I could see his machine being a bit overworked and perhaps there was something not 100.01% right in the hardware anymore. Maybe it clocked slightly different or something.
But his statement about starting in second gear when a code review says that's not possible makes it really suspect.
Occam's razor in me says - crappy TV in 1980 and a 7 looked like a 1:)
"C'mon Jim - don't feed me that bull that it can't be done. I was watching CSI last night and they typed "PASSWORD OVERRIDE" in and it let them in the system. Call apple back and have them try that."
What I've determined whenever I look at the reviews of a product on Amazon (or any site) is that no product produced actually works. Every product has the people that received DOA items, or they broke on first use.
Though my favorite is the five-star review I saw for "Box was damaged so I returned it unopened, but what I saw of it, it looked okay"
Our Radio Shack in West Milford NJ had an attached store - Computer Discount of NJ. Hardware, Software and the amazing thing - a software rental club. They were some great guys. I'm sure the idea was basically try-before-you-buy the software, but you could rent some of the games for $3 for 3 days or something like that...just enough time to get fed up or bored with them. Or let CopyIIPC deal with them:)
I rented Winter Sports, got home and it wasn't in there. Went back and they didn't have it. We looked where we parked, and there laying in the snow-melt was the floppy. Took it home, dried it off real good with a hair dryer and amazingly it worked. Don't know for how long after!
That's the biggest problems with shifts in power, especially if parties change every four years. One party spends four years getting something in place, or sets some long term goals, and then next election someone else comes in and changes it all. So they spend all the time and money getting one thing spun up and then it gets canned and they spend the next four years doing something else and it may be canned.
Am trying to remember the beginning days from the 0.98 or so era in 92. Was using 386BSD for a bit then decided to go to Linux (or perhaps I had them both going...had CP/M installed then too.) I think the first was a boot disk and a root filesystem disk. Then there were all the different disk images for GCC, and so on. rawrite it to a disk in dos, tar vfxM in Linux. Token ring at college, so no networking for me:( First real distribution was SLS, followed by Slackware, which was the main one for a while. Used RedHat at workt, and then Debian (about 1998). Since then, it's been Debian. There are a couple things I use uBuntu for, but that's pretty much the same.
Don't care about the free philosophy behind it, and don't really think it's perfect, but it is the one that has felt right. Have touched RedHat and SuSE since then because of things based on it, and still come back to Debian and uBuntu.
For everytime I had to call for support, or try to use their itrc, or everytime I had to come up with a model number from a device that had 20 different numbers on it, none of them matching the format they expected, for everytime I had to deal with HPUX...serves them right.
RAM is good - free ram is wasted. However when I leave my machine locked overnight and FF's memory usage goes from 200MB to 1200MB, that's probably bad, unless it's trying to pre-cache the Internet for me.:)
The analogy still holds by a thread. Generally that is true, but what if the car was stolen, used in a crime, in the accident, and then returned to the original location. The renter at the hotel could have slept through the whole thing and be none the wiser.
Dell made the computers that people downloaded Limewire from CNET. Cisco routed the packets. Kingston made the RAM. Seagate made the hard drives that stored it.
Not all schools have labs. With laptops and netbooks costing less than some textbooks, the schools realize why should they pay all the money for lab upkeep when it's easier just to push that out onto the students, charge them a fee and put some wifi in.
well...what languages you started with. Looking at that, the c++ based code is perfectly readable, but I can't make heads or tails of the other. In fact, reminds me of perl and objectiveC - just start hitting all those shifted characters - they each signify something special.
Am waiting for : Draw Pacman; Draw Ghosts; Ghosts chase pacman; Pacman follows joystick movement;
AFAIK, no versions of DOS were written with TCP/IP. Version 3.1 had support for Microsoft Networks, and 4 or 5 ish you started to see some of the NDIS stuff. And lets not forget all the joyful NetBIOS stuff. However, it wasn't really until Winsock came out that there was any sort of TCP/IP support in MS products. Before that, there were a lot of shareware/freeware type implementations that you could use, with the packet driver interface becoming pretty popular. But all addon's.
DOS 3.1 and bulletin boards - if not earlier. And the only ports usually involved there were COM1, COM2, etc... not TCP/IP ports. Completely different beast and not related.
WfW was the first thing that MS had an addon for to do TCP/IP, and then Win95 shipped with it.
So yes, DOS and Windows up til 95 shipped without TCP/IP support, and din't monitor thie "myriad of ports" (65535 actually, and it's not like they are being created and added to - it's a 16bit unsigned int.
Okay...with a not so common name like that, it was easy to find her page. While I feel for her a bit (7 month old, hence the marriage pressure, and the fact that she fell for something like that), I just had to laugh at the current relationship status: It's complicated.
For all the praise it got for the graphics, you think when MCP died, they could have done something better than "You...back your head out of the hole in recede into the darkness."
6 movies he was in. Speaking in each of them. Sure...it may have not been what Luke was speaking, and the viewer couldn't understand him, but so what. Chewbacca could not be understand by the viewer either. Neither could Jar-Jar Binks.
Perhaps the people that made and programmed the astromech's could understand them as clear as day? They just didn't see the need for language packs. After all, they would have to support over 6 million language packs - Sure...English and Bocce may sell well, but the resources required to translate into so many languages would be a huge money sink. So, they speak astromech and that's it.:) - ah..."serious" discussions:)
I could see his machine being a bit overworked and perhaps there was something not 100.01% right in the hardware anymore. Maybe it clocked slightly different or something.
But his statement about starting in second gear when a code review says that's not possible makes it really suspect.
Occam's razor in me says - crappy TV in 1980 and a 7 looked like a 1 :)
"C'mon Jim - don't feed me that bull that it can't be done. I was watching CSI last night and they typed "PASSWORD OVERRIDE" in and it let them in the system. Call apple back and have them try that."
What I've determined whenever I look at the reviews of a product on Amazon (or any site) is that no product produced actually works. Every product has the people that received DOA items, or they broke on first use.
Though my favorite is the five-star review I saw for "Box was damaged so I returned it unopened, but what I saw of it, it looked okay"
Our Radio Shack in West Milford NJ had an attached store - Computer Discount of NJ. Hardware, Software and the amazing thing - a software rental club. They were some great guys. I'm sure the idea was basically try-before-you-buy the software, but you could rent some of the games for $3 for 3 days or something like that...just enough time to get fed up or bored with them. Or let CopyIIPC deal with them :)
I rented Winter Sports, got home and it wasn't in there. Went back and they didn't have it. We looked where we parked, and there laying in the snow-melt was the floppy. Took it home, dried it off real good with a hair dryer and amazingly it worked. Don't know for how long after!
That's the biggest problems with shifts in power, especially if parties change every four years. One party spends four years getting something in place, or sets some long term goals, and then next election someone else comes in and changes it all. So they spend all the time and money getting one thing spun up and then it gets canned and they spend the next four years doing something else and it may be canned.
Gotta be a better way.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Banana_bunchy_top_virus
Am trying to remember the beginning days from the 0.98 or so era in 92. Was using 386BSD for a bit then decided to go to Linux (or perhaps I had them both going...had CP/M installed then too.) I think the first was a boot disk and a root filesystem disk. Then there were all the different disk images for GCC, and so on. rawrite it to a disk in dos, tar vfxM in Linux. Token ring at college, so no networking for me :( First real distribution was SLS, followed by Slackware, which was the main one for a while. Used RedHat at workt, and then Debian (about 1998). Since then, it's been Debian. There are a couple things I use uBuntu for, but that's pretty much the same.
Don't care about the free philosophy behind it, and don't really think it's perfect, but it is the one that has felt right. Have touched RedHat and SuSE since then because of things based on it, and still come back to Debian and uBuntu.
Meanwhile I'm sure they have some real pets who are being neglected.
This must be one of those things that I have blocked cause half the mom's I know are obsessed with that crap.
I rested all my hopes and futures on my one hit song "Bootleg Rum and the Red Flag Pirate" Little did I know they were forbidden words.
For everytime I had to call for support, or try to use their itrc, or everytime I had to come up with a model number from a device that had 20 different numbers on it, none of them matching the format they expected, for everytime I had to deal with HPUX...serves them right.
RAM is good - free ram is wasted. However when I leave my machine locked overnight and FF's memory usage goes from 200MB to 1200MB, that's probably bad, unless it's trying to pre-cache the Internet for me. :)
The analogy still holds by a thread. Generally that is true, but what if the car was stolen, used in a crime, in the accident, and then returned to the original location. The renter at the hotel could have slept through the whole thing and be none the wiser.
Like I said - by a thread :)
Dell made the computers that people downloaded Limewire from CNET.
Cisco routed the packets.
Kingston made the RAM.
Seagate made the hard drives that stored it.
Not all schools have labs. With laptops and netbooks costing less than some textbooks, the schools realize why should they pay all the money for lab upkeep when it's easier just to push that out onto the students, charge them a fee and put some wifi in.
That's okay. I hear there was a commissioned low altitude aerial fly by.
well...what languages you started with. Looking at that, the c++ based code is perfectly readable, but I can't make heads or tails of the other. In fact, reminds me of perl and objectiveC - just start hitting all those shifted characters - they each signify something special.
Am waiting for :
Draw Pacman;
Draw Ghosts;
Ghosts chase pacman;
Pacman follows joystick movement;
AFAIK, no versions of DOS were written with TCP/IP. Version 3.1 had support for Microsoft Networks, and 4 or 5 ish you started to see some of the NDIS stuff. And lets not forget all the joyful NetBIOS stuff. However, it wasn't really until Winsock came out that there was any sort of TCP/IP support in MS products. Before that, there were a lot of shareware/freeware type implementations that you could use, with the packet driver interface becoming pretty popular. But all addon's.
DOS 3.1 and bulletin boards - if not earlier. And the only ports usually involved there were COM1, COM2, etc... not TCP/IP ports. Completely different beast and not related.
WfW was the first thing that MS had an addon for to do TCP/IP, and then Win95 shipped with it.
So yes, DOS and Windows up til 95 shipped without TCP/IP support, and din't monitor thie "myriad of ports" (65535 actually, and it's not like they are being created and added to - it's a 16bit unsigned int.
Why do I feel like I'm feeding trolls here?
The best will be when it becomes a hosting situation wherein some site that hosts evilsex.xxx also hosts academicresearch.com on the same IP.
Okay...with a not so common name like that, it was easy to find her page. While I feel for her a bit (7 month old, hence the marriage pressure, and the fact that she fell for something like that), I just had to laugh at the current relationship status: It's complicated.
For all the praise it got for the graphics, you think when MCP died, they could have done something better than "You...back your head out of the hole in recede into the darkness."
6 movies he was in. Speaking in each of them. Sure...it may have not been what Luke was speaking, and the viewer couldn't understand him, but so what. Chewbacca could not be understand by the viewer either. Neither could Jar-Jar Binks.
Perhaps the people that made and programmed the astromech's could understand them as clear as day? They just didn't see the need for language packs. After all, they would have to support over 6 million language packs - Sure...English and Bocce may sell well, but the resources required to translate into so many languages would be a huge money sink. So, they speak astromech and that's it. :) - ah..."serious" discussions :)
Yeah...shame they chose that. We all know it should have been :)
555.555.555.200
I like the rawness of the home recordings. Albums are WAY too polished lately. Each to their own.
In my best Jean Luc Picard: There....are...nine...planets!
Keep in mind that the French are equally vehement about the purity of their language. This could be the next great war :|