Of course they do...I guarantee somewhere in the contract the snes9x people signed with their ISP it has a semi-elastic clause that allows them to terminate service at any point without prior notification. I bet it's in yours, too...read the terms of service of geocities or your ISP.
No it doesn't.. as the original poster wrote (and I strongly agree with him) Google doesn't give you options to retry your search on other engines when it returns absolutely NO results, as it really should. The only time it gives you the option to retry on other search engines is when it actually returns a hit or two.
Don't get me wrong, I love google.. it's my start page. But most of the current usability problems people have been mentioning still need to be worked on.. so get crackin, googlers.
Exactly.. it really isn't news. CT complains that the archived version of slashdot is as old as, *gasp*, april 10, 1999 but then posts this non-news? The job listings and FAQ pages have been there since long before April 10, so it seems google is _not_ the one behind on their work.
I forgot to include these in the submitted story.. but here are 15 (low quality) images of some alpha units in action.
"I wonder if they have jurisdiction to do that"
Of course they do...I guarantee somewhere in the contract the snes9x people signed with their ISP it has a semi-elastic clause that allows them to terminate service at any point without prior notification. I bet it's in yours, too...read the terms of service of geocities or your ISP.
No it doesn't.. as the original poster wrote (and I strongly agree with him) Google doesn't give you options to retry your search on other engines when it returns absolutely NO results, as it really should. The only time it gives you the option to retry on other search engines is when it actually returns a hit or two.
Don't get me wrong, I love google.. it's my start page. But most of the current usability problems people have been mentioning still need to be worked on.. so get crackin, googlers.
-ehfisher
Exactly.. it really isn't news. CT complains that the archived version of slashdot is as old as, *gasp*, april 10, 1999 but then posts this non-news? The job listings and FAQ pages have been there since long before April 10, so it seems google is _not_ the one behind on their work.