The Twin Peaks pilot (with the original ending) is available as a Region 0 encoded DVD, released in Taiwan. Overall, it beats the copy I've had kicking around on VHS all these years with but two exceptions: it lacks the Log Lady intro (as added for the Bravo airing) and the sound is a bit strange at times. A US/Canada release? While there are various rumors floating about the internet, your guess is truly as good as mine.
> getting broadband in Whitefish, Montana and other metropolae;
IIRC, Whitefish already has DSL. At the very least, Kalispell and the nearby areas, with (AT&T) cable internet scheduled soon. Hey, we even have a Radio shack!
Me? 7 Miles south of Kalispell sporting (in perpetuity) a 28.8 dialup connection. I'd check into the satellite deal, but that would require actually getting a job.
Why reinvent the wheel? While a personal response from Nader would obviously have been preferable, his staff did an acceptable job responding to the majority of questions presented. I just don't see how restating Nader's previously expressed opinions and/or policies in a germane manner is considered "disrespectful."
Sure they haven't spent a whole lot of $$$ on the 4.x line since the Mozilla project began, but why should they? You have to keep in mind these (4.5 on, or so- I forget...) are for the most part maintenance/ security fix releases. It would be foolish to attempt to rewrite major parts of the code, such as the rendering engine, multiple POP mailboxes, better CSS support- the list goes on...
No investment to lose? I beg to differ. While for home users the product is free, it sure isn't for the corporate client.
And Mozilla? Cut them some slack. Is the code even alpha yet?
Along those lines... I have a friend who buys cheap-ass calling cards from who-knows-where, that show up on my caller id as `999-999-9999'.
That's the guy who used to work for him, but got fired for whatever reason, and has an axe to grind, no?
The Twin Peaks pilot (with the original ending) is available as a Region 0 encoded DVD, released in Taiwan. Overall, it beats the copy I've had kicking around on VHS all these years with but two exceptions: it lacks the Log Lady intro (as added for the Bravo airing) and the sound is a bit strange at times. A US/Canada release? While there are various rumors floating about the internet, your guess is truly as good as mine.
> getting broadband in Whitefish, Montana and other metropolae;
IIRC, Whitefish already has DSL. At the very least, Kalispell and the nearby areas, with (AT&T) cable internet scheduled soon. Hey, we even have a Radio shack!
Me? 7 Miles south of Kalispell sporting (in perpetuity) a 28.8 dialup connection. I'd check into the satellite deal, but that would require actually getting a job.
Why reinvent the wheel? While a personal response from Nader would obviously have been preferable, his staff did an acceptable job responding to the majority of questions presented. I just don't see how restating Nader's previously expressed opinions and/or policies in a germane manner is considered "disrespectful."
> FreeSB: Free (as in speach and beer) Pronounced
> something like Frisbe
If you look that one up, you'll see that it's actually pronounced "unruly mob"
Sure they haven't spent a whole lot of $$$ on the 4.x line since the Mozilla project began, but why should they? You have to keep in mind these (4.5 on, or so- I forget...) are for the most part maintenance/ security fix releases. It would be foolish to attempt to rewrite major parts of the code, such as the rendering engine, multiple POP mailboxes, better CSS support- the list goes on...
No investment to lose? I beg to differ. While for home users the product is free, it sure isn't for the corporate client.
And Mozilla? Cut them some slack. Is the code even alpha yet?