It can't be empty. The ssh* tools are installed in/usr/bin.:)
But OSX is a lot less fun without the Developer CD.
Re:No, AppleDVD does not support SPDIF passthru
on
The State of PC Audio
·
· Score: 2
It's possible on Linux (Ogle, OMS), it's possible on Windows 98-- it's even theoretically possible on macs. AC3 streaming is a fairly simple patch-- but not all players implement it. All I wanted was info on whether Apple's DVD player worked-- not an advertisement for billg's pride and joy
They use higher quality soundcards, or usb/firewire boxes. Mark of the Unicorn has a number of products that work on Macintosh machines. (as well as ms. windows).
Most consumer digital audio gear-- cd players, minidisc, or dvd players, make use of the spdif coaxial or fibre port. This is also commonly found on pc soundcards, but does not come with macs.
Edirol has several USB to s/pdif converters that work with mac, but I have no idea if Apple's DVD player will stream the required dts or ac3 data correctly.
I think you need to consult a brand name dictionary-- perhaps Merriam-Webster, and realize that cheap imitation dictionaries, are, like genuine "Sorny" televisions, best left unsold.
Yes, MacOSX is based in part on BSDLite 4.4. Some libraries come from NetBSD, while most of he utilities stem from FreeBSD. BSD's contribution to MacOSX But MacOSX/Darwin is also based on Mach.
Cheerfully adding to the confusion are various projects such as Fink, which aims to port a good deal of linux software to MacOSX. Occasionally, dumb flamewars will sprout up, with one side advocating FreeBSD style ports, etc., and the other advocating a more linux-like style.
I guess it depends on what systems you've used before.
Most American schools already use flourescent lighting. Unfortunately, this choice of lighting tends to interact most violently with 60Hz refresh rates. (In my experience, a goodly proportion of system administrators are so oblivious to ergonomics that after failing to set refresh rates to a decent 85Hz level, they also disable student acesss to the "Monitors" control panel.)
Sometimes, it's much easier to use information if it's not tied down to a browser page-- perl programmers have been parsing web pages for years. Various versions of Excel can do this as well, importing data from Yahoo! Finance 's stock ticker directly into a spreadsheet. Sherlock (for MacOS) parses search engine results. BioPerl parses NCBI webpages (among others) into sequence data...
Obfuscated code makes this type of activity less useful. The trouble is that most of the services are tied to an archaic, and annoying advertising based model. Sherlock gets around this problem by actually parsing the ads and displaying them to a mac user. But most clients are built not to avoid ads so much as increasing the usability of the data. For some things, web browser interfaces leave a lot to be desired.
Interesting article. In the first part, it's shown that a z900 is very expensive for what it does. In the second part, the author claims that IBM tries to justify the cost with claims of superior resource management-- but the only reason that resources need to be managed so effectively is that the resources are artificially limited by IBM's sky high prices.
So why the 390 port? Is it a gimmick-- a source tree designed first to enhance Linux's reputation for scaling from palmtops to mainframes, and then to make IBM's outdated mainframes seem hip?
that there are sever "Oak Hill, VA"'s and the one the driver went to was almost at the North Carolina border, while we were less than an hour from Washington, DC.
Which is why you should use "Herndon, VA." There's only one Herndon, and it still points to your zip code.
Zip Code 30222 is Grantville, GA, not Montgomery, AL. Montgomery AL has a Charles St, but 17 is "out of range", at least according to Yahoo Maps.
Besides, Krusty lives in Springfield. (He's also Jewish, though whether he would be oblivious enough to be associated with Krusty For Kongress Kampaign is beyond me.)
I'll give you an example. A programmer is developing a linear algebra application and designs a class to handle vectors-- the mathematical kind, not the STL kind.
If the programmer uses namespaces intelligently, he can place his vector class in a custom namespace. (e.g. linalg). Thus std::vector<double> and linalg::vector<double> will be recognized as separate entities-- each with distinctive behavior.
You may ask-- why doesn't the programmer use the name linalg_vector<double> instead? Not every potential namespace collision is avoidable. I might want to link my linear algebra program with a plotting/image processing library. It would be a lot more useful to me if their functions/classes were segregated into namespace plot-- so that I didnt have to make sure that my fft functions (linalg::fft) didn't conflict with their fft function (plot::fft).
There's a strain of SF (often known as libertarian SF) that often depicts NASA as the enemy. Should sales of Stephen Baxter's work fund a government takeover of space? (Manifold:Space,for instance, depicts, among other things, the struggles of a private citizen to mine an asteroid in the face of violent governmental opposition)
Alright-- IF the 9th circuit court of appeals eventually affirms a right of "fair use", and if the Supreme Court believes the such a ruling would contradict the 2nd circuit doctrines (Universal v 2600), they might grant cert. Who knows? Perhaps the Supremes will strike down the DMCA. But all this is hypothetical. After all, 321Studio still has to argue its case.
Mathematics are not "the science of numbers". It is about building a theory of axioms and theorems where nothing is unproved.
You may be forgetting Godel's Incompleteness Theorem
Many things are "false economies" if you ignore who iss actually bearing the cost. For example, Microsoft has no motive to try to reuce code bloat in Office-- because slimming down the code costs them money-- the savings get passed on to the consumer who doesn't have to buy a bgger hard drive.
Similarly, if a PC vendor can save a little money by crippling their "Wifi" card, few prospective buyers will notice anything but the reduced cost or 0.1 Ghz adantage the model has is comaprison to a competitor's offering.
Winmodems offer a false economy-- but they cost one third of a external serial moddem or haalf of a UART incorporating ISA modem. This price advantage has not led buyers to shun these devices-- but rather, the opposite.
I have no problem with used books-- SF, mostly. But I have had problems with used textbooks. Most textbooks, in my experience, have poor bindings, and are less likely to survive the semester. I also dislike annotations from previous textbook owners-- quite often, they are mistaken. On the other hand, I suspect that without a used book market, prices would be even higher than they are now.
The safe within the panic room was cracked with a drill. Financial instruments worth millions of dollars were kept in the safe, yet most insurers would demand better security.
(More secure safes will resist drilling, explosives, and acetylene torches for periods longer than an hour)
Yes, the panic room does provide security-- but only if panic room is closed-- and the owner inside. If the owner was out, for any reason, the safe would provide minimal security.
The GPL prevents embrace and extend behaviors. The BSD license does not.
Re:How many do you think Two Towers is going to wi
on
LoTR Takes 4 Oscars
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· Score: 2
The Royal Tenenbaums wasn't neglected by the Academy. It was nominated for best original screenplay, but lost to Gosford Park. Neither was Ghost World, which was nominated for "best adapted screenplay, and lost to A Beautiful Mind.
You still need to generate keys. /usr/bin/ssh-keygen
It can't be empty. The ssh* tools are installed in /usr/bin. :)
But OSX is a lot less fun without the Developer CD.
It's possible on Linux (Ogle, OMS), it's possible on Windows 98-- it's even theoretically possible on macs. AC3 streaming is a fairly simple patch-- but not all players implement it. All I wanted was info on whether Apple's DVD player worked-- not an advertisement for billg's pride and joy
They use higher quality soundcards, or usb/firewire boxes. Mark of the Unicorn has a number of products that work on Macintosh machines. (as well as ms. windows). Most consumer digital audio gear-- cd players, minidisc, or dvd players, make use of the spdif coaxial or fibre port. This is also commonly found on pc soundcards, but does not come with macs. Edirol has several USB to s/pdif converters that work with mac, but I have no idea if Apple's DVD player will stream the required dts or ac3 data correctly.
Arguing from the dictionary is a clumsy endeavor. Misspelling the name of your primary source is even clumsier.
Monopoly's definition is best left to lawyers and economists-- not to lexicographers.
First, Let's refer to...
Marriam-Webster
I think you need to consult a brand name dictionary-- perhaps Merriam-Webster, and realize that cheap imitation dictionaries, are, like genuine "Sorny" televisions, best left unsold.
Yes, MacOSX is based in part on BSDLite 4.4. Some libraries come from NetBSD, while most of he utilities stem from FreeBSD. BSD's contribution to MacOSX But MacOSX/Darwin is also based on Mach. Cheerfully adding to the confusion are various projects such as Fink, which aims to port a good deal of linux software to MacOSX. Occasionally, dumb flamewars will sprout up, with one side advocating FreeBSD style ports, etc., and the other advocating a more linux-like style. I guess it depends on what systems you've used before.
Most American schools already use flourescent lighting. Unfortunately, this choice of lighting tends to interact most violently with 60Hz refresh rates. (In my experience, a goodly proportion of system administrators are so oblivious to ergonomics that after failing to set refresh rates to a decent 85Hz level, they also disable student acesss to the "Monitors" control panel.)
I haven't been able to find pictures-- but an article is available here. No pics, though.
(should have previewed that last post. sorry)
I haven't been able to find pictures-- but an article is available here. No pics, though.
Sometimes, it's much easier to use information if it's not tied down to a browser page-- perl programmers have been parsing web pages for years. Various versions of Excel can do this as well, importing data from Yahoo! Finance 's stock ticker directly into a spreadsheet. Sherlock (for MacOS) parses search engine results. BioPerl parses NCBI webpages (among others) into sequence data...
Obfuscated code makes this type of activity less useful. The trouble is that most of the services are tied to an archaic, and annoying advertising based model. Sherlock gets around this problem by actually parsing the ads and displaying them to a mac user. But most clients are built not to avoid ads so much as increasing the usability of the data. For some things, web browser interfaces leave a lot to be desired.
Interesting article. In the first part, it's shown that a z900 is very expensive for what it does. In the second part, the author claims that IBM tries to justify the cost with claims of superior resource management-- but the only reason that resources need to be managed so effectively is that the resources are artificially limited by IBM's sky high prices.
So why the 390 port? Is it a gimmick-- a source tree designed first to enhance Linux's reputation for scaling from palmtops to mainframes, and then to make IBM's outdated mainframes seem hip?
Which is why you should use "Herndon, VA." There's only one Herndon, and it still points to your zip code.
(desperately trying to compile Opendx)
_autocolor.c: In function `_dxfMakeRGBColorMap':
_autocolor.c:2606: unrecognizable insn:
(insn 4390 4389 4391 (set (reg:DF 1164)
(if_then_else:DF (ge (reg:DF 1163)
(const_double:DF 0 [0x0] 0 [0x0] 0 [0x0] 0 [0x0] 0 [0x0]))
(reg/v:SF 173)
(reg:SF 1162))) -1 (insn_list 1800 (insn_list 4388 (insn_list 4389 (nil))))
(expr_list:REG_DEAD (reg/v:SF 173)
(expr_list:REG_DEAD (reg:SF 1162)
(nil))))
_autocolor.c:2606: Internal compiler error in extract_insn, at recog.c:2129
It's not quite "ready for prime time".
Zip Code 30222 is Grantville, GA, not Montgomery, AL. Montgomery AL has a Charles St, but 17 is "out of range", at least according to Yahoo Maps.
Besides, Krusty lives in Springfield. (He's also Jewish, though whether he would be oblivious enough to be associated with Krusty For Kongress Kampaign is beyond me.)
Uh no...
I'll give you an example. A programmer is developing a linear algebra application and designs a class to handle vectors-- the mathematical kind, not the STL kind.
If the programmer uses namespaces intelligently, he can place his vector class in a custom namespace. (e.g. linalg). Thus std::vector<double> and linalg::vector<double> will be recognized as separate entities-- each with distinctive behavior.
You may ask-- why doesn't the programmer use the name linalg_vector<double> instead? Not every potential namespace collision is avoidable. I might want to link my linear algebra program with a plotting/image processing library. It would be a lot more useful to me if their functions/classes were segregated into namespace plot-- so that I didnt have to make sure that my fft functions (linalg::fft) didn't conflict with their fft function (plot::fft).
There's a strain of SF (often known as libertarian SF) that often depicts NASA as the enemy. Should sales of Stephen Baxter's work fund a government takeover of space? (Manifold:Space,for instance, depicts, among other things, the struggles of a private citizen to mine an asteroid in the face of violent governmental opposition)
Alright-- IF the 9th circuit court of appeals eventually affirms a right of "fair use", and if the Supreme Court believes the such a ruling would contradict the 2nd circuit doctrines (Universal v 2600), they might grant cert. Who knows? Perhaps the Supremes will strike down the DMCA. But all this is hypothetical.
After all, 321Studio still has to argue its case.
Mathematics are not "the science of numbers". It is about building a theory of axioms and theorems where nothing is unproved. You may be forgetting Godel's Incompleteness Theorem
Many things are "false economies" if you ignore who iss actually bearing the cost. For example, Microsoft has no motive to try to reuce code bloat in Office-- because slimming down the code costs them money-- the savings get passed on to the consumer who doesn't have to buy a bgger hard drive.
Similarly, if a PC vendor can save a little money by crippling their "Wifi" card, few prospective buyers will notice anything but the reduced cost or 0.1 Ghz adantage the model has is comaprison to a competitor's offering.
Winmodems offer a false economy-- but they cost one third of a external serial moddem or haalf of a UART incorporating ISA modem. This price advantage has not led buyers to shun these devices-- but rather, the opposite.
I have no problem with used books-- SF, mostly. But I have had problems with used textbooks. Most
textbooks, in my experience, have poor bindings, and are less likely to survive the semester. I also dislike annotations from previous textbook owners-- quite often, they are mistaken. On the other hand, I suspect that without a used book market, prices would be even higher than they are now.
The safe within the panic room was cracked with a drill. Financial instruments worth millions of dollars were kept in the safe, yet most insurers would demand better security.
(More secure safes will resist drilling, explosives, and acetylene torches for periods longer than an hour)
Yes, the panic room does provide security-- but only if panic room is closed-- and the owner inside. If the owner was out, for any reason, the
safe would provide minimal security.
The GPL prevents embrace and extend behaviors. The BSD license does not.
The Royal Tenenbaums wasn't neglected by the Academy. It was nominated for best original screenplay, but lost to Gosford Park. Neither was Ghost World, which was nominated for "best adapted screenplay, and lost to A Beautiful Mind.