A measuring cup is 8 oz
A coffee cup is often, but not always, 6 oz.
The cup on my desk with which I use to drink coffee is something in the range of 12 oz.
So when I saw 6 cups of coffee intake, my eyes lit up. Partly from the cup of coffee I just drank, but also at the thought of how much time would be spent in the bathroom over the course of those 6 cups.
And by extension CentOS 5 users.
Sure the argument can be made that an OS from 2007 is too old and thus not worth going ofter (as the Chromium devs do in this bug report http://code.google.com/p/chromium/issues/detail?id=15984). But it seems to me that if you want to compete with Firefox in the Linux browser arena you should match the list of compatible distros. Firefox, Thunderbird and Seamonkey all work great in RHEL5.
I guess I always assumed the musicians were getting screwed in their deals, just never knew the breakdown.
This just reinforces my decision to support artists through live performances and "swag" sales at said performances rather than through record sales.
Different strokes for different folks. No one is making you ditch your tangible mouse. But this is a great starting point for the type of three dimensional computer interaction mentioned by another poster.
A measuring cup is 8 oz
A coffee cup is often, but not always, 6 oz.
The cup on my desk with which I use to drink coffee is something in the range of 12 oz.
So when I saw 6 cups of coffee intake, my eyes lit up. Partly from the cup of coffee I just drank, but also at the thought of how much time would be spent in the bathroom over the course of those 6 cups.
F*** the Pole-Ice comin' straight from the underground
And by extension CentOS 5 users. Sure the argument can be made that an OS from 2007 is too old and thus not worth going ofter (as the Chromium devs do in this bug report http://code.google.com/p/chromium/issues/detail?id=15984). But it seems to me that if you want to compete with Firefox in the Linux browser arena you should match the list of compatible distros. Firefox, Thunderbird and Seamonkey all work great in RHEL5.
I guess I always assumed the musicians were getting screwed in their deals, just never knew the breakdown. This just reinforces my decision to support artists through live performances and "swag" sales at said performances rather than through record sales.
Different strokes for different folks. No one is making you ditch your tangible mouse. But this is a great starting point for the type of three dimensional computer interaction mentioned by another poster.
Bojangler likes this
The "for you" is the important thing there. It may be good for his own practice and to stay fresh, but is good for the company?