There's also projects like OneSocialWeb, and Elgg that they'll be competing with, not to mention all the other smaller projects that may not be out of pre-alpha, but still have more code completed and problems solved than they do at this point.
Why do all these projects have to be in competition? If they could agree on some common protocols for interaction, then they could join forces and together be much stronger.
Re:Codes.... HTML... NOTEPAD?!
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Zen Coding
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· Score: 1
This does not affect the Drake equation at all. From Wikipedia:
The Drake equation [...] is an equation to organize our guesses about the potential number of extraterrestrial civilizations in our galaxy, the Milky Way.
You can still develop on your own iPhone as long as you have the tools. Apple will not accept the app until you agree to bide by their rules.
I don't believe you can develop for your own iPhone without accepting the license agreement (unless you jailbreak it, but that's a different story).
You can download the SDK and run apps in the simulator, but to copy them to an iPhone (including your own) you need a provisioning profile, wich means paying $100 per year and accepting the license agreement.
No one seems to get that the application does nothing without a phone and network.
That the customer is already paying for.
Until Google has their own network that they are willing to give these services out on I would say it is legitimate for AT&T to not want to deal with all the bandwidth that this app would use.
What bandwidth? This is not a VOIP app, it redirects your regular phone calls to a number owned by Google. Would it be legitimate for AT&T to block access to certain websites to preserve their precious bandwidth?
Kinky is using a feather, perverted is using the whole duck!
BUT.. How would you call, or define, the egg?? An X-egg (X = not 100% chicken) or a chicken egg?
Why does it matter? It's still an egg.
So wasn't what came out of the egg something other than a X-egg??
Yes of course, it was a chicken.
if you understood binary then you'd know that 10 represents 4 states
Ummm wtf? In what way does 10 represent 4 states?
so just whitelist mail.google.com
There's also projects like OneSocialWeb, and Elgg that they'll be competing with, not to mention all the other smaller projects that may not be out of pre-alpha, but still have more code completed and problems solved than they do at this point.
Why do all these projects have to be in competition? If they could agree on some common protocols for interaction, then they could join forces and together be much stronger.
Notepad++ != notepad
That would be robots.txt file.
"tiene" is completely the wrong tense
Whoosh!
You can still develop on your own iPhone as long as you have the tools. Apple will not accept the app until you agree to bide by their rules.
I don't believe you can develop for your own iPhone without accepting the license agreement (unless you jailbreak it, but that's a different story). You can download the SDK and run apps in the simulator, but to copy them to an iPhone (including your own) you need a provisioning profile, wich means paying $100 per year and accepting the license agreement.
I was hoping the editors would fix it.
You must be new here.
The appearance of life is of about the same bizarreness. There is just no way it can ignite by itself.
Why? It obviously did "ignite by itself" at least once.
Where does it say he only gave them 10 days to fix the problem?
Who is this "Slashdot" person you talk about?
Your post lacks ontopy.
Otherwise known as a percicent.
That doesn't sound right to me. Do you have a citation? Or did you just make that up?
120mm diameter, not radius, so 94.2 m/s
But my teacher told me it mean's "HERE COME'S AN 'S"!
FTFY
No one seems to get that the application does nothing without a phone and network.
That the customer is already paying for.
Until Google has their own network that they are willing to give these services out on I would say it is legitimate for AT&T to not want to deal with all the bandwidth that this app would use.
What bandwidth? This is not a VOIP app, it redirects your regular phone calls to a number owned by Google. Would it be legitimate for AT&T to block access to certain websites to preserve their precious bandwidth?