He could sign away his right to sue to get the patent revoked. He could sign away his right to complain about it in public. He could sign away his right to further develop the technology. There's always lots of stuff to sign away.
Then do yourself a favor and move your media to a upnp server, airplay is an apple only upnp clone.
AirTunes was first available in June 2004 with the Airport Express. The first UPNP DLNA guidelines were also released in June 2004. Which one is the clone?
No kidding! Nobody ever eats out since they all garden for free. Nobody ever goes to plays because they just put them on themselves. Nobody ever buys TV shows because they're all broadcast for free. Nobody ever buys a book because everyone just uses the library.
Sure, Einstein single-handedly invented relativity. That's why all the components are named after him, like Maxwell's equations, the Lorentz transform, Minkowski spaces, etc.
I'll respond to this despite the uncivil tone. Given the millions (billions?) of people with CD-R collections, it's inevitable that there will be someone out there at the far end of the probability distribution who has a collection that has somehow survived the ravages of time. That doesn't somehow cancel out the fact that for many (most?) people, CD-R is not a stable archive format. It's like the saying "Million-to-one chances happen daily in New York City".
TL;DR for the AC: The "large numbers" is the set of people with CD-Rs, which is, frankly, large. Moron.
Have you done a blind test (e.g. ABX) to see if you can hear the difference between uncompressed PCM and 256kbit AAC? I'd be surprised if you could do it for anything except the rare pathological case.
I had a classical mechanics prof put the same question on two midterms and the final. I actually laughed out loud during the final when I got to that question.
Nobody should be documenting sprintf calls because nobody should be writing them. Unless the comment is along the lines of/* since this program is a demonstration of buffer overflows, we're using sprintf instead of snprintf */
Agreed - and like other posts have mentioned, give people ABS and they just drive faster/closer.
The conversation was just focused on stopping distances so I thought I'd try to get steering on the radar. Having tried to both maneuver around an obstacle while slowing down on a skid pad with and without ABS, it's amazing the difference it makes in terms of being able to maintain control of the vehicle.
A huge benefit to ABS is being able to steer while braking. Without it, you can steer or you can slow down, but if you try both in low enough traction conditions you're looking at a spin.
Dude. Ontario has 13 million people. Current unemployment (which is historically high) is 9.2%, or about 1.1 million people. There is no way that ~90% of the unemployed made their way to Queen's Park. When was the last time that 90% of any geographically dispersed group did anything?
Does that advantage extend to stealing money from rural areas so you can feel smug about your high-speed rail that no-one actually uses?
Yeah. Nobody would take high-speed rail. "In 2003, TGV carried its 1 billionth rider. This milestone marked an era with an average annual ridership of 45 million passengers—a stunning figure considering France’s population of 60 million." (source)
He could sign away his right to sue to get the patent revoked. He could sign away his right to complain about it in public. He could sign away his right to further develop the technology. There's always lots of stuff to sign away.
Then do yourself a favor and move your media to a upnp server, airplay is an apple only upnp clone.
AirTunes was first available in June 2004 with the Airport Express. The first UPNP DLNA guidelines were also released in June 2004. Which one is the clone?
You rewrite the portion of the request that says "I'm a Google TV".
Copyrighted by whom? Not the Facebook user who posted it; you waive your right to copyright the moment you sign up for a Facebook account.
That's not even remotely true. It's the second item in the Facebook terms:
You own all of the content and information you post on Facebook
No kidding! Nobody ever eats out since they all garden for free. Nobody ever goes to plays because they just put them on themselves. Nobody ever buys TV shows because they're all broadcast for free. Nobody ever buys a book because everyone just uses the library.
What if we restrict the discussion to the denser regions of the US? e.g. the Northeast is quite dense.
If the time machine doesn't interact with matter during the trip, how is it affected by gravity?
Sure, Einstein single-handedly invented relativity. That's why all the components are named after him, like Maxwell's equations, the Lorentz transform, Minkowski spaces, etc.
Allow all apps in, but have a "featured apps" section? Allow for trusted reviewers to create a pool of well-reviewed apps?
I'll respond to this despite the uncivil tone. Given the millions (billions?) of people with CD-R collections, it's inevitable that there will be someone out there at the far end of the probability distribution who has a collection that has somehow survived the ravages of time. That doesn't somehow cancel out the fact that for many (most?) people, CD-R is not a stable archive format. It's like the saying "Million-to-one chances happen daily in New York City".
TL;DR for the AC: The "large numbers" is the set of people with CD-Rs, which is, frankly, large. Moron.
All things considered, if that's the publicly available consumer model, the FBI most likely has one that is vastly more expensive.
FTFY.
More species of life have gone extinct without human influence than humans have even had contact with.
Is that the murder defense that Johnnie Cochran used for OJ? "More people have gone dead without human influence than OJ has even had contact with."
Ihow are the 2008 elections being lost and yet I still have voodoo 2 drivers and a windows 95 bootleg?
Law of large numbers, probably
Have you done a blind test (e.g. ABX) to see if you can hear the difference between uncompressed PCM and 256kbit AAC? I'd be surprised if you could do it for anything except the rare pathological case.
I had a classical mechanics prof put the same question on two midterms and the final. I actually laughed out loud during the final when I got to that question.
As a podcaster, you can put up an RSS feed, or an iTunes link. Which do you think will get you more hits?
From Apple's iTunes podcast spec: "iTunes uses RSS 2.0 plus some additional tags." There is no iTunes or RSS option, they're the same option.
Nobody should be documenting sprintf calls because nobody should be writing them. Unless the comment is along the lines of /* since this program is a demonstration of buffer overflows, we're using sprintf instead of snprintf */
http://copyrightlitigation.blogspot.com/2010/09/software-programs-joint-authorship-work.html
Big Companies like wikipedia?
Agreed - and like other posts have mentioned, give people ABS and they just drive faster/closer.
The conversation was just focused on stopping distances so I thought I'd try to get steering on the radar. Having tried to both maneuver around an obstacle while slowing down on a skid pad with and without ABS, it's amazing the difference it makes in terms of being able to maintain control of the vehicle.
A huge benefit to ABS is being able to steer while braking. Without it, you can steer or you can slow down, but if you try both in low enough traction conditions you're looking at a spin.
This sounds like it includes web browsers (given the references to 'viewing a web page' in the article)
Sounds like flash to me. It's always flash.
For some reason, RIM develops all their social networking apps in house. So they'll probably add it themselves to their (buggy) Facebook app.
Dude. Ontario has 13 million people. Current unemployment (which is historically high) is 9.2%, or about 1.1 million people. There is no way that ~90% of the unemployed made their way to Queen's Park. When was the last time that 90% of any geographically dispersed group did anything?
Does that advantage extend to stealing money from rural areas so you can feel smug about your high-speed rail that no-one actually uses?
Yeah. Nobody would take high-speed rail. "In 2003, TGV carried its 1 billionth rider. This milestone marked an era with an average annual ridership of 45 million passengers—a stunning figure considering France’s population of 60 million." (source)