If you as the carpenter are going to use imperial measurements you would have a tape measure or ruler in imperial units. I think the carpenter may have something to say about getting a 12mm board when they can see it is not actually 1/2 inch according to their imperial measuring tool. Of course the supplier can get away with it if they provide their product in clearly defined metric units, then the carpenter would most likely find it easier to switch to metric.
Not when the job at hand involves renovating or repairing an existing structure that's built with imperial-standard materials.
And yet, somehow, ISP's with even larger numbers of users manage to keep their networks up and running WITHOUT requiring spyware on their customer's computers....
Your impression is wrong. I just looked at their website. They're offering a webmail service like Yahoo or Gmail -- the difference is that they phone you with an access code at a pre-determined phone number every time you want to access your email account.
Last summer I did a small project for a local business. The owner wanted to sell his business and retire, so I registered a couple of domain names that described his business and added "for sale" to them, along the line of shoestoreforsale.com or paperrouteforsale.com and so on. I took a few pictures of his business and put a simple web page up on those two domain names and a couple of months later he sold his business and I changed the content of the website to simply say "sold".
When those two domain names come up for renewal this summer I'm not going to be renewing them. I no longer need them and the chance of another business of that exact type coming to me to sell his business are between slim and none, and Slim left town last week. So paying the renewal fee for those domain names would be a waste of money.
I would like to think that those domain names will simply expire and go back into the pool so they would become available for the next guy who has that type of business for sale to purchase and use, but I suspect that they will be snapped up by domain squatter-scammers instead. Which is a darn shame and no the way that the system should work, in my humble opinion.
You need to either tell noscript to allow fsdn.com, as others have said, or go to your user preferences and turn on the "classic index" (or words to that effect). Either one works, but the "classic index" solution seems to work better -- I was missing the subject line bars over each message until I switched to the "classic index". (You don't need to allow fsdn.com if you have the "classic index" switched on.)
I have one of each. A Samsung ML-1210 black-and-white laser that I've had for several years, and a HP 2550L colour laser that's maybe 3 years old or so. I actually do most of my printing on the Samsung, but the colour laser is ready to go for the relatively few occasions that I need to print something in colour.
I think that having two printers like this is probably the most economical solution over the longer term.
This Firefox extension has a lot of good uses; one of them is the "filter" option where you can list websites that you want to filter out of your search results.
This Firefox extension has a lot of good uses; one of them is the "filter" option where you can list websites that you want to filter out of your search results.
Years ago I was working on a project to export data from a fancy survey instrument. After working at my office all day, I started work on the survey project in my basement around 5pm on a Friday night and worked on it for a while and had a wonderful time and everything was coming together nicely. After a while I suddenly felt sick; thought I might have to lie down or something. I then noticed that it was about 7pm on Sunday night. I hadn't noticed until then. That's why I was suddenly sick.
It's one of the strangest things that ever happened to me. I subsequently felt much better after having a meal and a nap.
I guess that if something is sufficiently interesting and so on, you won't notice that you haven't had any sleep for quite some period of time.
I have often thought that someone needs to make a gizmo that you could install on your phone line that would automatically answer all incoming calls and say "Press *random number* to complete this call." If the random number is not pressed within ten seconds, or the wrong number is pressed, then the recipient's phones would never be allowed to ring.
A highway traffic patrol officer I used to know had an accident at his weigh scale station once. A shelf containing toilet bowl cleaner and a bottle of bleach fell off of the wall behind the toilet and broke. He had to crawl out of the station on his hands and knees. Afterward he showed me his cap badge which had corroded where it was hanging on a coat hook. They had to replace most of the electronics in the scale after that.
Moral: Never put bleach and toilet bowl cleaner on the same shelf.
The worst smell I've ever encountered: In a former life, I used to be a sheriff. One day I went to impound an old station wagon -- I could smell it from many feet away. I broke a window on the side of the car with the intent of seeing what's what, and immediately vomited on the street and ran away as fast as I could. I called the fire department to come with their Scott air packs to hook up the car and tow it to furthest back corner of the impound yard. After getting it to the impound yard, we examined it and discovered a liquified goo in a couple of large garbage bags in the back of the station wagon. The goo also contained small bones. We sampled it and sent the goo to the crime lab, thinking that it was parts of a rotted-away body. It turned out to be the remains of a large dog.
Nobody could go near that car without breathing apparatus. The smell apparently wouldn't kill you (I'm still here) but it sure did make me sick.
Is the lgpl licensing retroactive to previous versions of QT, or just going forward?
Some compilers work with a previous version of QT and have no immediate plans to update to new QT versions. Therefore, does the lgpl QT licensing apply to programs generated with those compilers?
* ANSI X3.113-1987 "PROGRAMMING LANGUAGES FULL BASIC"
* ISO/IEC 10279:1991 "INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY - PROGRAMMING LANGUAGES - FULL BASIC"
# ANSI/ISO/IEC Addendum Defining Modules:
* ANSI X3.113 INTERPRETATIONS-1992 "BASIC TECHNICAL INFORMATION BULLETIN # 1 INTERPRETATIONS OF ANSI 03.113-1987"
* ISO/IEC 10279:1991/ Amd 1:1994 "MODULES AND SINGLE CHARACTER INPUT ENHANCEMENT"
If you as the carpenter are going to use imperial measurements you would have a tape measure or ruler in imperial units. I think the carpenter may have something to say about getting a 12mm board when they can see it is not actually 1/2 inch according to their imperial measuring tool. Of course the supplier can get away with it if they provide their product in clearly defined metric units, then the carpenter would most likely find it easier to switch to metric.
Not when the job at hand involves renovating or repairing an existing structure that's built with imperial-standard materials.
As consumers...?
You're part of the problem.
As customers...
A consumer consumes whatever he's given. Customers, on the other hand, are in the driver's seat.
And yet, somehow, ISP's with even larger numbers of users manage to keep their networks up and running WITHOUT requiring spyware on their customer's computers....
Your impression is wrong. I just looked at their website. They're offering a webmail service like Yahoo or Gmail -- the difference is that they phone you with an access code at a pre-determined phone number every time you want to access your email account.
Last summer I did a small project for a local business. The owner wanted to sell his business and retire, so I registered a couple of domain names that described his business and added "for sale" to them, along the line of shoestoreforsale.com or paperrouteforsale.com and so on. I took a few pictures of his business and put a simple web page up on those two domain names and a couple of months later he sold his business and I changed the content of the website to simply say "sold".
When those two domain names come up for renewal this summer I'm not going to be renewing them. I no longer need them and the chance of another business of that exact type coming to me to sell his business are between slim and none, and Slim left town last week. So paying the renewal fee for those domain names would be a waste of money.
I would like to think that those domain names will simply expire and go back into the pool so they would become available for the next guy who has that type of business for sale to purchase and use, but I suspect that they will be snapped up by domain squatter-scammers instead. Which is a darn shame and no the way that the system should work, in my humble opinion.
I would gladly pay google for higher placement in their results, and I have the money to do it. Show me the form where I can sign up, please.
adwords.google.com
Lemonade Stand had a simulated economy ten years before MULE.
You need to either tell noscript to allow fsdn.com, as others have said, or go to your user preferences and turn on the "classic index" (or words to that effect). Either one works, but the "classic index" solution seems to work better -- I was missing the subject line bars over each message until I switched to the "classic index". (You don't need to allow fsdn.com if you have the "classic index" switched on.)
Not one bit of it is a puboic resource. It's all privatly owned.
Not exactly accurate. There are many publicly-owned ISPs.
I see the day coming when this will no longer be funny.
It's already here: http://newsbreaks.infotoday.com/nbreader.asp?ArticleID=15986
Use AOL Radio. It works great in Canada and there is something for every musical taste.
I, too, mourned the loss of Pandora but I discovered AOL Radio, it doesn't really matter.
I have one of each. A Samsung ML-1210 black-and-white laser that I've had for several years, and a HP 2550L colour laser that's maybe 3 years old or so. I actually do most of my printing on the Samsung, but the colour laser is ready to go for the relatively few occasions that I need to print something in colour.
I think that having two printers like this is probably the most economical solution over the longer term.
This wouldn't be your desktop PC 3.5" hard disk drive or a 2.5" laptop drive. This would be an server-class hard disk drive the size of a briefcase
No.
It is a two terabyte Western Digital MY BOOK external hard drive, measuring 6.5 x 2.1 x 5.4 inches.
Citation here: http://www.cnn.com/2009/POLITICS/05/20/lost.hard.drive.clinton/index.html
http://www.customizegoogle.com/
This Firefox extension has a lot of good uses; one of them is the "filter" option where you can list websites that you want to filter out of your search results.
http://www.customizegoogle.com/
This Firefox extension has a lot of good uses; one of them is the "filter" option where you can list websites that you want to filter out of your search results.
http://extensions.services.openoffice.org/
Years ago I was working on a project to export data from a fancy survey instrument. After working at my office all day, I started work on the survey project in my basement around 5pm on a Friday night and worked on it for a while and had a wonderful time and everything was coming together nicely. After a while I suddenly felt sick; thought I might have to lie down or something. I then noticed that it was about 7pm on Sunday night. I hadn't noticed until then. That's why I was suddenly sick.
It's one of the strangest things that ever happened to me. I subsequently felt much better after having a meal and a nap.
I guess that if something is sufficiently interesting and so on, you won't notice that you haven't had any sleep for quite some period of time.
I have often thought that someone needs to make a gizmo that you could install on your phone line that would automatically answer all incoming calls and say "Press *random number* to complete this call." If the random number is not pressed within ten seconds, or the wrong number is pressed, then the recipient's phones would never be allowed to ring.
That should defeat robocalls.
You want to go here: https://www.lnnte-dncl.gc.ca/plt-cmp-eng
If you get one of these types of calls, just go Here: http://esupport.fcc.gov/complaints.htm and fill out the form.
And Canadians can go here:
https://www.lnnte-dncl.gc.ca/plt-cmp-eng
A highway traffic patrol officer I used to know had an accident at his weigh scale station once. A shelf containing toilet bowl cleaner and a bottle of bleach fell off of the wall behind the toilet and broke. He had to crawl out of the station on his hands and knees. Afterward he showed me his cap badge which had corroded where it was hanging on a coat hook. They had to replace most of the electronics in the scale after that.
Moral: Never put bleach and toilet bowl cleaner on the same shelf.
The worst smell I've ever encountered: In a former life, I used to be a sheriff. One day I went to impound an old station wagon -- I could smell it from many feet away. I broke a window on the side of the car with the intent of seeing what's what, and immediately vomited on the street and ran away as fast as I could. I called the fire department to come with their Scott air packs to hook up the car and tow it to furthest back corner of the impound yard. After getting it to the impound yard, we examined it and discovered a liquified goo in a couple of large garbage bags in the back of the station wagon. The goo also contained small bones. We sampled it and sent the goo to the crime lab, thinking that it was parts of a rotted-away body. It turned out to be the remains of a large dog.
Nobody could go near that car without breathing apparatus. The smell apparently wouldn't kill you (I'm still here) but it sure did make me sick.
Is the lgpl licensing retroactive to previous versions of QT, or just going forward?
Some compilers work with a previous version of QT and have no immediate plans to update to new QT versions. Therefore, does the lgpl QT licensing apply to programs generated with those compilers?
Some folks are doing amazing things with dos emulators on Linux:
http://www.melvilletheatre.com/articles/powerbasic-linux/index.html
Not due to a lack of a standard:
# ANSI/ISO/IEC Standard for Minimal BASIC:
* ANSI X3.60-1978 "FOR MINIMAL BASIC"
* ISO/IEC 6373:1984 "DATA PROCESSING - PROGRAMMING LANGUAGES - MINIMAL BASIC"
# ANSI/ISO/IEC Standard for Full BASIC:
* ANSI X3.113-1987 "PROGRAMMING LANGUAGES FULL BASIC"
* ISO/IEC 10279:1991 "INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY - PROGRAMMING LANGUAGES - FULL BASIC"
# ANSI/ISO/IEC Addendum Defining Modules:
* ANSI X3.113 INTERPRETATIONS-1992 "BASIC TECHNICAL INFORMATION BULLETIN # 1 INTERPRETATIONS OF ANSI 03.113-1987"
* ISO/IEC 10279:1991/ Amd 1:1994 "MODULES AND SINGLE CHARACTER INPUT ENHANCEMENT"