They're called page charges.. I don't know how many journals do it, but all the American Society for Microbiology (ASM) journals do it. I'm not saying its bad, but these scientists do have a point.
Re:So where does the information come from?
on
A Map to Nowhere?
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· Score: 1
Im sorry, how much information should it take to make a human? Is >650MB more or less than most life?
This is indicative of religion, telling you that as a human you are more special than everything else. Remember, you are not a special or unique snowflake, you are the same decomposing crap as the rest of us.
Also, as I have a Masters in Microbiology, I would like to add that obtaining the sequence was the easy first part. There's a *whole* lot of biochemistry (the real work) that needs to be done. The sequence certianly helps though.
People who buy the latest and greatest versions of Office every two or so years (like myself) may find this to be a good deal.. Depending on the price.
If I have the choice to purchase a license to version 11 for $375 which will just be sitting on a shelf in 1.5 years, its probably worth it to just pay like $75 a year for the license.
I guess I'm not sure what I am losing in this deal (if the price is right), I already have to register my product, its already under a restrictive EULA, etc. The only difference is that there is a version that is time-killed for less money.
I believe that some people have already discussed this here but.. the large 'icons' are actually a special view, called 'thumbnails'. This makes the 'icons' larger and if the file is an image the image is displayed in the 'icon'. You can turn this on for certian folders to show thumbnails by default. It is actually a nice feature that I use often.
The 'thumbnail' option is currently in win 2000.
Not to be too critical, but maybe some people should try understanding windows _cough_ hemos _cough_ before they make critical comments. I mean the regular size icons are in the shots, along with the menu options. http://www.m0ss.com/Images/Whistler2250/themed2.jp g
Hmm... The tulip driver? I wanted to set up a linux box with at spare (namebrand) NIC I had lying around. Turns out it needed the tulip driver. As this was not included with the distribution I was using (RH 6.1) I had to hunt for the driver. It existed only in source. So I had to compile it into the kernel. Yeah, that's _real_ easy. It never worked and took the better part of 4 hours. I am sorry, but for most harware and driver installs, windows trashes linux.
Um, I don't think that will ever happen. In genetics, the concept of "race" is really non-existant for humans. There is greater human DNA homology (similarity) _between_ "races" than there are _within_ "races". For example, I ( a white male) may have greater homology to a black African male than to another white male. Any one to design a genetic weapon would have a hard time not killing himself.
It seems to me that this is a perfect example of how the record companies/RIAA have dropped the ball. THEY should be providing this type of service. THEY should be keeping themselves relevant for the future. THEY should have decided if they are providing the disc or the license. The distribution scheme they have is no longer the monopoly it once was. I mean really, what are record companies but loan sharks with distributors?
They're called page charges.. I don't know how many journals do it, but all the American Society for Microbiology (ASM) journals do it. I'm not saying its bad, but these scientists do have a point.
Im sorry, how much information should it take to make a human? Is >650MB more or less than most life?
This is indicative of religion, telling you that as a human you are more special than everything else. Remember, you are not a special or unique snowflake, you are the same decomposing crap as the rest of us.
Also, as I have a Masters in Microbiology, I would like to add that obtaining the sequence was the easy first part. There's a *whole* lot of biochemistry (the real work) that needs to be done. The sequence certianly helps though.
People who buy the latest and greatest versions of Office every two or so years (like myself) may find this to be a good deal.. Depending on the price.
If I have the choice to purchase a license to version 11 for $375 which will just be sitting on a shelf in 1.5 years, its probably worth it to just pay like $75 a year for the license.
I guess I'm not sure what I am losing in this deal (if the price is right), I already have to register my product, its already under a restrictive EULA, etc. The only difference is that there is a version that is time-killed for less money.
I know a Doctor from Cornell and he is an idiot. How that for slander?
CorelDraw 9 can be scripted with either VBA or the basic-like corel script language. Its the primary reason I use Draw over other vector-based apps.
I believe that some people have already discussed this here but.. the large 'icons' are actually a special view, called 'thumbnails'. This makes the 'icons' larger and if the file is an image the image is displayed in the 'icon'. You can turn this on for certian folders to show thumbnails by default. It is actually a nice feature that I use often. The 'thumbnail' option is currently in win 2000. Not to be too critical, but maybe some people should try understanding windows _cough_ hemos _cough_ before they make critical comments. I mean the regular size icons are in the shots, along with the menu options. http://www.m0ss.com/Images/Whistler2250/themed2.jp g
Hmm... The tulip driver? I wanted to set up a linux box with at spare (namebrand) NIC I had lying around. Turns out it needed the tulip driver. As this was not included with the distribution I was using (RH 6.1) I had to hunt for the driver. It existed only in source. So I had to compile it into the kernel. Yeah, that's _real_ easy. It never worked and took the better part of 4 hours. I am sorry, but for most harware and driver installs, windows trashes linux.
Um, I don't think that will ever happen. In genetics, the concept of "race" is really non-existant for humans. There is greater human DNA homology (similarity) _between_ "races" than there are _within_ "races". For example, I ( a white male) may have greater homology to a black African male than to another white male. Any one to design a genetic weapon would have a hard time not killing himself.
It seems to me that this is a perfect example of how the record companies/RIAA have dropped the ball.
THEY should be providing this type of service.
THEY should be keeping themselves relevant for the future.
THEY should have decided if they are providing the disc or the license.
The distribution scheme they have is no longer the monopoly it once was. I mean really, what are record companies but loan sharks with distributors?