Except the cost of remedy for a stolen key is rather cheap.
Change lock, redistribute new key, and maybe make sure there is nothing left behind (a broken window lock for instance).
Cracking multiple accounts (including an admin account)leaves the very real possibility of rootkits installed on machines, backdoors left all over the place.
Getting admin access allows you to leave invisible doors that only remodeling the room will fix (to over stretch a terrible analogy even further).
After finding a torrent for gOS and finding E17 into Gutsy Gibbon E17 is "normal" enough to be by a typical person, even being very different to Windows or Gnome. There is now (by default) a start button and the icon bar can fit many more icons. It still looked capable of going behind windows though.
I also think that the area that acts like OSX's dock is kind of rediculous because you can't see everything at once, but I blame that on gOS for having too much stuff.
E17 looks to save about 20 MiB of RAM over XFCE (20 to 40). I still think a strait Xubuntu is a better choice, but gOS is good in the sense that it looks to be turning the computer into an appliance for people who don't know how to use computers.
I think the OS should report GiB and KiB and MiB as such. Let the HD manufacturers do as they please using GB or GiB. Then everything reports accurately and no one is lieing. People who don't know the difference are then just people who don't know, and the OS is accurately reporting information.
This is a real question because I can´t check right now, but does the slide embedded in Word use full resolution text, or is it embedding the slide as a raster?
Because I have not been able to print 100% faithful slide representations at 24 x 36 inches without using a lowish res raster image. When printing from Power Point is drops the background and other things sometimes, and when exporting the slides as images there was no resolution control. I have not moved the slides into word, but it would not chock me if it rasterized the text in the process.
I still stand by fact that File->Print prints something that looks nothing like the slide (with no option to make it look like the slide) is a design defect if that is how it was supposed to work. I always assumed that it was because it dummed down the layout when printing so as to be readable on on a B&W printout, but never smartenned up when printing color.
PS we may both be offtopic, but you are not a Troll.
I like Enlightenment, but it is VERY different than Windows, and not completely intuitive. For example the icon bar (like a task list) defaults to being able to go under things (in Ubuntu anyway). Also, no start button and no files on the desktop.
XFCE works very close to gnome or Windows and looks great. Stuff saves to the Desktop, it has a start button and a task bar. No autoflip on screen edge (by default) no multi-view ports (by default at least). Using enlightenment almost to me sounds like designed failure. I would think a slightly sluggish Gnome or KDE would give a better impression.
I also think the biggest thing would be a lighter-weight (than Firefox) but still highly site compatible (like Firefox) web browser would help. On my system (that uses Gnome) Firefox is the biggest memmorey hog. I also have a Celeron 3.4GHz with 512 MB of ram. I installed Xubuntu, but also some Gnome and KDE apps. Firefox is using 125MB of RAM. My SWAP is at 400MB used of 800MB. I am using XFCE and as long as no super Flash site comes up things run fairly well, though there is definite lag in the Google Apps, they are functional.
I like Enlightenment, but it is just too unixy for the complete novice I think.
If I have a bitchen' ass presentation and it just prints as an ass presentation then there is a problem. Color printers have been affordable for a decade, there is not reason to require a shitty drop in quality for printing in year 2000.
The fact that I had to save the slides as jpegs and then put them in a page layout program (as approx 150 dpi at that point (including text)) IS a problem, even if that was how it was "supposed" to work.
Does the Office 2007 PDF have high res and appear as the slide? because XPS looks to be a semi-proprietary Office format (google search).
Saying your choice is a print out with shitty text or a printout that's not what is represented on the screen makes you sound like a Linux apologist, but that is my job, not an MS lovers.
PS same disclaimers on typos, but I extend it to general assholiness too.
I know with PP I need to save as.jpeg and drop into another program and print lowres versions of the slides (last known incident was with 2000, so PP apologists need not be rude, just tell me it was fixed). Otherwise I would get lame or no background.
if OO.org prints the final slide as it appears I could actually have a major use for it even though we pay for Office. If I still had some of the troublesome presentations I would jsut test.
Most of the letters were written after the fact explaining things. The letters were a way to spread dogma from one church to another and maintain a consistency of beliefs (that was achieved to some degree around 400CE and maintained until the splits started to happen)
The early beliefs were certainly oral tradition with many stuff being another 50 to 100 years after Mark when put to paper. But it was this putting to paper that allowed Christianity to become one religion (to a point) rather than Gnostics, What We Haves, Jews With an Extra Book (closer than we have now to Jews and could have been a continuation of Judaism), and others. It was the writings that allowed an ¨official¨ Christianity to happen and spread as a unifying force that rather than a mess of personal religions that the Romans (and pretty much all non-Jews) had at the time.
The importance of writing to Christianity can be observed by the fact that they quickly as they became established began to focus on scribing.
There are definitely parts of the new testament that are written down oral tradition, but the Romans had that too, what Christianity also has that allowed it to spread culturally within a society is written dogma that was spread by letters. This made sure the Greek Christians had the same beliefs and practices as the Roman Christians and quickly brought everyone into line. A strong written dogma is also most likely required for longevity of a religion (see Judaism vs the Parthenon).
Considering religious writings and rituals were some of the first things written (after wealthy peoples inventories) I think it is safe to say religion is the pen.
In fact isn't a large portion of the new testament letters? One would then assume that Christianity was spread by the pen (unless you are arguing that it was spread directly by God).
If we assume that half of the time was on battery we end up with 200 days on battery. Considering your not goign to be using it on battery for than a few hours a day (we'll call it 6) that is 800 days of use. Not too great, but not terrible either.
The last GI I received had stuff that already happened (a few weeks prior even) when I received it in the mail.
The October issue (that came late-mid September)had a Heavenly Sword review that was in the future tense, along with some blurbs about cool stuff coming being things that had passed. The fact that it was the only god review of Heavenly Sword I read. The review was like "better than sex" and considering it is only fairly good (if that), and shorter the credibility of the magazine is bad by game reviewer standards.
The last 3 times I went to compusa they did not have what I wanted in stock. That is no big deal, but each time I took the box representing what I wanted (that they had 2-5 of on the shelf) to the front. Waited at the register 5 minutes for the manager to come and get what i wanted so he/she could check the lockup. Then waited another 5 minutes of them searching to find out they didn't have it. Now I had to find something else, hope they have it, wait in line again, and repeat.
All the best buys where I am have the plastic alarm boxes, so I can take the actual product with m when I purchase.
How about default the friends codes to ON and not OFF. The parent must turn it off. Any kid who knows about and can turn it off (most probably) can already use the unternet and trade the codes anyway. But the clueless ones with clueless parents are fine.
The analogous situation to no net neutrality would be to say the destination countries need to pay to guarantee good baggage delivery, so people don't associate them with lost baggage.
Charging the customer for better service is a perfectly acceptable way to handle getting more money, both the cable and phone companies do it.
Except the cost of remedy for a stolen key is rather cheap.
Change lock, redistribute new key, and maybe make sure there is nothing left behind (a broken window lock for instance).
Cracking multiple accounts (including an admin account)leaves the very real possibility of rootkits installed on machines, backdoors left all over the place.
Getting admin access allows you to leave invisible doors that only remodeling the room will fix (to over stretch a terrible analogy even further).
"Here's a hint: what tax burden is paid by those younger than 18?"
A lot more than currently if they were allowed to smoke.
How long does it take for a purely software crack to them? It doesn't really ever happen for a lot of things.
Or do you mean how long for an undetectable mod chip? That can take some time.
But you are right, spyware ninjas (or pirates maybe) can indeed mod your computer when you are asleep.
It probably isn't to hard to find a rpovider of email that will do such a thing and offers SSL connections. I know it is easy enough with news groups.
"by the way, and I doubt it's much better doing face-to-face meetings on the ground."
I'm willing to bet Hans agrees with you on that.
I am going to follow up after.
After finding a torrent for gOS and finding E17 into Gutsy Gibbon E17 is "normal" enough to be by a typical person, even being very different to Windows or Gnome. There is now (by default) a start button and the icon bar can fit many more icons. It still looked capable of going behind windows though.
I also think that the area that acts like OSX's dock is kind of rediculous because you can't see everything at once, but I blame that on gOS for having too much stuff.
E17 looks to save about 20 MiB of RAM over XFCE (20 to 40). I still think a strait Xubuntu is a better choice, but gOS is good in the sense that it looks to be turning the computer into an appliance for people who don't know how to use computers.
I think the OS should report GiB and KiB and MiB as such. Let the HD manufacturers do as they please using GB or GiB. Then everything reports accurately and no one is lieing. People who don't know the difference are then just people who don't know, and the OS is accurately reporting information.
Like the Orange Box you mean?
I think they may be going there.
This is a real question because I can´t check right now, but does the slide embedded in Word use full resolution text, or is it embedding the slide as a raster?
Because I have not been able to print 100% faithful slide representations at 24 x 36 inches without using a lowish res raster image. When printing from Power Point is drops the background and other things sometimes, and when exporting the slides as images there was no resolution control. I have not moved the slides into word, but it would not chock me if it rasterized the text in the process.
I still stand by fact that File->Print prints something that looks nothing like the slide (with no option to make it look like the slide) is a design defect if that is how it was supposed to work. I always assumed that it was because it dummed down the layout when printing so as to be readable on on a B&W printout, but never smartenned up when printing color.
PS we may both be offtopic, but you are not a Troll.
They should really have used Ubuntu and XFCE.
I like Enlightenment, but it is VERY different than Windows, and not completely intuitive. For example the icon bar (like a task list) defaults to being able to go under things (in Ubuntu anyway). Also, no start button and no files on the desktop.
XFCE works very close to gnome or Windows and looks great. Stuff saves to the Desktop, it has a start button and a task bar. No autoflip on screen edge (by default) no multi-view ports (by default at least). Using enlightenment almost to me sounds like designed failure. I would think a slightly sluggish Gnome or KDE would give a better impression.
I also think the biggest thing would be a lighter-weight (than Firefox) but still highly site compatible (like Firefox) web browser would help. On my system (that uses Gnome) Firefox is the biggest memmorey hog. I also have a Celeron 3.4GHz with 512 MB of ram. I installed Xubuntu, but also some Gnome and KDE apps. Firefox is using 125MB of RAM. My SWAP is at 400MB used of 800MB. I am using XFCE and as long as no super Flash site comes up things run fairly well, though there is definite lag in the Google Apps, they are functional.
I like Enlightenment, but it is just too unixy for the complete novice I think.
What do you mean "not a problem"?
If I have a bitchen' ass presentation and it just prints as an ass presentation then there is a problem. Color printers have been affordable for a decade, there is not reason to require a shitty drop in quality for printing in year 2000.
The fact that I had to save the slides as jpegs and then put them in a page layout program (as approx 150 dpi at that point (including text)) IS a problem, even if that was how it was "supposed" to work.
Does the Office 2007 PDF have high res and appear as the slide? because XPS looks to be a semi-proprietary Office format (google search).
Saying your choice is a print out with shitty text or a printout that's not what is represented on the screen makes you sound like a Linux apologist, but that is my job, not an MS lovers.
PS
same disclaimers on typos, but I extend it to general assholiness too.
Does OO.org print the slide as it appears?
.jpeg and drop into another program and print lowres versions of the slides (last known incident was with 2000, so PP apologists need not be rude, just tell me it was fixed). Otherwise I would get lame or no background.
I know with PP I need to save as
if OO.org prints the final slide as it appears I could actually have a major use for it even though we pay for Office. If I still had some of the troublesome presentations I would jsut test.
Typos == drunk, forgive me.
Sorry, I like to limit my burning tinkle to VD.
Most of the letters were written after the fact explaining things. The letters were a way to spread dogma from one church to another and maintain a consistency of beliefs (that was achieved to some degree around 400CE and maintained until the splits started to happen)
The early beliefs were certainly oral tradition with many stuff being another 50 to 100 years after Mark when put to paper. But it was this putting to paper that allowed Christianity to become one religion (to a point) rather than Gnostics, What We Haves, Jews With an Extra Book (closer than we have now to Jews and could have been a continuation of Judaism), and others. It was the writings that allowed an ¨official¨ Christianity to happen and spread as a unifying force that rather than a mess of personal religions that the Romans (and pretty much all non-Jews) had at the time.
The importance of writing to Christianity can be observed by the fact that they quickly as they became established began to focus on scribing.
There are definitely parts of the new testament that are written down oral tradition, but the Romans had that too, what Christianity also has that allowed it to spread culturally within a society is written dogma that was spread by letters. This made sure the Greek Christians had the same beliefs and practices as the Roman Christians and quickly brought everyone into line. A strong written dogma is also most likely required for longevity of a religion (see Judaism vs the Parthenon).
Considering religious writings and rituals were some of the first things written (after wealthy peoples inventories) I think it is safe to say religion is the pen.
In fact isn't a large portion of the new testament letters? One would then assume that Christianity was spread by the pen (unless you are arguing that it was spread directly by God).
This is ~ 400 days of pure run time.
If we assume that half of the time was on battery we end up with 200 days on battery. Considering your not goign to be using it on battery for than a few hours a day (we'll call it 6) that is 800 days of use. Not too great, but not terrible either.
Is cable cheaper than renting DVDs?
at 3.50 a rental that's 10 to 20 rentals a month, or a hell of a netflix account for the price of cable.
The last GI I received had stuff that already happened (a few weeks prior even) when I received it in the mail.
The October issue (that came late-mid September)had a Heavenly Sword review that was in the future tense, along with some blurbs about cool stuff coming being things that had passed. The fact that it was the only god review of Heavenly Sword I read. The review was like "better than sex" and considering it is only fairly good (if that), and shorter the credibility of the magazine is bad by game reviewer standards.
The last 3 times I went to compusa they did not have what I wanted in stock. That is no big deal, but each time I took the box representing what I wanted (that they had 2-5 of on the shelf) to the front. Waited at the register 5 minutes for the manager to come and get what i wanted so he/she could check the lockup. Then waited another 5 minutes of them searching to find out they didn't have it. Now I had to find something else, hope they have it, wait in line again, and repeat.
All the best buys where I am have the plastic alarm boxes, so I can take the actual product with m when I purchase.
To draw the windows more quickly?
It sounds like it need it to me.
How about default the friends codes to ON and not OFF. The parent must turn it off. Any kid who knows about and can turn it off (most probably) can already use the unternet and trade the codes anyway. But the clueless ones with clueless parents are fine.
Would GNU want to spend money to encourage use of closed source software?
Or,
It is like offering customers a chance to save money by not even using checked luggage (which I pay for even though I don't use it).
How is tiers of service price gouging? And why can't I sacrifice decent service for cheaper prices? I do that for everything else.
This is not equivalent to net neutrality.
The analogous situation to no net neutrality would be to say the destination countries need to pay to guarantee good baggage delivery, so people don't associate them with lost baggage.
Charging the customer for better service is a perfectly acceptable way to handle getting more money, both the cable and phone companies do it.
The Zen:M is iPod classic 80GB price for 30GB.
It better have some incredible features for that price disparity.