I'd like to put a generator in my computer, working off the heat of the P3, to alleviate some of the power consumption. Maybe if I attached a whistle, I could hear when my load is high.
(Note: the above paragraph contains many mechanical and scientific inaccuracies. For example, no computer really needs that much power.)
The #1 result on Google has a special bonus: you can click the I'm Feeling Lucky to be redirected straight to it. I'm troubled, then, that Google has a system to artificially insert a top result based on your search. The only reason I can think of for slowing down each and every search like this is selling keywords to the highest bidder.
If you really want to filter porn, there are some search engines that will allow you to do that. However, they usually are very eager. (They'd filter out this page for example. (Yeah, I know this is excluded by/robots.txt, but the static version isn't.)) They'll often filter out what you really want. Better to just accept that you'll sometimes have to see a porn site's meta tags.
This sounds very unlikely to me. For one thing, there aren't a huge number of frozen mammoths in places where work gangs are likely to be digging ditches. For another, they'd have to somehow thaw (and preferably cook) the meat; this would interrupt the work. Really, this just sounds like an urban myth (check the FAQ...).
When my compile doesn't turn out right, I generally don't execute the file. Why should it be any different or a creature that might otherwise live a tortured existance in the ICU of a research compound, merely because someone forgot to./configure it with the --enable-lung2 option.
Next time I have trouble reading a CD, I'll just stick it in the microwave. If not very much of the metal layer flaked off, I'll know it's a problem with the drive. To test the drive, I'll put it in the dishwasher. This a great, practical idea! Thanks!
(sarcasm-impaired: try the microwave testing on your gonads)
This happened years before the JonKatz Witch Project was released. If they did this 'in the spirit of' BWP, I'd like to hire them to take care of my stock.:)
In the beginning God created the computer and the terminal. And the computer was without operating system; and darkness was upon the face of the DIMMs. And the Spirit of God moved upon the cylinders of the HDD. And God said, Let there be LILO: and there was LILO. And God saw the bootloader, that it was underneath cylinder 1023: and God loaded the kernel image from the HDD. And God called the bootloader LILO, and the kernel image he called Linux. And the bootloader and the kernel image were the first things on the partition. And God said, Let there be a division in the midst of the kernel, and let it divide the kernel from the kernel. And God made the division, and divided the kernel which was above the division from the kernel which was below the division: and it was so. And God called the division memory management.
I was going to finish this out and submit it to segfault, but I don't really see that much potential.
It will be a sad day when a teacher can't get hired because someone thinks a machine (television) can do his job better.
In a worst-case scenario the proliferation of such devices will discourage young people from exploring the opportunities of teaching as a career, and may decrease our chances of.....
Machines can replace people who perform manual labor. Machines can replace people who perform glorified forms of manual labor. Machines cannot replace creativity. (At least, not in the forseeable future.:)
You can either lament that machines have replaced most of the need for humans in coal mines, or you can recognize that the continuing division of labor will obsolete certain professions and create others. If a machine can play music better than humans, then so it will be. But until a machine can duplicate human creativity, there'll be plenty of interesting things for us to do.
If Amazon expects people who don't have their high ASCII characters memorized in octal to win, they aren't going to have their final answers encoded in ASCII or UTF8 or anything of the sort. If they map characters to numbers, it will be 1-26.
The aliens in Independence Day suffered from their decision to rely on security through obscurity. If they had GPLed their software before attacking Earth, they could have had the benefit of improvements submitted by other malicious alien civilizations (for example, better clustering code so that they don't rely on one big mothership). But they insisted on a closed source, proprietary solution, and they got rooted.
Microsoft Oceania 84 is just around the corner. Any day now they'll release it...
(Note: the above paragraph contains many mechanical and scientific inaccuracies. For example, no computer really needs that much power.)
The #1 result on Google has a special bonus: you can click the I'm Feeling Lucky to be redirected straight to it. I'm troubled, then, that Google has a system to artificially insert a top result based on your search. The only reason I can think of for slowing down each and every search like this is selling keywords to the highest bidder.
If you really want to filter porn, there are some search engines that will allow you to do that. However, they usually are very eager. (They'd filter out this page for example. (Yeah, I know this is excluded by /robots.txt, but the static version isn't.)) They'll often filter out what you really want. Better to just accept that you'll sometimes have to see a porn site's meta tags.
He said to make a form on your own personal page.
This sounds very unlikely to me. For one thing, there aren't a huge number of frozen mammoths in places where work gangs are likely to be digging ditches. For another, they'd have to somehow thaw (and preferably cook) the meat; this would interrupt the work. Really, this just sounds like an urban myth (check the FAQ...).
Besides, what's preprocessed bovine? I'd prefer that they didn't #include all those other parts.
When my compile doesn't turn out right, I generally don't execute the file. Why should it be any different or a creature that might otherwise live a tortured existance in the ICU of a research compound, merely because someone forgot to ./configure it with the --enable-lung2 option.
"Wimpy City Terrorized by Furry Herbivorous Mammal"
But would you want to fight a 10 story tall shotgun dude for your memory? :)
(sarcasm-impaired: try the microwave testing on your gonads)
This happened years before the JonKatz Witch Project was released. If they did this 'in the spirit of' BWP, I'd like to hire them to take care of my stock. :)
I haven't had any problems either, except that one of the fish in the tank next to the trash has three eyes.
I was going to finish this out and submit it to segfault, but I don't really see that much potential.
...is that the real enemy is Microsoft. :)
Because at least one of the Apache developers is British, Apache should be eligible for knighthood due to its excellent service of the crown's site.
In a worst-case scenario the proliferation of such devices will discourage young people from exploring the opportunities of teaching as a career, and may decrease our chances of.....
Machines can replace people who perform manual labor. Machines can replace people who perform glorified forms of manual labor. Machines cannot replace creativity. (At least, not in the forseeable future. :)
You can either lament that machines have replaced most of the need for humans in coal mines, or you can recognize that the continuing division of labor will obsolete certain professions and create others. If a machine can play music better than humans, then so it will be. But until a machine can duplicate human creativity, there'll be plenty of interesting things for us to do.
the music stops and a synthesized voice says "Windows A fatal exception 0E has occurred..."
If Amazon expects people who don't have their high ASCII characters memorized in octal to win, they aren't going to have their final answers encoded in ASCII or UTF8 or anything of the sort. If they map characters to numbers, it will be 1-26.
"Buy more stuff!" Err, wait, that was the subliminal message. The secret message was "7hi$ /\/\3$$4g3 |-|4X0r3D bY 31337 d00dz."
He said it had a P6.
And I find it funny that he didn't just attempt a massive denial of service attack against the aliens. Or did the alien sysadmins use tcp_wrappers?
Get a laptop, stick Apple stickers over the manufacturer's name and logo, and run Linux. :)
The aliens in Independence Day suffered from their decision to rely on security through obscurity. If they had GPLed their software before attacking Earth, they could have had the benefit of improvements submitted by other malicious alien civilizations (for example, better clustering code so that they don't rely on one big mothership). But they insisted on a closed source, proprietary solution, and they got rooted.