Johnny Quest as live action Starblazers Ghost in the Shell UFO Space 1999 My favorite martian Dresden Files Probe (yeah, you never saw it, I know) MacGuyver
It was not too long ago that Java was going to: Give us applets to do what Browsers can never do: Bring animated and reactive interfaces to the web browsing experience! Take over the desktop. Write once, run anywhere and render the dominance of Intel/MS moot by creating a neutral development platform!
Yes, perhaps its found a niche somewhere. But its fair to say it fell short of the hype.
In court. With independently substantiated documentation and video.
Better make sure the content is accurate and not fiction for the purpose of abuse.
Better make sure you are willing to deal with the consequences and collateral damages that happen in our very human world. Will someone be harmed? Will a family be harmed. Will someone suicide? Do you want to be a part of the aftermath?
What are the -civil- courts ramifications? Did the subject suffer serious monetary damages, lost wages, lost income, lost property. Do you want to foot the bill?
After you are sure of all of all the answers, hire a lawyer and have him/her make sure.
For established legitimate users? Perhaps an official sale will come with an entry point to a protected site that offers additional value?
A legit purchase that gives the customer the opportunity to ask the author a question might be very attractive.
Also the questions would give you grist for future revisions or alternate titles.
Anyway, if you wrote a book you are a subject matter expert. Perhaps you should make the book a kind of advertisement for advanced services in the field. So the more its passed around, the more benefit flows back to you.
Probably not the magic bullet you wanted though...
Its actually a combination of two books under one cover. The books account the adventures of Michael, who receives a key from an eccentric composer and is transported into a world of elves, men, and monsters.
But the backdrop of the story is that magic is in everything: Music, architecture, poetry, even wine. So the book brings an enthusiasm not only for far away places, but for things we see but do not appreciate here at home.
The book has excellent character development and places Michael inside a historical context: An epic battle by masters of the arts and understanding against those who would deny Humanity their place in Art and life.
I think they could have extended the address space in the existing IPv4 protocol to accommodate a hierarchical address space.
Instead of having a flat address space, you could have a "Network of Internets". With each country having its own 32bit address space.
The "zip code" to these 32bit address spaces comes inside a dns packet or syn packet. Isn't the IPv4 header size flexible as well?
The "zip code" would tell your machine which route to use to send the packets back. So the extra address space is actually supported by the routing table. Think 20 routes instead of one default route.
Once the packet is inside the "zip code" it functions just like a normal ipv4 packet.
Simple hacks to dns and the ipv4 code could make it all work. No hardware changes. No ridiculously large flat address space. No tunneling.
I am just afraid that it will never switch over to native, and we will be left in a tunneled limbo land forever. With the header overhead of both protocols in every packet. The ISPs will be forced into the role of tunnel brokers. And because there were so many problems with the first transition, no one will have the stomach for the second transition to native IPv6.
Just send an sms notice to the phone when you are being tracked. It can be on a random basis, low frequency. Send an email alert as well.
Just something so that it cannot be a secret to the phone user what is happening. You can opt-out of these messages, if you reply to the first 5 with an opt-out reply.
yes, they could be donors theoretically. But I suspect that past HIV positive status would make things complicated. AIDS is not currently considered "fatal". It is considered "manageable".
So they would be considering the -unknown- risks of exposing someone to a potentially new strain of AIDs.
I have had a bone marrow transplant. No radiation, minimal chemo-like drugs. In the hospital a week or a week and a half, 6 months of outpatient monitoring and I was cured.
For the AIDS treatment to work, they would most likely use something closer to my transplant protocol than the full oblation that they use with cancer patients.
Note to those interested: They dont have to go in with needles or drills to "dig out" the bone marrow from the donor. They give you a drug call the "G" that causes your bone marrow to percolate into your bloodstream. Then they filter it out with a dialysis-type procedure. Its fairly painless. I had it done to save my own marrow in case something went wrong with the transplant.
If the objective is to prevent large-scale keyword sniffing, then you can obfuscate it with compression.
The support is already built into the browsers.
Yes I know its not encryption, but if everything was gzip'd then it would cost the listener more to decrypt it. Plus gzip'd data would not invite any added attention.
Johnny Quest as live action
Starblazers
Ghost in the Shell
UFO
Space 1999
My favorite martian
Dresden Files
Probe (yeah, you never saw it, I know)
MacGuyver
If its a predator fish, we probably think its tasty or at least good
enough for pet food.
It was not too long ago that Java was going to:
Give us applets to do what Browsers can never do: Bring animated and reactive interfaces to the web browsing experience!
Take over the desktop. Write once, run anywhere and render the dominance of Intel/MS moot by creating a neutral development platform!
Yes, perhaps its found a niche somewhere. But its fair to say it fell short of the hype.
In court. With independently substantiated documentation and video.
Better make sure the content is accurate and not fiction for the purpose of abuse.
Better make sure you are willing to deal with the consequences and collateral damages that happen in our very human world. Will someone be harmed? Will a family be harmed. Will someone suicide? Do you want to be a part of the aftermath?
What are the -civil- courts ramifications? Did the subject suffer serious monetary damages, lost wages, lost income, lost property. Do you want to foot the bill?
After you are sure of all of all the answers, hire a lawyer and have him/her make sure.
And then don't do it.
For established legitimate users? Perhaps an official sale will come with an entry point to a protected site that offers additional value?
A legit purchase that gives the customer the opportunity to ask the author a question might be very attractive.
Also the questions would give you grist for future revisions or alternate titles.
Anyway, if you wrote a book you are a subject matter expert. Perhaps you should make the book a kind of advertisement for advanced services in the field. So the more its passed around, the more benefit flows back to you.
Probably not the magic bullet you wanted though...
And you can see them fleeing live on the net.
If the un-updated machines are cesspools and pose a threat to the internet, then should they not be blocked?
The browsers identify themselves to some extent. Shouldnt websites detect these browsers and refuse to do business with them?
Should firefox, itunes and such refuse to install on machines that are not updated?
If we had a measurement that said that only 25% of the entire address space is in use at any one time, then maybe would would rethink our choices.
Sorry about that. Seems unnecessary, but they certainly would want to make the money if they could.
Perhaps it will let you buy them on amazon.com.
You are correct, its not on their UK site.
They even have their own download client. Search on Video on Demand.
Good point. I dont really like reading the -is it dead yet- comments either.
Do we know if it is safer to use the ATM at your bank branch office?
What about CC. CC often have a pin to get cash. If they can copy cards, what is to stop them from brute-forcing the pin?
Is plastic dead?
Its actually a combination of two books under one cover. The books account the adventures of Michael, who receives a key from an eccentric composer and is transported into a world of elves, men, and monsters.
But the backdrop of the story is that magic is in everything: Music, architecture, poetry, even wine. So the book brings an enthusiasm not only for far away places, but for things we see but do not appreciate here at home.
The book has excellent character development and places Michael inside a historical context: An epic battle by masters of the arts and understanding against those who would deny Humanity their place in Art and life.
I loved the book.
I think they could have extended the address space in the existing IPv4 protocol to accommodate a hierarchical address space.
Instead of having a flat address space, you could have a "Network of Internets". With each country having its own 32bit address space.
The "zip code" to these 32bit address spaces comes inside a dns packet or syn packet. Isn't the IPv4 header size flexible as well?
The "zip code" would tell your machine which route to use to send the packets back. So the extra address space is actually supported by the routing table. Think 20 routes instead of one default route.
Once the packet is inside the "zip code" it functions just like a normal ipv4 packet.
Simple hacks to dns and the ipv4 code could make it all work. No hardware changes. No ridiculously large flat address space. No tunneling.
I am just afraid that it will never switch over to native, and we will be left in a tunneled limbo land forever. With the header overhead of both protocols in every packet. The ISPs will be forced into the role of tunnel brokers. And because there were so many problems with the first transition, no one will have the stomach for the second transition to native IPv6.
Just send an sms notice to the phone when you are being tracked. It can be on a random basis, low frequency. Send an email alert as well.
Just something so that it cannot be a secret to the phone user what is happening. You can opt-out of these messages, if you reply to the first 5 with an opt-out reply.
Very nice little asteroids/space invaders game.
Thats very informative. Thanks!
http://moneycentral.msn.com/investor/invsub/insider/trans.asp?Symbol=MSFT
Does that seem like a lot to anyone else?
And its selling pretty cheap right now too....
This according to google-finance. Its just curious, I am no expert.
yes, they could be donors theoretically. But I suspect that past HIV positive status would make things complicated.
AIDS is not currently considered "fatal". It is considered "manageable".
So they would be considering the -unknown- risks of exposing someone to a potentially new strain of AIDs.
I have had a bone marrow transplant. No radiation, minimal chemo-like drugs. In the hospital a week or a week and a half, 6 months of outpatient monitoring and I was cured.
For the AIDS treatment to work, they would most likely use something closer to my transplant protocol than the full oblation that they use with cancer patients.
Note to those interested: They dont have to go in with needles or drills to "dig out" the bone marrow from the donor. They give you a drug call the "G" that causes your bone marrow to percolate into your bloodstream. Then they filter it out with a dialysis-type procedure. Its fairly painless. I had it done to save my own marrow in case something went wrong with the transplant.
The term to indicate a room is under some form of electronic surveillance, especially used by British intelligence services
Actually, I think they got that from "Edge of Darkness" mini-series.
If the objective is to prevent large-scale keyword sniffing, then you can obfuscate it with compression.
The support is already built into the browsers.
Yes I know its not encryption, but if everything was gzip'd then it would cost the listener more to decrypt it. Plus gzip'd data would not invite any added attention.
I don't think that magnetic fields can bend light.