the hands of each of them as you leave the room to continue with your quests to save the world and conquer the heart of that sweet and pretty girl that fights as if she learned it from Jackie Chan himself, including a considerable amount of thematrix and charliesangels special effects.
Did you use that service to make calls from the Netherlands to the U.S. (and is the quality&reliability good?). Could you divulge and tell us the name of the provider (am interested).
$0.0117 per minute plus the charges to call one of the local access numbers for their Purple calling card. No monthly charges, no added taxes. I've been using that card for a little while and have no complaints about anything. Other options are using a free 1-800 access number and paying $0.02 per minute plus $0.25 per call plus 2*$0.59 per month, or $0.025 per minute + 2*$0.59 per month and many others.
If you have a mobile phone or VOIP phone with nationwide minutes, the purple card from these guys should be ideal.
"The lesson is that whilst you don't need to know the details, you had better have an idea of what your teams are doing."
The lesson is that you better ask questions and listen to your team to get your information for making your decisions how to deploy the team.
What really is the problem is that managers often think that they know the material their teams are dealing with, while in reality they dont. And as a result they start to make their decisions based on their own intuitions, instead of advice from their teams. Using your reference, just recall what has been going on at NASA recently in this context...
"your average techie invests versus a doctor or a lawyer"
The "Doctor or Lawyer" designation here requires at least a master's degree or equivalent (and in some occasions even a postdoc), and "techie" needs absolutely nothing.
If you compare apples and oranges, you will find that both are fruit and that the one piece of fruit is an apple and the other is an orange.
So I agree that it would be a much better comparison to compare by equivalent amount of schooling (and experience), for example MSc versus Doctor/Lawyer and other degrees or 'techies' versus paralegals and assistants. I may run the risk to insult paralegals here, some of which I'm sure are extremely capable, but the same holds for BSc degree holders.
Now who is what and what is compared here? I think that across the whole range of schooling, on the average technical people are underpaid for their investments, capabilities, efforts, and contributions.
But, does my opinion, or yours matter at all?
Salary levels are not a matter of opinion, they are the result of a society and market.
Unless you run with a well configured selinux kernel, or something of similar nature for controlling users (root's) capabilities, what you just described will do nothing except give you a false sense of increased security against privilege escalation...
Maybe a bit too heavy on the violence scale (even for an AC posting), but otherwise spoken like a true MIR hater.
You're not alone, I've been boycotting MIR retail products for years. Often you can find the price for real on a web store without MIR before the three months that it takes for the MIR check to come back.
MIR is a giant waste of labor, materials and energy: People on the seller side doing paperwork, the buyer doing paperwork, the mailman carrying paperwork, and the banks doing paperwork and then again sending the checks to each other, the 'where-is-my-rebate call center' answering calls about the obviously high incidence of lost checks of misfiled or erroneous forms, plus the MIR tracking websites, and all of them are actually being very busy producing a lot of completely nothing.
Of all the things I dislike, I really hate waste, and MIR is a big waste.
You want the fan to stay on a little longer than the lamp, because that greatly increased lamp life. Hence, no switch. A button will do, actually just a button on the remote will do because the projector will be up there close to the ceiling anyway.
Hmm.
Now that is whack.
If a computer can't get a DHCP lease, then it should do TCP/IP, with any IPnumber.
Oh, well. Yeah, filter that too.
"as well as the Microsoft private IP space"
Huh?
"My PC (running Linux_)" and running the program wordplay translated "We haven't talked to a single user who has said they're using [open source] because it's better." into this statement:
"A BACCALAUREATE BAD DEE HETEROGENEITY HETEROGENEOUS SHRUNKEN SWISH SWISS ITS VOLT PUT" at solution number 68467.
And strangely it makes more sense than the Microsoft statement.
A patient who had not been sick is not a contradiction in terms at all.
A person is a patient when under treatment, but that not necessarily requires the person to be sick. It can be a preventive treatment, or a misdiagnosis. You also are a patient when you are in the office to get a flu shot, or a vaccination, in which case, you are usually not sick.
It can also be a non illness-related treatment that causes a person visiting a doctor to be called a 'patient': Customers of plastic surgeons, or people getting a lasik eye surgery are also called patients, while they are not sick. Actually, I would not be surprised if a plastic surgeon or a lasik eye surgeon would refuse to operate on a patient that is sick.
Besides all that, you can be ill, and still may not be sick. You can also be ill, and not sick, but still require treatment, hence becoming a patient.
How many more examples of patients who had not been sick do you need?
It's not that hard, really.
Guess why nobody who "uses Open source because it's better" talks with Microsoft. They have no reason to talk with Microsoft, because they are using something that is better. Duh!
Microsoft, Coffee, hint.
'We haven't talked to a single user who has said they're using [open source] because it's better.'
I for one am using open source because it is better, and yes it is also true: I have no reason at all to talk with Bradley Tipp or anybody else of Microsoft. Why? Because I don't depend on their software anymore.
Basically they are saying 'we haven't seen it so it doesn't exist'. Ask any mathematician how flawed that 'proof' is.
Isn't history full of example of people declaring victory, while that wasn't really true?
Yeah, his web site says "This site is temporarily unavailable because it has exceeded it's daily bandwidth allotment, please try back later.".
Very informative indeed.
Yeah, and while it does that, in the slightly darkened room, a laser draws a grid all across your face and around your head as if to take detailed measurements, while the camera makes a 360 around you.
Some beeps in the background, and then in true hollywood fashion a very beautiful woman in laboratory clothes steps forward to do something with a little flashlight in your ear that looks remotely medical of nature. She then proceeds to inform you that the calibration procedure was successful.
You get up, and greet the group of 6 or so people in custom black suits standing across the room, who had been watching the whole procedure with respect. Now they are nodding their heads and smiling, obviously happy that the procedure went well. With a very big smile on your face, you crack some quick jokes while you shake the hands of each of them as you leave the room to continue with your quests to save the world and conquer the heart of that sweet and pretty girl that fights as if she learned it from Jackie Chan himself, including a considerable amount of thematrix and charliesangels special effects.
You're the MAN.
Yeah!
Now, back to the issue: will that work with the broadcast flag too?
Isn't implying something the same as saying it, in cases where saying something would be illegal?
And where would that place explicitly shadowy but implicitly clear definitions as 'loyal customer discounts'?
Thanks.
"so that I don't trigger it, just to add to their suffering."
Sort of like, "I hit myself in the stomach so that the others have to see me puke?"
Did you use that service to make calls from the Netherlands to the U.S. (and is the quality&reliability good?). Could you divulge and tell us the name of the provider (am interested).
$0.0117 per minute plus the charges to call one of the local access numbers for their Purple calling card. No monthly charges, no added taxes. I've been using that card for a little while and have no complaints about anything. Other options are using a free 1-800 access number and paying $0.02 per minute plus $0.25 per call plus 2*$0.59 per month, or $0.025 per minute + 2*$0.59 per month and many others.
If you have a mobile phone or VOIP phone with nationwide minutes, the purple card from these guys should be ideal.
Until recently, I had bellsouth, and they charged me more than $25 including taxes for just the line and even still without caller ID, etc.
I now switched to using my cell phone exclusively and saved a bundle. I probably should have put emphasis on had in that first line.
Nice post. But in your posts please type the links like this: mylink
Then the url will be clickable for the readers.
"Reads are still going to be terribly slow."
Since you have the data once on the local disk and once on the remote disk, the reads will not be slower than they would be without the remote mirror.
Note that the main reason to use this is for backup and high availability through failover.
"to ANYBODY who even says 'I can do impossible task X'. Where X is usually something like 'facial recognition'..."
;-)))
Actually, I think I am pretty capable of doing facial recognition. It's the name memorization that I have more of a problem with
"I recognize you, but I forgot your name" sort of deal.
Will I still get buckets of money now?
"The lesson is that whilst you don't need to know the details, you had better have an idea of what your teams are doing."
The lesson is that you better ask questions and listen to your team to get your information for making your decisions how to deploy the team.
What really is the problem is that managers often think that they know the material their teams are dealing with, while in reality they dont. And as a result they start to make their decisions based on their own intuitions, instead of advice from their teams. Using your reference, just recall what has been going on at NASA recently in this context...
"your average techie invests versus a doctor or a lawyer"
The "Doctor or Lawyer" designation here requires at least a master's degree or equivalent (and in some occasions even a postdoc), and "techie" needs absolutely nothing.
If you compare apples and oranges, you will find that both are fruit and that the one piece of fruit is an apple and the other is an orange.
So I agree that it would be a much better comparison to compare by equivalent amount of schooling (and experience), for example MSc versus Doctor/Lawyer and other degrees or 'techies' versus paralegals and assistants. I may run the risk to insult paralegals here, some of which I'm sure are extremely capable, but the same holds for BSc degree holders.
Now who is what and what is compared here? I think that across the whole range of schooling, on the average technical people are underpaid for their investments, capabilities, efforts, and contributions.
But, does my opinion, or yours matter at all?
Salary levels are not a matter of opinion, they are the result of a society and market.
Unless you run with a well configured selinux kernel, or something of similar nature for controlling users (root's) capabilities, what you just described will do nothing except give you a false sense of increased security against privilege escalation...
Now, do you think splitting your files up in partitions will help against privilege escalation?
Lucky you ;-)
(And yes, I do cool the disks sufficiently).
Maybe a bit too heavy on the violence scale (even for an AC posting), but otherwise spoken like a true MIR hater.
You're not alone, I've been boycotting MIR retail products for years. Often you can find the price for real on a web store without MIR before the three months that it takes for the MIR check to come back.
MIR is a giant waste of labor, materials and energy: People on the seller side doing paperwork, the buyer doing paperwork, the mailman carrying paperwork, and the banks doing paperwork and then again sending the checks to each other, the 'where-is-my-rebate call center' answering calls about the obviously high incidence of lost checks of misfiled or erroneous forms, plus the MIR tracking websites, and all of them are actually being very busy producing a lot of completely nothing.
Of all the things I dislike, I really hate waste, and MIR is a big waste.